Current reading matter
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- wickedwitch
- GE (Great Erasmus)
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Re: Current reading matter
I have just finished Testimony - Anita Shreve. eek. I certainly HOPE such stuff doesnt go on at CH. In preparation i have let my daughter try wine (the strongest most icky type) and beer (i think it was stella!) both of which she hated. She knows that if she got drunk i would very likely jump on her laptop in front of her. Not that i'm a strict parent or anything.... As for the other stuff, i think seeing me pregnant, fat and foul twice in quick succession over the past few years has put her off anything to do with boys!
Next up is a book on sewing for children.
oh and Mrs Average... i think it would be really good book for older kids to read. There is obviously some nookie in it but its short and to the point. Its the ripples on the pond from that initial stone that are so very well written. if you know what i mean!
Next up is a book on sewing for children.
oh and Mrs Average... i think it would be really good book for older kids to read. There is obviously some nookie in it but its short and to the point. Its the ripples on the pond from that initial stone that are so very well written. if you know what i mean!
wide awake on the edge of the world
- J.R.
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Re: Current reading matter
More Raymond Chandler for me !
'The High Window'
'The High Window'
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
- icomefromalanddownunder
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Re: Current reading matter
One Dead In Attic: a collection of poignant articles written by a New Orleans journalist post Katrina.
- J.R.
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Re: Current reading matter
'Monstrous Regiment'
Sir Terry Pratchett.
I was Persuaded to give it a try by family. Found it a bit odd to start with, but now half way through, I' totally addicted.
Sir Terry Pratchett.
I was Persuaded to give it a try by family. Found it a bit odd to start with, but now half way through, I' totally addicted.
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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Re: Current reading matter
Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo by Michael McCarthy. A gift from an editor I have been writing for, and very well-chosen I'm pleased to say. I've only read two chapters so far as there's so much information about bird migration to absorb; but the general thrust is that all the "bringers of spring" we've become accustomed to are starting not to arrive, and time's running out to do anything about it.
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Re: Current reading matter
Stones into Schools by Greg Mortenson, a follow up to Three Cups of Tea by him. I cannot recommend these too highly, he is an American inspiring people by building schools, particularly for girls, in remote parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Apparently he was one of the many nominated for Nobel Peace Prize last year when Obama won, IMHO Greg Mortenson would have been a worthier winner!
Katharine Dobson (Hills) 6.14, 1959 - 1965
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Re: Current reading matter
Noted, Katharine, and thank you for the info., it's another subject that's right up my street!Katharine wrote:Stones into Schools by Greg Mortenson, a follow up to Three Cups of Tea by him. I cannot recommend these too highly, he is an American inspiring people by building schools, particularly for girls, in remote parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Apparently he was one of the many nominated for Nobel Peace Prize last year when Obama won, IMHO Greg Mortenson would have been a worthier winner!
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Re: Current reading matter
Annie - I have just read a chapter that recounts how so many more girls than boys in Kashmir were killed in the earthquake in 2005. The girls did not have desks to shelter them because their education was low priority, also girls naturally huddle together boys would be prepared to leap out of the windows. The point about the desks made my blood boil!
Katharine Dobson (Hills) 6.14, 1959 - 1965
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Re: Current reading matter
It's infuriating, isn't it, that girls out there aren't valued for anything more basic than childbearing. What else can you expect though from a region dominated by uneducated religious bigots? I don't know how Mortenson managed to persuade them to allow schools to be built for girls, but all credit to him for succeeding where governments have failed.Katharine wrote:Annie - I have just read a chapter that recounts how so many more girls than boys in Kashmir were killed in the earthquake in 2005. The girls did not have desks to shelter them because their education was low priority, also girls naturally huddle together boys would be prepared to leap out of the windows. The point about the desks made my blood boil!
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Re: Current reading matter
Annie - see my post here viewtopic.php?f=27&t=1300&start=390 The Three Cups of Tea explain the concept that the first cup is drunk as a stranger, the second as a friend, the third you join the family. Mortenson does nothing without the support of the local people.
Katharine Dobson (Hills) 6.14, 1959 - 1965
- huntertitus
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Re: Current reading matter
Just finished Richard Davenport-Hines' fine biography of W.H.Auden. Before that I read Rupert Thomson's "This Party's Got to Stop" a hilarious and moving account of parts of the writers life. And also recently I read Per Petterson's fine novel "Out Stealing Horses"
- J.R.
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Re: Current reading matter
Just to resurrect an old thread.....
I have recently got well into Len Deighton (again), if you'll pardon the expression.
At present, I'm NOT ploughing through the Harry Palmer's, but the Bernard Samson (Berlin) trilogy. Really 'cannot-put-down' books.
I have recently got well into Len Deighton (again), if you'll pardon the expression.
At present, I'm NOT ploughing through the Harry Palmer's, but the Bernard Samson (Berlin) trilogy. Really 'cannot-put-down' books.
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
- LongGone
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Re: Current reading matter
Stone's Fall by Iain Pears is a good read: if you read his first book (An Instance of the Fingerpost) you may get a slight deja vu.
If a stone falls on an egg: alas for the egg
If an egg falls on a stone: alas for the egg
If an egg falls on a stone: alas for the egg
- NEILL THE NOTORIOUS
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Re: Current reading matter
NOT my normal reading matter but-----
Before visiting the Somme, to find out where my Grandfather was "Running away", I read "The Somme" and I have now started "D Day" by Antony Beevor.
Neither of these are to be recommended, unless you have a penchant for being terrified out of your tiny mind, but they are both an instruction on the idiocy of some of the people, who are put in charge, when conducting a War
There is a popular saying -- "Carry on regardless" ----------nobody finishes, as the original "Of casualties" !!!
OK so I am biased -- and likely to remain so.
My preferred reading is "The small Garden" by C.E. Lucas Phillips (Brigadier!) a mine of information and my "Bible" on growing things.
However, I suspect his "Small Garden" was abot 3 Acres !!!
Before visiting the Somme, to find out where my Grandfather was "Running away", I read "The Somme" and I have now started "D Day" by Antony Beevor.
Neither of these are to be recommended, unless you have a penchant for being terrified out of your tiny mind, but they are both an instruction on the idiocy of some of the people, who are put in charge, when conducting a War
There is a popular saying -- "Carry on regardless" ----------nobody finishes, as the original "Of casualties" !!!
OK so I am biased -- and likely to remain so.
My preferred reading is "The small Garden" by C.E. Lucas Phillips (Brigadier!) a mine of information and my "Bible" on growing things.
However, I suspect his "Small Garden" was abot 3 Acres !!!
- huntertitus
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Re: Current reading matter
I read Anthony Beevor's Berlin which was good for learning the history of the end of WW11. Now reading Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, which is brilliant!