#834256 - Fri Oct 26 2012 12:22 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Moderator
Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 12593
Loc: Kowloon Tong Hong Kong
|
Thanks Trangie, that makes interesting reading. I am going to start a new thread dealing with Authors we may have met. Its a good subject I think.
_________________________
Wandering aimlessly through FT since 1999.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#834659 - Sat Oct 27 2012 01:31 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Moderator
Registered: Fri Mar 23 2001
Posts: 12578
Loc: Ontario Canada
|
I agree there. Heinlein is a brilliant author and he makes Science Fiction accessible to the masses and not just its fans. He has many good books with underlying themes that are still relevant today.
_________________________
"La divina podestate, la somma sapienza e 'l primo amore." -------------------- Editor/Moderator/Awesome Guy
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#834829 - Sun Oct 28 2012 06:22 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Star Poster
Registered: Fri Jan 30 2004
Posts: 14486
Loc: North West of England
|
I remember reading Carrie's War many years ago, and the successful TV programme. She was a talented writer trangie, thanks for the memories
_________________________
My mind is like a parachute...it functions only when open.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#834845 - Sun Oct 28 2012 08:13 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Enthusiast
Registered: Mon May 19 2008
Posts: 464
Loc: Lincoln<br>England UK ...
|
Reading Alfie My story by Alfie Boe,Britains best Tenor tells his story so far and what a wide and various career he has had prior to becoming a opera/west end star.
As biographies go this is informative at times funny and also sad, i am finding it very intresting is a good read, some things i am trying to check the validity of where he claims to have recorded a demo of 2 queen songs in abbey road studio as a sound check for Queens engineers, one person who worked with freddie mercury and queen says he cant recall, another says that queen and their engineers never used abbey road studios. But am sure Alfie Boe has not lied as he has nothing to gain from it.
This is one biography i recommend throughly.
_________________________
Would I do it again? of course i would darling. Freddie Mercury
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#834908 - Sun Oct 28 2012 02:40 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Mainstay
Registered: Tue Mar 09 2010
Posts: 634
Loc: Pennsylvania USA
|
I just started "Daughters-in-Law" by Joanna Trollope. Sounded interesting, but for some reason (perhaps being distracted at the time) I couldn't quite get into it. Will keep it and try again later tonight or tomorrow.
It tels the story of what happens when a headstrong woman becomes the in-law of a couple who are used to running their sons--and their sons' wives--lives.
_________________________
(1) Young I may be, but even young people are entitled to their opinions. (2)Attempting to silence me doesn't hurt me, but the silencer. (3) I must remain true to myself.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#836034 - Thu Nov 01 2012 11:50 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Moderator
Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 12593
Loc: Kowloon Tong Hong Kong
|
Oooh Yes, Agony! Travis McGee- Ladies in distress, lost treasure and brutal villains! Yu might start a new trend!
_________________________
Wandering aimlessly through FT since 1999.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#836217 - Fri Nov 02 2012 06:05 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Mainstay
Registered: Tue Mar 09 2010
Posts: 634
Loc: Pennsylvania USA
|
I was relieved to finish “Daughters-in-Law,” which is one of those books that, if you stop reading, you wonder what would have happened. And I was somewhat disappointed by the ending, as it leaves the reader hanging (fine for readers who don’t mind that sort of thing, but I do). I did rather enjoy the place descriptions, though. I’m now reading “Killing Kate” by Julie Kramer. More what I’m interested in reading  *Love* those mystery and suspense stories!
_________________________
(1) Young I may be, but even young people are entitled to their opinions. (2)Attempting to silence me doesn't hurt me, but the silencer. (3) I must remain true to myself.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#836876 - Mon Nov 05 2012 08:05 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Mainstay
Registered: Tue Mar 09 2010
Posts: 634
Loc: Pennsylvania USA
|
I'm reading a book called "Girl in Translation," about a girl and her mother who emigrate to America from HongKong. So far, it's very interesting.
_________________________
(1) Young I may be, but even young people are entitled to their opinions. (2)Attempting to silence me doesn't hurt me, but the silencer. (3) I must remain true to myself.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#838010 - Sat Nov 10 2012 04:26 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Administrator
Registered: Sat Mar 29 2003
Posts: 16595
Loc: Western Canada
|
Finished "The Friends of Eddie Coyle" and it really is pretty remarkable. It reads so easy - it's like sitting on a bar stool listening to the guys talking - that you hardly notice that there is some very skillful subtle writing going on. If you like gritty crime novels, check this one out. Don't read the intro until after you've finished the book.
