OT: Holiday reading

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Robert Harris...'Fatherland' is a good read. I've now read most of the Lee Child, 'Jack Reacher' novels, which have already been mentioned on here. Gladly, I read most of them before the books were ruined by Tom Cruise playing the role of Jack Reacher in the film. He killed it.
 
James Ellroy is a proper writer, but it's unremittingly dark stuff. Even his heroes are usually deeply flawed, he never shies away from showing the worst of human nature. His own early life has clearly had a grave impact - his mother was murdered when he was 8 or 9, and he was little better than a petty criminal himself for a long time.

Matt, you may have seen the film L.A. Confidential, which is based on the Ellroy novel of the same name. The film is very good, but can't capture the genius of the book. As Badger says, his American Underworld trilogy - American Tabloid, The Cold Six Thousand and Blood's a Rover is simply stunning, weaving criminal and police fiction into real events with real people as characters - the assassinations of JFK, RFK and Martin Luther King, the roles of Nixon and Hoover etc etc from the late 50s to the early 70s.

I could imagine these as a long, multi-episode high quality TV series Badger, struggle to squeeze them into films without losing a lot.

A lighter alternative is Carl Hiaasen, who's Florida based crime novels are very funny.

You and Badger aren't book salesmen are you? I will be eagerly trying to hunt down this hitherto unheard of trilogy.
 
You and Badger aren't book salesmen are you? I will be eagerly trying to hunt down this hitherto unheard of trilogy.

Booksellers must be a dying breed, 80% of my reading is on the Kindle/iPad now.........Waterstone's drives me round the bend, they never have what I want in there.

If you find some Ellroy and enjoy it let us know. Then I'll get you on to Roberto Bolano.........
 
You and Badger aren't book salesmen are you? I will be eagerly trying to hunt down this hitherto unheard of trilogy.

Would a book salesman buy his books in a charity shop?? Probably.

I spent a year working nights in a publishers warehouse. It was a weird place to work but I got hundreds of books out of it on the cheap, every month they would sell off damaged stock...think my best haul was about £250 worth of books for £5. Think I gathered most of the Ellroy, Murikami and Palahniuk books while working there.

Enjoy some Ellroy, it's worth the hunt!
 
Booksellers must be a dying breed, 80% of my reading is on the Kindle/iPad now.........Waterstone's drives me round the bend, they never have what I want in there.

If you find some Ellroy and enjoy it let us know. Then I'll get you on to Roberto Bolano.........

Not read any Bolano Stan, any tips on best books to start with?
 
Not read any Bolano Stan, any tips on best books to start with?

Ease yourself in with 'Nazi Literature in the Americas', a series of completely fictitious mini biographies of invented right wing nutters (Bolano of course is from the other end of the spectrum) including Argentinian football ultras.

But the big ones are The Savage Detectives a surreal search through Mexico and Spain for some strange poets; and 2666, also a search for a perhaps mythical author but tied into the (horribly true) serial killings of women in Northern Mexico. Actually both books defy proper description.
 
Robert Harris...'Fatherland' is a good read. I've now read most of the Lee Child, 'Jack Reacher' novels, which have already been mentioned on here. Gladly, I read most of them before the books were ruined by Tom Cruise playing the role of Jack Reacher in the film. He killed it.

have given the jack reacher stuff a go
read two of them
never again
I hope the rest are not as bad as the 2 I read
awful stuff imho
 
I liked the Carlos the Jackal parts of the Bourne books but they have descended in quality a bit after the change of authors.

I've not read any Raymond Chandler but did read the Maltese Falcon a couple of years back and enjoyed the lucid atmosphere that Hammett created - I will have to give him a look. In terms of pure crime, Mario Puzo is a personal favourite. Sometimes the characters are a bit too adept but the interchanges between them (especially the mafia family members) and the action sequences are all laid out pefectly and I haven't found one of his that hasn't been compelling to the last.

I'll also see if I can locate any James Ellroy books given the glowing recommendation although finding the first of a trilogy is a challenge in charity shops (although the slightly trendier Oxfam bookshops can come up trumps) but the patience required means it is more rewarding when it pays off. :)

the eric van lustbader one was a terrible waste of my time
 
Soon to be starting 'Commandant Of Auschwitz' the memoires of Rudolf Hoess.

Hardly sunny, happy reading.............

That book would have to be a very learning experience, Staines R's.

I'm currently re-reading 'Albert Speer - Inside the Third Reich' ISBN 297 00015 2 ( nearly 600 pages ) .......... written by himself whilst in prison for his part in Hitler's activities.
There would not be another person under Hitler's control who would have the overall knowledge of what the Gestapo, Luftwaffe and the German armies were doing.

This person was Hitler's second in command and oversaw everything, including building works, concentration camps, slave labour and the making weapons etc.

There is so much happening, it is really hard to put the book down for a spell. A fantastic read and a real eye opener as to real events of WW2.
Cheers,
Aussie.