Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion
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What Are You Reading Now?

I think the dog is the perfect narrator, his voice really makes the book for me. (The vibe is very like Pratchett at his best, I think.) Plus I love mysteries, and there are plenty of them here. I'm thinking I may want to buy a copy to reread regularly.

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

I read that last month and really liked it, such a quirky book.

Paraíso Perdido by John Milton
Battles Of The Bible: A Military History Of Ancient Israel by Chaim Herzog

Just realised that it is the same place that inspired arthur conan doyles Lost World. This is earlier though, Lost World was only published in 1912.

Put aside all thoughts (if you have any) of the disastrous 1957 film adaptation. That movie was made as if no one involved had read the 1,000+ page book (and indeed, the director admitted that he hadn’t even opened it).
The adaptation was doomed from the beginning because this is a book with a complicated temporal structure and Joycean language in an American tone; it doesn’t scream “Hollywood”. Nonetheless, MGM had awarded Lockridge a hefty prize even before the book’s publication, contingent on some cutting to the huge manuscript, in addition to the excisions that publisher Houghton Mifflin and the Book of the Month Club were already demanding. (The manuscript still exists at Harvard, and I wish the Lockridge family would authorize a published restoration.)
Lockridge felt sullied by all the negotiations and believed he had compromised his creation; he gassed himself just as the novel was hitting the top of the bestseller lists.
The novel was forthrightly and scandalously erotic for the Forties. I give Ross Lockridge enormous credit for that delightful and bounding frankness. As someone once said, none of us got here without a sexual act. 😏
Teri-K wrote: "Interesting discussion on Paradise Lost. I've read it as a strong believer and then not, and it definitely has plenty to think about from both perspectives. I'll confess I prefer his "regular" poet..."
That sounds good Teri-K. I also have been thinking about reading Zelazny - Z in his name!!
That sounds good Teri-K. I also have been thinking about reading Zelazny - Z in his name!!


⭐⭐⭐
For first time readers the rating would be 4 stars and above.
For series readers like me this story is Similar to books in the series. Thriller.
Read as a fan of the series and the hero Gabriel Allon.
Series needs some unpredictability to rejuvenate.
My review here - https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

This would be a great choice for Z, and perfect for this time of year. Also, it's a quick read, both in length and in how the story moves along. So it would be easy to fit in as the year draws to a close.
The only downside might be getting a physical copy if you want one. My library found a copy for me, there are audio and ebook versions available now. There's a new pb edition due out February 2025, which I have my eye on. There are wonderful illustrations that added a lot of fun to the book.

*Now that I’m returning to many writers in retirement after long hiatuses, I usually first re-read what I had read by them before, in order to refresh my recollections and old impressions.

Possibly one of the most scary books, I have ever read. It turns out that in real world there are sometimes monsters under the bed. An orange orc takes up a lot of room in this book about Biden’s presidency. Whenever Biden was proactive on this or that, or prevented an escalation in the middle east, the question kept coming: What would some other president have done? I had no idea that the use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine was that close a call.

So i just looked through what was already on there and i've started Omega: The Last Days of the World by Camille Flammarion (1894) .
The apocalyspse is at least horror adjacent, it'll do :P .

So i just looked through what was already on there and i've started [book:Omeg..."
Thank you. added.

Also, I had put Our Mutual Friend on hold because life was getting stressed and I didn't feel like I could really appreciate it. I've picked it up again, and it's so good - it may turn out to be my favorite Dickens.
For nonfiction I just started The Plantagenets by Dan Brown. I loved Powers and Thrones so much I can't wait to read another by him. I wish he wrote more books that aren't solely focused on Great Britain, though.

Wreade1872 wrote: "I was going to add something for holloween but my ereader needs to be plugged in to update and i couldn't be bothered.
So i just looked through what was already on there and i've started [book:Omeg..."
I think Apocalypse is horror.
So i just looked through what was already on there and i've started [book:Omeg..."
I think Apocalypse is horror.

Rebecca is one of my favorites but this also taps into the dark side of love, too. I just reviewed it here
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I got this through an ILL, and I'm sure wishing I had my own copy because I'm itching to mark up the book so I can track the clues and red herrings. Instead I've resorted to writing them down on a big bookmark, which isn't quite so satisfying. I've read a few other books by Lorac and some of them were excellent, but this is my first in the Carnac series. I also love the cover from the British Library Crime Classics edition.




