Aussie Readers discussion
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What Are You Currently Reading? (doesn't have to be an Aussie book)
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Tango
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Jul 24, 2012 02:00AM

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We have to compare it to that film about The Holocaust, 'The Pianist'.


Well done! Have a ball....let us know in here how it was (chat thread maybe!!) We'd love to hear:)
Ashleigh wrote: "Thanks. I still haven't worked out how to do that!"
In your comment box, top RHS it says 'add book/author'. Click on that, put your book title in and hit 'search'. When the correct book shows, hit 'add', and there you will have it! If you want the cover to show, down the bottom of the box are your choices:) Good luck!
In your comment box, top RHS it says 'add book/author'. Click on that, put your book title in and hit 'search'. When the correct book shows, hit 'add', and there you will have it! If you want the cover to show, down the bottom of the box are your choices:) Good luck!




Anyway, the food was lovely, the interview was really good and it was well worth the money. Got 2 books autographed. I wonder if the interview will be on the ABC website, because Tony Delroy was the interviewer. (Is that a bad wig or his real hair???) I think I will go to more of these....
Marianne wrote: "Brenda, you will never believe this! Jess was opposite me on the same table! We didn't realise until the end when we were talking about books and book sites and GoodReads............what's this in ..."
Haha!! That's amazing Marianne! She messaged me on FB and told me she'd been chatting to you all through lunch, and hadn't realized who you were until near the end!! It's a small world, that's for sure! Glad you enjoyed the luncheon anyway, also the interview with Jodi:) Sounds like a lot of fun!
Haha!! That's amazing Marianne! She messaged me on FB and told me she'd been chatting to you all through lunch, and hadn't realized who you were until near the end!! It's a small world, that's for sure! Glad you enjoyed the luncheon anyway, also the interview with Jodi:) Sounds like a lot of fun!

I also ran into a former neighbour there
Marianne wrote: "there must have been 300+ people there, so it really was amazing
I also ran into a former neighbour there"
OMG!!! That is unbelievable! To be put at the same table, with that many people! And the neighbour too!!
I also ran into a former neighbour there"
OMG!!! That is unbelievable! To be put at the same table, with that many people! And the neighbour too!!

I'm currently reading city of lost souls :)
Heather wrote: "Wow, last I heard there were only 3 City of Bones books: looks like I've got some reading to do!"
Catch up time Heather;)
Catch up time Heather;)

Yeah, I stopped after the third. Like, they were fun to read, but I was content where the story was finished. After reading so many negative reviews of the fourth book, it became apparent Cassandra Clare was just milking it. I didnt want to waste my time.
Fun fact: Cassandra Clare is milking the series the series further. Not only were there an extra three books added to it, as well as a prequel trilogy, now there will be a LA spin off.
Haha, can you imagine how much shit JK Rowling would get in if she wrote another four Harry Potter books, then a prequel trilogy about James + Lily's time at Hogwarts, then another series about random Hogwarts students.
I just wish Cassandra Clare would come up with some new ideas.

Yeah, I stopped after the third. Like, they were fun to read, but I was content wh..."
Huh, I wasn't aware of all that. It's been over 2 years since I read the books, so I can't really remember how it ended... I remember enjoying them, but not thinking they were great literature. Will have to do some research before making any purchases. Sometimes it's better just to leave a good thing alone.

Isn't it funny how people's opinions differ so much about one particular book/series (and other things of course). It's a good thing though...pretty boring if everyone liked the same thing! ;P


Oh wow thankyou Katie - I'll get onto it soon then :D

Michael wrote: "I just finished this wonderful book. The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry.
Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Possibly the best book i have read this year. Yes its that ..."
Excellent review Michael...I'll definitely have to pick it up now:)
Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Possibly the best book i have read this year. Yes its that ..."
Excellent review Michael...I'll definitely have to pick it up now:)

That's one of the bonuses about GR - you read a wide variety of opinions, and then if you choose to read the book, can make up your own mind, and add a review to addd to the on going discussion.

I heard an interview on Radio National "Conversations with Richard Fidler". The book sounded interesting.
Maggie wrote: "Brenda wrote: "Isn't it funny how people's opinions differ so much about one particular book/series (and other things of course). It's a good thing though...pretty boring if everyone liked the same..."
You're right there Maggie!
You're right there Maggie!

I would define milking as having finished a series, then going back and writing at least 9 more books, instead of moving on.
But yes, yay for differing opinion.

I would define milking as having finished a series, then going back and writing at least 9 more books, instead of moving on.
..."
It definitely seems like she's milking it; however, I don't know if going back to a story after you've finished it is necessarily milking. Some authors get caught up in fictional worlds inside their heads and just keep developing them. I don't think Tolkien was milking it when he kept writing about Middle Earth or Melina Marchetta when she wrote The Piper's Son. I'm not saying Cassandra Clare isn't milking it, but I don't believe finishing a series then deciding to write more necessarily equates milking it. These books have been pretty successful, so it's easy to assume she's milking it, but who's to say, maybe she's just caught up in their world.

Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Possibly the best book i have read this year. Yes its that ..."
I seriously contemplated reading this, but then I read the description and Michael's excellent review, and all I could think of was this (which I knew would vex me on every single page if I did commit to the book): A rational person who hears that a friend, for whom he cares deeply, is dying... does not delay his arrival at her deathbed for untold days or weeks and invite his own prospective demise by idiotically walking across the whole country utterly without preparation. No, he begs, borrows or steals whatever he has to to take a plane, or at worst, a bus, with the hope of arriving *before* the friend is dead. Also, absolutely irrespective of the state of the marriage, simply to walk out on your partner, without warning, notice or explanation, is unambiguously abusive in the extreme. Joyce's idea may be a great and creative literary conceit, but in the real world, Fry's actions are irrational and abusive. I gather the book must be gripping and superlatively well-written, but I could never get past the problem of the premise.
Mark wrote: "Michael wrote: "I just finished this wonderful book. The Unlikely Pilgrimage Of Harold Fry.
Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Possibly the best book i have read this yea..."
Well said Mark!! Just as well it's not non-fiction, isn't it;P
Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Possibly the best book i have read this yea..."
Well said Mark!! Just as well it's not non-fiction, isn't it;P

...
Well said Mark!! Just as well it's not non-fiction, isn't it;P
Thanks, Brenda! It would be nice, at least with respect to the part about people abandoning their life-long partners without notice, if it were non-fiction. :( I guess this particular sore point is why the premise would make it particularly difficult for me to appreciate.




On another note, I've finished writing the short story anthology, so I'm relaxing with a guilty indulgence and re-reading the Harry Potter series. It's just so much fun and so well written, I love going back to this series.
Of course I also have my usual pile of books I have to read for Uni **little sigh** :)




Likely to move onto Ship of Magic, the next trilogy that Robin Hobb wrote in that world, afterwards.
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