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Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Wed Jun 17, 2009 8:12 pm
by loringa
kerrensimmonds wrote:Won't take you long Maggie, but you will enjoy it!
I still can't recommend highly enough Melvyn Bragg's 'novel' (though it is clearly autobiographical) entitled 'Remember Me'. Beautifully written and breathtakingly honest.
When was this released? I imagine that it is the next in the series that started with The Soldier's Return. The next two are A Son of War and Crossing the Lines. They too are clearly autobiographical but written as novels. They take him through his early childhood, through adolescence and end with Oxford. If you haven't read them then you are in for a treat. I have also greatly enjoyed those of his novels that I have read and thoroughly recommend Credo,an historical novel set in Dark Age Britain and opening in 647.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Wed Jun 17, 2009 8:30 pm
by kerrensimmonds
I think it was published last year. It opens with the narrator meeting a French student (female) almost by accident at a Christmas party in Oxford, in the year before he graduates (early 1960's). And then it goes on.
I repeat that I can't recommend it highly enough. Astoundingly honest, and brilliantly written. It was a pleasure to read, even if there were tears now and then.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Fri Jun 26, 2009 11:15 pm
by englishangel
I was given a Waterstones card for my birthday in February and have just spent it on "My word is my Bond" by Roger Moore, clearly written by the man himself and while not a literary read it is a very good read. I took that and "Dreams of my Father" by Barack Obama to Canterbury to read while waiting for my daughter to say goodbye to all her friends. As Waterstones were doing 3 for 2 I also bought "Ross Kemp in Afghanistan" which I didn't take to Canterbury.

One of these authors was signing his book in Waterstones in Canterbury. I will give you a clue, it wasn't Barack Obama or Roger Moore.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 9:55 am
by MKM
I'm currently reading "The Children's Book" by A.S. Byatt. I suspect there are lots of deep meanings which I am totally missing.

I've never read any Georgette Heyer. Would someone like to suggest a good one to start with?

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 10:06 am
by lonelymom
I'm reading 'Innocent Traitor' by Alison Weir. It's about Lady Jane Grey, from her birth, through her nine-day reign and to her death, and is written from her perspective, and that of her mother, her nursemaid, cousins etc. It says on the front page that 'if you don't cry at the end, you have a heart of stone'. I'm dreading getting to the end now :(

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jun 27, 2009 8:00 pm
by kerrensimmonds
I have just finished 'Spies' by Michael Frayn. Won the Whitbread Novel of the year 2002. Couldn't put it down.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sun Jun 28, 2009 3:00 am
by icomefromalanddownunder
Yesterday I read 'The Spare Room' by Helen Garner and thoroughly enjoyed it. I began it with trepidation (three weeks in the life of someone who has a terminally ill friend to stay), but it is beautifully written, not at all black or depressing, and covers issues and emotions that we will all, no doubt, experience at some point with empathy, humour and sensitivity.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Wed Jul 01, 2009 12:05 pm
by J.R.
'The House Of Horrors'.

The very harrowing and recent story of the Fritzl case in Austria.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Thu Jul 02, 2009 8:15 am
by englishangel
J.R. wrote:'The House Of Horrors'.

The very harrowing and recent story of the Fritzl case in Austria.
Either this or another on the same subject was put in a rack for "Ideal Father's Day Gifts" at a couple of Tesco and W H Smith stores.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 12:40 pm
by J.R.
englishangel wrote:
J.R. wrote:'The House Of Horrors'.

The very harrowing and recent story of the Fritzl case in Austria.
Either this or another on the same subject was put in a rack for "Ideal Father's Day Gifts" at a couple of Tesco and W H Smith stores.

I really think ALL parents should read it.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 1:44 pm
by englishangel
So do I but I don't think "Ideal Father's Day Gift" is quite the correct tone.

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Sat Jul 04, 2009 2:12 pm
by J.R.
P'raps some Tesco's and D.H.S. staff have a warped sense of merchandising !

Whodunnit?

Posted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 4:11 pm
by Angela Woodford
This is driving me crazy.

Has anybody read "Death in Holy Orders" by PD James?

I just can't work out who sent the anonymous letter to Sir Alred Treeves.

"Why don't you ask some questions about your son's death? Nobody really believes it was an accident. Those priests will cover up anything to keep your their good name. There are a number of things going on at that college which ought to be brought into the light. Are you going to let them get away with it?"

You see, at first I thought it was part-time Matron and Mistress of Linen, Margaret Munroe! She liked and felt sorry for the wretched Ronald Treeves. But no, she believed his death in the sand at the foot of the cliffs was accidental! Then I thought it was the most handsome ordinand Raphael Arbuthnot - but no... couldn't have been...

"The smashed skull; the Archdeacon's spectacles lying a little apart, but unbroken; ... the purple padded dressing gown stiffening with his blood."

Eek!

But who wrote the letter?

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2009 10:58 am
by NEILL THE NOTORIOUS
I have a problem ----- no not that one -- I have another, amongst many.
I am trying to introduce one of my Grandchildren (Aged 21) to some of the books, which I read and enjoyed in my youth.
I remember, with affection, Sellers and Yeatman's "1066 and all that" --- which was a GOOD THING
but I have been trying to find "Horse Nonsense" -- also by S&Y.
I remember we had both in the Ba B Dayroom, and they were much loved.
I have tried Amazon, but without much success. :(

Re: Current reading matter

Posted: Thu Jul 23, 2009 11:11 am
by Fjgrogan
Sorry Neill, I can't help with Horse Nonsense, but is my memory right? - I believe there was another one based on gardening? The main quote I remember from 1066 and All That is that WilliamanMary discovered the National Debt and built the Bank of England to put it in - how true!