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Summer Reading..

Discussion in 'Watford' started by tworossjenkins, May 27, 2012.

  1. tworossjenkins

    tworossjenkins Member

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    Any more ideas??
     
    #21
  2. tworossjenkins

    tworossjenkins Member

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    Just finished Down Under (Bryson). Also anything by Tony Hawks, Pointless (a year with East Stirling), and naval memoirs, "Days of a Dogsbody". Currently on 1415 and a couple from the "Very Short Introduction series".
     
    #22
  3. Mexican Hornet

    Mexican Hornet Well-Known Member

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    Death in the afternoon by E. Hemmingway.

    Enjoy it at the moment.
     
    #23
  4. geitungur akureyrar

    geitungur akureyrar Well-Known Member

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    Bernard Cornwell and his Sharpe books.
     
    #24
  5. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    I thought they were your winter reading books - or is it all the same up there? :)
     
    #25
  6. bragantino

    bragantino Active Member

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    Probably takes him a long time.
     
    #26

  7. hornethologist a.k.a. theo

    hornethologist a.k.a. theo Well-Known Member

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    Those of you who are crime fiction fans all the following are good:

    Peter Billingham, Stephen Booth, Ellie Griffiths, Donna Leon, Peter James, Martin Edwards
     
    #27
  8. wear_yellow

    wear_yellow Well-Known Member

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    Just looked back at this thread Theo and saw your comment regarding Michael Moorcock - great reading, Jerry C is one of my fav characters..it inspired my rants against the BBC censors on the old 606 web site.
     
    #28
  9. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    And I would add Jo Nesbo to that list. I've just finished what I suspect will be the last in his Inspector Harry Hole series, The Phantom, and recommend that & every other book in the series as damned good reads.
     
    #29
  10. Lloydinio

    Lloydinio Well-Known Member

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    The Dammed United by David peace. Brilliant book about Brian Clough!
     
    #30
  11. canary-dave

    canary-dave Well-Known Member

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    I think this is one of the very few occasions when the film is even better than the book! <ok>
     
    #31
  12. vic-rijrode

    vic-rijrode Well-Known Member

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    Bill Bryson anyone?
     
    #32
  13. canary-dave

    canary-dave Well-Known Member

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    Not for me! I won't go into detail, some of you may like him!
     
    #33
  14. vic-rijrode

    vic-rijrode Well-Known Member

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    Judging by the number of books he sells, a lot of people like him.

    Mind you, Jeffrey Archer sells a lot, so I'm told. I tried to read one of his books once and had to give up as I was laughing too much........
     
    #34
  15. canary-dave

    canary-dave Well-Known Member

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    Not from his wit I take it? <laugh>
     
    #35
  16. Bloother

    Bloother Well-Known Member

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    Wot, no Ian Rankin? Rebus rules. Also Peter Robinson and the Banks books.

    If historical crime fiction is your bag I recommend Suzanna Gregory and the Thomas Challoner books (Resoration period), S.J.Paris and the Giordano Bruno books (Elizabethan period), Rory Clements and the John Shakespeare books (Elizabethan period again) and Philip Kerr and the Bernie Gunther books (before, during and after WWII).

    At the moment reading 1356 by Bernard Cornwell, the new Grail Quest book (and very good it is too).

    Any Jack Reacher book is fine by me (by Lee Child).

    The Jackson Brody books by Kate Atkinson are also excellent.

    Other books enjoyed this year:

    The 100 year old man who climbed out of the window and disappeared by Jonas Jonasson;
    Skios by Michael Frayn;
    Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby.

    Recently finished Inferno by Dan Brown. Awful!!
     
    #36
  17. canary-dave

    canary-dave Well-Known Member

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    The Clan of the Cave Bear by Jean Auel is a fantastic series of books chronicling the life of a young orphan brought up by primate like peoples!
     
    #37
  18. Golden Gordon

    Golden Gordon Well-Known Member

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    Just started my 4th odyssey with Patrick O'Brian's Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin. Twenty books to get lost in. Went through them first in about 1999, went straight round again afterwards, gave it a year or two off and did it again, then made myself wait a good ten years, which is now up. Where did that time go?
    They aren't immediately accessible, but stick with it and get familiar with the tone, and an immense humour and humanity comes through, along with an amount of Napoleonic War wooden sailing ship knowledge which knocks Forrester into cocked hat.*

    I like Derek Robinson's RAF novels; 1stWW and 2ndWW.

    Crime fiction: try Frank Tallis- Vienna pre 1stWW

    Espionage/noir: Alan Furst is unbeatable.

    *PS the Master & Commander film was a good stab but got nowhere near the depths of character. It also elided several of the novels into one.
     
    #38
  19. Golden Gordon

    Golden Gordon Well-Known Member

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    #39
  20. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    Cheers for that GG - excellent site! <cheers>
     
    #40

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