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It's the occasional reading thread!

Lily Fairbairn
Half-elven


Oct 12 2022, 4:04pm

Post #1 of 12 (899 views)
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It's the occasional reading thread! Can't Post

Once again, real life has impinged on my reading time. There's nothing bad going on, but we are in a period of transition.

I thoroughly enjoyed the library ebook of The Bullet That Missed, by Richard Osman, third in the Thursday Murder Club series. In this installment, the group of friends living in a retirement center in Kent take on a cold case that has its very warm moments. Osman's cast of characters keeps expanding in a very good way. His pacing is excellent, his dialog sparkling, and his sympathy for us older folk is subtle but telling. I like these books so much I can almost overlook his veering back and forth between past and present tense, the latter being an affectation that will often destroy my patience with less entertaining books.

Next up on my ebook list is the latest in Alexander McCall Smith's Precious Ramotswe series, A Song of Comfortable Chairs. I'm not fond of all of his multitide of titles, but I do like this series, not least because I know to expect an easy, positive read.

I'm still listening to The Garden of Unearthly Delights, written and read by Robert Rankin. His main character, Maxwell Carrion, is whisked out of the present day into a future world, where magic rather than science rules. It's Douglas Adams meets Terry Pratchett meets Monty Python. Even though Rankin is right up there with Neil Gaiman in his ability to read his own fiction---something I don't say lightly---and the satire is dead on (if heavy-handed), I'm only able to listen to this in short segments. I'm also listening to a collection of Gaiman's pieces in short segments because they're so dark. Despite the comedy, there's a darkness to Rankin's, too, and I think I'm just not in the mood.

I took a break and listened to the very short 84, Charing Cross Road, by Helene Hanff, read by a variety of voices. This is the transcription of New Yorker Hanff's correspondence with a rare books dealer in London over many years between the late 40s and the early 60s. She mentions Queen Elizabeth IIs coronation, which added a moment of poignancy to a light but entertaining narrative.

On paper, I started reading yet another of Titan Publishing's Sherlock Holmes novels, this one by Nick Kyme and titled A Legacy of Deeds (not a good title, IMHO). Also IMHO, I don't feel as though Kyme has captured Watson/Conan Doyle's voice as well as some of the other authors in the series. The plot---multiple people found dead at an art gallery---is plodding along.

The recent Smithsonian has a very nice cover article on Samuel Adams, but I found another one, on the science of smells and smelling, to be more interesting. The newest Archaeology just arrived, with a cover story on England's medieval abbeys.

I'm still listening to Andy Serkis's brilliant, compelling reading of LotR. I'm now well into The Return of the King, where iconic scene follows iconic scene. Our heroes are counting their losses after their victory in the battle of the Pelennor Fields and debating what to do next to challenge the Dark Lord on his dark throne. Never mind that I've read this book many, many times, and even listened to the earlier recording, I'm hanging on and relishing every word.

So what have you been reading?

Where now the horse and the rider? Where is the horn that was blowing?
Where is the helm and the hauberk, and the bright hair flowing?
Where is the hand on the harpstring, and the red fire glowing?
Where is the spring and the harvest and the tall corn growing?
They have passed like rain on the mountain, like a wind in the meadow;
The days have gone down in the West behind the hills into shadow....


Annael
Elvenhome


Oct 12 2022, 5:16pm

Post #2 of 12 (869 views)
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Love 84 Charing Cross Road [In reply to] Can't Post

A long-time favorite, always worth a re-read. They made a movie with Anne Bancroft and Anthony Hopkins, but for my money it didn't capture the charm of the book.

I've just finished Deathless Gods, which P.C. Hodgell promises is the penultimate book of her Kencyrath series. I was first led to read Godstalk, the first of the series, many years ago on this very forum by someone who said "it's probably out of print but if you can find it READ THIS BOOK." I found a hardbound first edition on alibris and loved it. Then Hodgell, who had been busy pursuing a PhD, started writing sequels. The world and the characters are inventive and unique and compelling and I have re-read the entire series every time a new book comes out, always finding something new (it's a very complicated plot!). I can't say this latest book was as compelling, however. It feels like a detour, picking up some plot threads that got a bit dropped along the way - filling in a hole in the sweater of the story, perhaps? Things happen very rapidly without a lot of tension being built, and considering that the entire series is heading toward a very large confrontation, I would have expected more urgency, more fraught-ness. We shall see.

