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What will you be reading next?
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message 351:
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Amber
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Jan 05, 2014 03:47PM

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-the curse of having just finished a really great book that sets your expectations up on the clouds-

-the curse of having just finished a really great book that sets your expectations up on the clouds-"
Do you want suggestions? And if so, maybe indicate what type of book you feel in the mood for...
I have a fairly long list of what I wanted to read in January, so I know that I will be reading next - a play (either Travesties by our winter playwright Tom Stoppard or a Shakespeare play) and then a Barsetshire novel by Angela Thirkell...

Tracey, I must have overlooked this when you posted it but I am a Tom Baker fan, so that title made me smile (Who on Earth is Tom Baker)!

Sure, suggestions are always welcome! Right now I'm looking for something that doesn't demand too much energy or effort to read but that is nevertheless worth reading. Very vague, I know but that's the definition of I-don't-know-what-to-read-next mood...

Sure, suggestions are always welcome! Right now I'm looking for something that does..."
I looked over your shelves & it looks like I am not the person to make recommendations for you as we have very little overlap. However I did see So You Want to Be a Wizard on your to-read shelf - sounds like it might fit the bill? Or, since you liked Isabel Allende, maybe a Louis de Bernières book?


Clare wrote: "Next I plan to read The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton and then some Ernest Hemmingway but I can't remember which books of his I have here in London!"
The Luminaries it's on my TBR list .. after I've finished moving!!!!
The Luminaries it's on my TBR list .. after I've finished moving!!!!


Me Before You
The Wisdom of Psychopaths: What Saints, Spies, and Serial Killers Can Teach Us About Success

Snow Country"
I love Kawabata's writings. Hope, you find it very interesting...



Laurel, I've been eyeing Embassytown by him for quite a while now, did you read it?




I visited Auschwitz-Birkenau a few years ago while being in Poland. I hadn't slept all night since it was a red-eye flight and went there feeling very fragile already, which might not be the best state to be in when visiting a concentration camp. Horrifying. Would be interested in hearing your thoughts once you've finished 'Night'!

Jenny wrote: "Which places apart from Berlin and Sachsenhausen have you been Erica?
I visited Auschwitz-Birkenau a few years ago while being in Poland. I hadn't slept all night since it was a red-eye flight and..."
My mom visited that camp just a couple of years before dieying and said it's a place too see before you die...
I visited Auschwitz-Birkenau a few years ago while being in Poland. I hadn't slept all night since it was a red-eye flight and..."
My mom visited that camp just a couple of years before dieying and said it's a place too see before you die...

Same here - I remember reading 'The Passage' when it came out, and then I never heard of the series again. I wasn't even aware that the next one was published.

Yes, and apparently a third is being written.


Oh I absolutely loved that book, Gemma! Parts of it were hard to read, but the story is wonderful.

Good choice!
I am not sure what to read next - either The Prime Minister by Trollope (since I am still working on the Palliser series challenge from last year!) or Vile Bodies by Waugh (as part of my 2014 category challenge)... although I really should be looking for books for my Around the World challenge too!

Anastasia wrote: "I'm going to start Buddenbrooks: The Decline of a Family, ...wish me luck!"
A really beautiful book Anastasia!!!! You won't regret it!
A really beautiful book Anastasia!!!! You won't regret it!

The old'uns, all from 1953-63 are:
A Summer Bird-Cage by Margaret Drabble
The Ballad of Peckham Rye by Muriel Spark
The Country Girls by Edna O'Brien
The Assistant by Bernard Malamud
The Humbler Creation by Pamela Hansford Johnson
Under The Net by Iris Murdoch
The Great Fortune by Olivia Manning
The Picnic at Sakkara by P H Newby
The Man Who Won The Pools by J I M Stewart (aka Michael Innes)
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
Mr Pye by Mervyn Peake
Happy reading hours ahead during this wretched wet weather here in England's Peak Districk.
Hope these give some ideas to others!

Having received many good reviews and many of my friends having great love for it, I think Rebecca will surely be an interesting read.

Dhanaraj wrote: "Tracey wrote: "Dhanaraj hope you enjoy Rebecca."
Having received many good reviews and many of my friends having great love for it, I think Rebecca will surely be an interesting read."
Great book
Having received many good reviews and many of my friends having great love for it, I think Rebecca will surely be an interesting read."
Great book


Books mentioned in this topic
Rebecca (other topics)Rebecca (other topics)
Rebecca (other topics)
Rebecca (other topics)
Buddenbrooks: The Decline of a Family (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Justin Cronin (other topics)Justin Cronin (other topics)
Justin Cronin (other topics)
Ernest Hemingway (other topics)
Ernest Hemingway (other topics)
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