Also just finished another slice of low life, this one purportedly true - "Full Service" the memoirs of Scotty Bowers, who apparently slept with everyone in Los Angeles from 1946 until well into the eighties. Viewed one way, it's an amazing social document; viewed another, it is simply appalling - he quite cheerfully tells us all about the pedophilic prostitution ring he ran at the age of twelve, for example. A boy's gotta make money somehow during the Depression, and the paper route wasn't cutting it.
And (wasn't kidding when I said I read more than one book at a time) also just finished Dickens' "Hard Times". Just loved it, and am amazed at how topical it is.
Now reading "How Children Succeed" from Paul Tough, about some newish research into the effects of noncognitive skills on success, especially for disadvantaged children.
And the new Harlen Coben - Myron Bolitar again, yay!
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#838097 - Sun Nov 11 2012 10:54 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Star Poster
Registered: Thu Oct 16 2003
Posts: 10984
Loc: Burlington Ontario Canada
|
"Port Mortuary" by Patricia Cornwell
_________________________
Editor: Movies/Celebrities/Crosswords
"To insult someone we call him 'bestial'. For deliberate cruelty and nature, 'human' might be the greater insult." - Isaac Asimov
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#917525 - Wed Nov 14 2012 03:01 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Forum Champion
Registered: Sun May 18 2003
Posts: 7842
Loc: Arizona USA
|
I just finished "me again" by Keith Cronin. It's told in first person about a man who awakes from being in a coma for six years. The story is really enlightening about how stroke victims can feel while going through recovery and coping with their new limitations to their bodies and minds. I hated for the story to end.
_________________________
May the tail of the elephant never have to swat the flies from your face.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#917570 - Wed Nov 14 2012 07:08 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Administrator
Registered: Sat Mar 29 2003
Posts: 16595
Loc: Western Canada
|
Just finished "The Monster in the Box" by Ruth Rendell. It's one of the later Inspector Wexford novels, and, I hate to say it, but I think this series has run its course. I enjoyed seeing back into Wexford's past, but the basic story of this one is pretty silly, and the side plot about the young Muslim girl defies belief. Too bad, I've always liked this series and the books that came out during the 80s and 90s were really excellent. Read the very latest in the series, "The Vault" a few weeks ago, and it suffered from the same problems. Well, Wexford has retired now, so that's probably that.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#950624 - Wed Nov 21 2012 01:03 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Forum Champion
Registered: Mon Apr 14 2003
Posts: 8867
Loc: France
|
Despite the flaws, I thoroughly enjoyed the BBC's recent mini series "The Paradise", or at least the idea of it, so I borrowed Emile Zola's "Au Bonheur des Dames" (on which the series is based) from a friend. It's a great read (even though I am discovering just how lacking I am in French "literary" vocabulary). It reminds me of The Coral Island with its long descriptive prose, where each word is carefully chosen to convey just the atmosphere the author wants to create. I think there are various versions available in English, but I'm not sure I'll read any of them as the original is so rich itself that I risk being disappointed in a translation. It's definitely a style of writing which is dated, but for me it's so much more satisfying to read than more modern stuff, that I'm perfectly happy to bury my head between the covers of the book any time I have even just five minutes to spare.
Edited by Santana2002 (Wed Nov 21 2012 01:25 AM)
_________________________
It's hard to be perfect when you're human
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#950656 - Wed Nov 21 2012 07:35 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Moderator
Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 12593
Loc: Kowloon Tong Hong Kong
|
Oh Gosh, Toni, I read it, so many years ago I think I struggled then, even while living in France and exposed to French all day so probably would even more so now.
_________________________
Wandering aimlessly through FT since 1999.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#950676 - Wed Nov 21 2012 10:48 AM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Forum Champion
Registered: Mon Apr 14 2003
Posts: 8867
Loc: France
|
I'm not struggling, exactly, but I'm certainly losing out on the detail. I refuse to get out my dictionary for every single word that I don't understand or know, when I am getting the sense of the meaning, as it would slow me down too much and become extremely frustrating. So far, I'm thoroughly enjoying the read in any case.
_________________________
It's hard to be perfect when you're human
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#950743 - Wed Nov 21 2012 03:42 PM
Re: What are you Reading mark2
|
Mainstay
Registered: Sat Apr 25 2009
Posts: 877
Loc: Minnesota USA
|
I'm reading the Peter Townshend autobiography "Who I am". I find it very difficult to follow and very poorly written. It's disconnected, doesn't flow at all and seems to be snippets of information placed one after another in chronological order with no transitions. General themes keep recurring to try and create a theme or transition, but as someone who knows next to nothing about The Who, it is not at all informative or easy to follow because it is so disconnected.
I guess when I read a biography I need more structure, especially if I'm not familiar with the subject/content/person. I'm about half way through it, so I'll finish it up, but unless you are a diehard Who or Pete fanatic, I'd avoid it.
|
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|