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What have you just read? Opinions, recommendations, reviews Part 2

My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

My English review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...





PattyMacDotComma wrote: "Terra Nullius, by Indigenous Aussie author Claire G. Coleman, is a unique take on colonisation, incorporating history, philosophy and religion, oh yes, and fantasy..."
This one sounds intriguing Patty!
This one sounds intriguing Patty!

The Haunting of Hill House, an old favorite that I re-read after many years and loved even more. Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and I just finished The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. I found The God of Small Things difficult to get into, but eventually loved it. This one started smooth and got more difficult. Still, an amazingly beautiful book. Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

One way I enjoy reading freebies is by concentating on the craft - identifying what works, what doesn’t and what I wish the author had done. It has helped me appreciate polished writing more and it helps control my inner (essential?) nitpicker.


My English review: https://www.goodreads.com/r..."
For me, his best book is Ten Days that Shook the World where he gives his first-hand account of the Bolshevik Revolution. I read this way back in late 70s during Russian classes.
There was also a film made starring Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton as Reed and his lover Louise Bryant. I know Beatty sounds miscast but, to me, in the 80s he seemed okay. I haven't watched the film as a mature adult.

My English review: https://www.go..."
I should try to read it again. I have Ten Days and tried to read it but I gave up after 100 pages because it was too confusing.

There was also a film made starring Warren Beatty ..."
Ten Days that Shook the World is high on my to-read list, and I'm glad to hear it's good.
Warren Beatty actually also wrote, produced, and directed the movie Reds.I saw it again recently--it had been many years--and especially appreciated the interviews with people who lived through that period and knew John Reed and Louise Bryant then. I loved it, and look forward to the book!



Yes Petra. I have read everything she has ever written. You don't need to be a member of wordpress.com to see the reviews. If, for some reason the link doesn't work, just put sandysbookaday in your browser and it should bring the blog up.☺







My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

As it stands, I got some tips to work on and a refresher on many others. What I didn't like was that there is an on-line quiz to evaluate yourself; give yourself a baseline. The code to access the quiz can only be used once. Since the quiz is a large part of the whole, I took away half the rating for this failure.
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I've fininshed yesterday Il gioco dei regni by Clara Sereni, that unfortunately has been translated only in Hebrew.
It is a really beautiful novel, based on the true story of the writer's family, especially focused on his mother and father. Of a Jewish family, her father entered the Comunist Party before WWII and for that he was arrested, torured and sentenced to death - luckily he escaped after a bombing of the prison. His brother, who had emigrated to Israel before Israel exhisted as a State, was captured when in Europe - for helping fellow Hebrews - during the war and sent to Dachau, where he died about 6 months before the liberation.
It is an extreamly interesting illustration of life in Italy in those years, also considering the rules that the PCI - the Comunist Party of Italy - imposed on his comrades.
It is a really beautiful novel, based on the true story of the writer's family, especially focused on his mother and father. Of a Jewish family, her father entered the Comunist Party before WWII and for that he was arrested, torured and sentenced to death - luckily he escaped after a bombing of the prison. His brother, who had emigrated to Israel before Israel exhisted as a State, was captured when in Europe - for helping fellow Hebrews - during the war and sent to Dachau, where he died about 6 months before the liberation.
It is an extreamly interesting illustration of life in Italy in those years, also considering the rules that the PCI - the Comunist Party of Italy - imposed on his comrades.

It is a really beautiful novel, based on the true ..."
I wish it existed in English.

My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."
Strange that so many people are shelving it as YA - read it years ago and re-read a while back and it has always been a science fiction novel, regarded as a classic among SF readers, and as an adult book.

Furthermore, it is only science fiction in the respect that such a medical intervention lay in the future. Actually, speculative fiction would be a more appropriate classification. I had no trouble with it though b/c in all other respects it reads simply as a book of fiction. I put all such books - speculative fiction, science fiction, magical realism, myths- on my "magic" shelf. I f you have a specific shelf for all all kinds of books you get so many!

Young people could also read it to learn something about how it is wrong to bully and discriminate someone, and to behave like that to someone with disabilities. One of the saddest things in it is to read in the diary that he thinks people are his friends when really they are making fun of him, and then how he realises this as his intelligence grows.
Speculative fiction was the term preferred by some SF writers, I think Harlan Ellison being one of them.

After Dark - review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2108842406
and
After Glow - review - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2108842525
I finished the audiobook of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. I enjoyed the story but the accents the narrator put on were terrible and definitely reduced my enjoyment of the book.
The other two books in the series are narrated by a different author but aren't available from my library service so I might end up reading the paperbacks instead
The other two books in the series are narrated by a different author but aren't available from my library service so I might end up reading the paperbacks instead

Binti was my 200th book of the year, finishing off my Goodreads Challenge. It was really refreshing - a nice change from the common white guy goes to space sci-fi. I have the second on hold at the library now.


Binti was my 200th book of the year, finishing off my Goodreads Challenge. It was really refreshing - a nice change from the common white guy goes..."
Congrats on reaching your goal Chinook!

We both agree that is a lot in the book for both young adults and adults. I think the book fits both. Not many books can pull that off successfully.
We are speaking of Flowers for Algernon.

Binti was my 200th book of the year, finishing off my Goodreads Challenge. It was really refreshing - a nice change from the common white guy goes..."
Congratulations!
Chinook wrote: "https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Binti was my 200th book of the year, finishing off my Goodreads Challenge. It was really refreshing - a nice change from the common white guy goes..."
Congrats Chinook - that was a good sized challenge!
Binti was my 200th book of the year, finishing off my Goodreads Challenge. It was really refreshing - a nice change from the common white guy goes..."
Congrats Chinook - that was a good sized challenge!
Pam wrote: "Young people could also read it to learn something about how it is wrong to bully and discriminate someone, and to behave like that to someone with disabilities..."
Definitely Pam! I expect this is a very strong reason that it is so widely taught to adolescents - it is a book that teachers feel helps develop empathy for those who are different and in particular for those who are differently abled.
Definitely Pam! I expect this is a very strong reason that it is so widely taught to adolescents - it is a book that teachers feel helps develop empathy for those who are different and in particular for those who are differently abled.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and
The Two Towers (contains spoilers!):
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

My review of The Picture Book:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


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The story started slow but picked up as I got to know the ..."
This is definitely a series which gets better as you get to know Erlandur and his colleagues. I started with book Silence of the Grave (because it was on the Guardian's list) - this is the 4th book in the series but the first two have not been translated into English so for me, it is the second book. It was excellent and got me hooked on the series.