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What will you be reading next?
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Giacomo
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Dec 08, 2013 02:26PM

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Never heard of that one before but it sounds brilliant!

Never heard of that one before but it sounds brilliant!"
It should be pretty famous, I will let you know...

Tracey I would go with The Language of Flowers I enjoyed it so much. I found it to be really touching emotionally. It brought tears to my eyes.

I'm going to read a contemporary romance (dont know which one, but need a light read after Allegiant!) next and start City of Bones at the weekend :)


And when I finish Phineas Redux, it will be time to read my last A-to-Z challenge book -- Zuleika Dobson.

I'll be reading A Christmas Carol later on this month over Christmas. I'm really looking forward to finally reading it, I remember the tale from when I was a child and loved it back then.
My next book will probably be The Manuscript Found in Saragossa by Jan Potocki.







I am starting A Christmas Carol tomorrow for sure. :)



Snap, Christmas Eve for [book:A Christmas Carol

I think you're in for a treat with both of them.

I think you're in for a trea..."
Agreed, both are favourites of mine. Alias Grace is a well-crafted tale that drew me in and Austerlitz is very poignant. WG Sebald is one of my favourite writers, The Rings of Saturn is another one of his books that I really appreciated. It's a kind of travelogue of a walk that he took along the Suffolk coast, weaving in lots of observations, details and thoughts that he had along the way.



I think you're..."
Cool, I'd heard good things about it so am really looking forward to it now!
Leslie wrote: "I will read, well listen to, A Christmas Carol on Christmas Eve... in the meantime, I am just about to start a Christmas story Laura mentioned - [book:Christmas at Thompson Hall: A Mid-..."
Really nice!!!
Really nice!!!

I think that I may change my mind, now that I am reminded that today is the 170th anniversary of the publication of A Christmas Carol… but I also have Village Christmas by Miss Read from the library.
These very short novellas (or long short stories) are really boosting my numbers :-)

Leslie wrote: "I think that I may change my mind, now that I am reminded that today is the 170th anniversary of the publication of A Christmas Carol"
Yesterday at the "Circolo dei lettori" - a sort of bookclub here in Perugia, we had a discussion about it, and it was held by an english teacher whom I know - he's the owner of the school my kids attend! - and who works a lot with the theatre. it went really well, all were involved and had something to say. Even one who thought Dickens a second class writer, if compared with Dostoevly.
I don't say I totally agree....
Yesterday at the "Circolo dei lettori" - a sort of bookclub here in Perugia, we had a discussion about it, and it was held by an english teacher whom I know - he's the owner of the school my kids attend! - and who works a lot with the theatre. it went really well, all were involved and had something to say. Even one who thought Dickens a second class writer, if compared with Dostoevly.
I don't say I totally agree....

Yesterday at the "Circolo dei lettori" - a sort of bookclub here in Perugia, we had a discussion about it, and it was held by an english teacher whom I know - he's the owner of the school my kids attend! - and who works a lot with the theatre. it went really well, all were involved and had something to say. Even one who thought Dickens a second class writer, if compared with Dostoevly.
I don't say I totally agree.... ..."
I haven't read enough Doestoyevsky to be able to judge but it seems to me from the little I have read that their styles are so different that it would be difficult to compare. We'll see how I feel after I read The Brothers Karamazov next year!
Leslie wrote: "I haven't read enough Doestoyevsky to be able to judge but it seems to me from the little I have read that their styles are so different that it would be difficult to compare. We'll see how I feel after I read The Brothers Karamazov next year!"
They're totally different. Dostoevsky is much more ... "deep", involved into complex mental processing, sense of guilt, earth destiny and so on. Really a great author, but I sometimes find "easier" author, describing more or less everyday life like Dickens or Trollope, more "illuminating" on human exhistance that those others "filosophical" ones...
It is something we could deepen sooner or later. What other people think about it?
They're totally different. Dostoevsky is much more ... "deep", involved into complex mental processing, sense of guilt, earth destiny and so on. Really a great author, but I sometimes find "easier" author, describing more or less everyday life like Dickens or Trollope, more "illuminating" on human exhistance that those others "filosophical" ones...
It is something we could deepen sooner or later. What other people think about it?

Leslie, you are reading The Brother's Karamasov in June right? Gill and I are planning a paired read of Dostoyevsky, where we'd read a novel (or two - a shorter one and a long one) and a non-fiction book (or two) about him or his writings. I wonder whether maybe we could have a Dostoyevsky month (or two;)) sometime next year, where - similar to our Daphne du Maurier thing we could tackle some Dostoyevsky toghether.


Me too - this is one of his novels which is well-known to have the name confusion (characters who have multiple names). I plan to use SparkNotes to help out!

But that might well be a good idea, Leslie. I really do want to tackle it, but it sounds daunting.


Margaret - How have you enjoyed GOT? It's been a long while on my TBR, though I've watched the series and have the box set ready to start and work my way through next year! Yikes, I suppose I better start on these next month!
Rahat - Did you like The Book Thief? I read it this year and it took me a while to get into, but I ended up loving it.

I would love to join in a readalong :)



Manon Lescaut is on my long TBR list -- I will be interested in hearing what you think of it when you finish.

How are you liking Game of Thrones? Personally, when I find a series I like, I read them all back-to-back (or at least I did pre-GoodReads), but those are pretty hefty books so interspersing something different might be good. Not much help there, I'm afraid...
Shirley wrote: "I'll be reading The Hunger Games next as it's the next choice for my book group."
Next year choice for me!!! The three of them!
In a day or two I hope to finish City of Bones and then it'll be high time to start A History of Reading
Next year choice for me!!! The three of them!
In a day or two I hope to finish City of Bones and then it'll be high time to start A History of Reading
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