I also got The Golden Enclaves, the last of Naomi Novik's Scholomance trilogy, and I'm very excited about that. BUT FIRST I need to read The Godbreaker by our very own Ufthak, Mike Brooks, which I just got on Kindle. So I'm awash in long-anticipated books!

I also read FireGrrl by Sharon Ryals Tamm. Sharon & I were 2 of the 4 first women ever hired by the Hoodsport Ranger District on the Olympic Peninsula to be forest fire fighters, back in 1974. I lost contact with her years ago and only just found out that 1. she has recently died and 2. she wrote this book. It is a very thinly fictionalized account of our first year on the crew. She hops from memory to memory with no explanation, so it's a little hard to follow, and her impressions of the other people on the crew - including me - do not always square with my memories of them, but she's got the major incidents down pretty much as I recall them. Including the time the four of us came very close to being gang raped while out on a fire. The story is told against the backdrop of Sharon's own earlier experience of being raped and the threat that was hanging over our college town of an "unknown rapist" who was kidnapping and killing women. Turned out to be Ted Bundy, but we didn't know that then. So that stirred up a lot of memories.

I am a dreamer of words, of written words.
-- Gaston Bachelard

* * * * * * * * * *

NARF and member of Deplorable Cultus since 1967


(This post was edited by Annael on Oct 12 2022, 5:21pm)


ElanorTX
Tol Eressea


Oct 12 2022, 7:22pm

Post #3 of 12 (857 views)
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84, Charing Cross Road [In reply to] Can't Post

I remember reading my parents' hardbound copy, but never knew there was a film. One detail that impressed me was how long shortages and rationing persisted after the war ended.

"I shall not wholly fail if anything can still grow fair in days to come."



Ataahua
Forum Admin / Moderator


Oct 12 2022, 7:48pm

Post #4 of 12 (852 views)
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I'm making my way through Tom Clancy books [In reply to] Can't Post

The Hunt for Red October was enjoyable although I like the movie's ending better (it's tidier by removing repetition).

Red Storm Rising is a re-read, although all I remembered was that it involves submarines and Reykjavik. The book was published in 1987 so there's still the Soviet Socialist Empire and the Berlin Wall, and the technology is waaaay out of date - but the push and pull of politics and war remain the same.

Reading Red Storm Rising - with its plot developments of the influence of oil supplies, destroyed bridges and the potential use of tactical nuclear weapons - has has been a disconcerting hall of echoes given that we have the Ukraine war going on.

Celebrimbor: "Pretty rings..."
Dwarves: "Pretty rings..."
Men: "Pretty rings..."
Sauron: "Mine's better."

"Ah, how ironic, the addictive qualities of Sauron’s master weapon led to its own destruction. Which just goes to show, kids - if you want two small and noble souls to succeed on a mission of dire importance... send an evil-minded beggar with them too." - Gandalf's Diaries, final par, by Ufthak.


Fantasy novel - The Arcanist's Tattoo

My LOTR fan-fiction


Ataahua
Forum Admin / Moderator


Oct 12 2022, 7:50pm

Post #5 of 12 (850 views)
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What an unusual experience [In reply to] Can't Post


In Reply To
It is a very thinly fictionalized account of our first year on the crew.


...to read about yourself and your experiences through another person's eyes. Are you in touch with anyone else in your crew?

Celebrimbor: "Pretty rings..."
Dwarves: "Pretty rings..."
Men: "Pretty rings..."
Sauron: "Mine's better."

"Ah, how ironic, the addictive qualities of Sauron’s master weapon led to its own destruction. Which just goes to show, kids - if you want two small and noble souls to succeed on a mission of dire importance... send an evil-minded beggar with them too." - Gandalf's Diaries, final par, by Ufthak.