It was found in a box of books that were being thrown out, presumably by a teacher given that they all have questions written on them in ink, like someone planning a test.
Anyway it had a decent run, i'll look out for a new (or rather old) copy at the second hand bookshop.

Rebecca is one of my favorites but this also taps into the dark side of love, too. I just reviewed it here
https://www.goodreads.co..."
whisper it quietly but I prefer MCR to Rebecca :oO

I'm almost exactly halfway through Our Mutual Friend. The threads are winding around each other and complications are increasing.

ah, this one is on my TBR list; has been there for a while. I could not resist buying an English mystery with my hometown on the cover ;-), but still have to read it.

I hope you like it as much as I did!

Highly recommended. Do you have any other suggestion related to future-thinking?




There's a theory that Shakespeare wrote this one because Falstaff was such a big hit in the previous play he knew people would love to see one mostly about him. Clearly, I'm not the intended audience. lol
However, Henry V is coming soon! And I can't wait for the Dan Jones book of same name to arrive in paperback so I can buy it and read it, too.
I finished The Lighted Heart and loved it.

Last year I watched a documentary about the race written about in this book, which is called the Mongolian Derby. I didn’t realize when I bought this book that it was written about the same year of the race featured in the documentary.
Personally, I am really enjoying her poetic and incisive writing style and some of her reflections and topics. I also find it interesting to think about writing a memoir centered on an event from about 7 years in the past, and trying to analyze one’s own ideas and behavior almost from another lens after the fact. In this case, the race and some of her words and behaviors appear in the documentary and news clips, so she had the choice of going back to give some kind of context or explanation from her perspective. I also find it interesting to see the kinds of context or knowledge about Mongolia and the culture that she adds which she didn’t know at the time and gained later on.
The Amazon description says it’s “for fans of Helen MacDonald’s H is for Hawk,” which I guess is a connection because Macdonald enfolds references to T.S. White’s The Goshawk. In Rough Magic, the author makes several references to The Tempest. When I finish the book I will be better able to evaluate what I think about the connections she was making between her story and the Tempest, but so far I found the inclusion of those references interesting and relevant.

I've also started Shakespeare's Cymbeline. I haven't read or seen this one before and it's not one of my favorite story lines, I'm afraid. But the cover fits the season, at least! lol





I found this book at the local library,. So those who do not want to buy another book may find it there.
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I found this book at the local library,. So those who do not want to buy anothe..."
Lovely! This is on my TBR for 2025, I'll be getting it from my library. Obviously I haven't read it yet, but I agree with the idea that actors and directors can shed fascinating light on the plays in different ways from academics.


First I reread Christie's The Clocks. I think it's an underrated book by her. I really like Colin's voice as a narrator, and I enjoy watching all the different threads wind together at the end. Plus, Poirot is bored so he's reading a lot of older mysteries, and you get a peek at Christie's opinions of her fellow Golden Age authors. Fun!
Last night was our first really cold one, so I curled up on the sofa in front of the electric fireplace with some hot tea and started Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart. It's been so long since I read this one that I barely remember it. But I'll take a trip to some exotic location, this time the Isle of Skye, with Stewart any time. Murder, adventure, hiking, and love - all in a couple hundred pages.


I have started reading the British Library Crime Classics so that I will add this next. I read on my iPad, with which I can take notes on the book, (view spoiler)

A free version is available for download PDF or ePub at https://archive.org/details/carol-car...

Pam some of us read as buddy read Parable of the Sower on March or April of 2023--or thereabouts. You can look over our comments if you would like.

There is so much to like about this book, I'm really becoming surprised that her stories went out of print for so long!


Measure for Measure (William Shakespeare) --- A second read.

Orlando

Now i don't remember snails playing a significant role in the book, but its been a while since it read it. Even if they do, this is still a terrible cover... i mean who on earth would want to own this one :P . Really dislike looking at that cover.
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Teri-K, I just finished "Lonesome October"! You're right, it is a fun one (I love the dog narrator!) and perfect for the season :)