Fantasy novel - The Arcanist's Tattoo

My LOTR fan-fiction


Annael
Elvenhome


Oct 12 2022, 9:46pm

Post #6 of 12 (842 views)
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I'm not [In reply to] Can't Post

It would be interesting to compare notes!

I am a dreamer of words, of written words.
-- Gaston Bachelard

* * * * * * * * * *

NARF and member of Deplorable Cultus since 1967


Aunt Dora Baggins
Immortal


Oct 12 2022, 10:24pm

Post #7 of 12 (847 views)
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The Rose Garden Husband [In reply to] Can't Post

It's a 100-year-old romance novel with a silly premise: a dying mother hires a poor librarian to marry her invalid son, who is also expected to die soon. (Spoiler: he doesn't.)

My daughter recommended it to me, saying that it reminded her of The Secret Garden. I listened to it on Librivox and devoured it in one day. Despite the silly premise the writing was very good. There are some unfortunate racial and ethnic slurs, none mean-spirited, and typical of the time. The author won a Pulitzer Prize for poetry (shared with Carl Sandburg that year.)

I'm also re-reading the Silmarillion as I enjoy RoP.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GNU Terry Pratchett
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"For DORA BAGGINS in memory of a LONG correspondence, with love from Bilbo; on a large wastebasket. Dora was Drogo's sister, and the eldest surviving female relative of Bilbo and Frodo; she was ninety-nine, and had written reams of good advice for more than half a century."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"A Chance Meeting at Rivendell" and other stories

leleni at hotmail dot com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



ElanorTX
Tol Eressea


Oct 13 2022, 5:51am

Post #8 of 12 (825 views)
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Hall of echoes [In reply to] Can't Post

 

In Reply To

Reading Red Storm Rising - with its plot developments of the influence of oil supplies, destroyed bridges and the potential use of tactical nuclear weapons - has been a disconcerting hall of echoes given that we have the Ukraine war going on.


"I shall not wholly fail if anything can still grow fair in days to come."



Ginger
Rohan

Oct 13 2022, 4:40pm

Post #9 of 12 (797 views)
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The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith [In reply to] Can't Post

This is the sixth book in the Cormoran Strike series (pseudonym of J.K. Rowling) I like not only trying to figure out who did it but also the story of the personal lives of Strike and Robin (though I do find her a bit whiny at times). I found it interesting that amongst the murder suspects are the moderators of a website. The book is almost 1000 pages, but some of the pages are columns of moderators speaking on separate channels at the same time.
I liked the story, even though I didn’t figure out the mystery.

And next to read is my hardcover copy of The Godbreaker.


Annael
Elvenhome


Oct 14 2022, 6:29pm

Post #10 of 12 (755 views)
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me too [In reply to] Can't Post

I remember watching A Town like Alice and being surprised at how long rationing lasted in the UK. I didn't realize it became worse after the war. Helene's food packages must have been like manna from heaven.

I am a dreamer of words, of written words.
-- Gaston Bachelard

* * * * * * * * * *

NARF and member of Deplorable Cultus since 1967


Rostron2
Gondor


Oct 15 2022, 6:46pm

Post #11 of 12 (730 views)
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Bernard Cornwell - Revisited [In reply to] Can't Post

I had read the Bernard Cornwell Saxon stories sort of as they came out years ago. The TV series Last Kingdom was very good overall, so I've gone back to the books to re-read from the start.


NottaSackville
Valinor

Oct 17 2022, 1:04pm

Post #12 of 12 (623 views)
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Great series! [In reply to] Can't Post

It's forced its way into my top 4 all-time favorite series.

Happiness: money matters, but less than we think and not in the way that we think. Family is important and so are friends, while envy is toxic -- and so is excessive thinking. Beaches are optional. Trust is not. Neither is gratitude. - The Geography of Bliss by Eric Weiner as summarized by Lily Fairbairn. And a bit of the Hobbit reading thrown in never hurts. - NottaSackville

 
 

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