Reading the Detectives discussion
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What non-mystery books are you reading? (2023-25)

I love Trollope also, I appreciate how he writes women. And I appreciate his dry humor; I’ve come to appreciate Dickens’s imagination, passion for social welfare, and interesting characters. He’s funny too, sometimes, but seems more given to lurching into melodrama.
I’d love to revisit the Palliser novels, also, Judy, but when I was reading them the first time several years ago, I was so enthused with Trollope’s writing, I bought several used copies of his other books. Feel like I should tackle those first!

Oh, thank you, you’ve expressed so clearly what I feel for both writers.
I never read Dickens in school, we spent a lot of time on Jane Austen, the Brontës - friends one level down spent a lot of time on Dickens, had the same complaints. Sad, in both US and Britain, adults who are avid readers don’t have fond memories of reading these authors in school. I wish they did a better job teaching literature and history in school- I was lucky to have a couple of excellent English Lit teachers, and one amazing history teacher, but they seem rare! To this day, I love reading history, and am trying to make up for the classic literature I did not study back then.


Oddly, growing up in London, I never had to read any of those nineteenth century classics at school. We did do Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge. Apart from Shakespeare, Chaucer and a bit of Renaissance drama, everything I had to read for school was twentieth century.
I read Austen, the Brontes, Trollope, Dickens and so on myself - I was obsessed with Penguin Classics as a teenager and wanted to own them all for the lovely covers!

Oddly, growing up in London, I never ..."
Interesting - I wonder who designs the curriculums, and why they choose certain titles and authors? I went to high school in suburban Chicago in the early 1980s, and when I look back, it seems each of my excellent teachers had clear favorites that influenced how long we spent on an author - lots of Shakespeare, dip into Austen, lots of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, then jump way up to “Lost Generation” American writers after World War I (lots of Hemingway- who I’ve never wanted to read again!)

Rosina wrote: "Timothy West reading Trollope - both the Barchester novels, and the Pallisers, as well as some stand-alones like The Way We Live Now, really is superb!"
I found Audible in the US has many Trollope's books available for free, narrated by Timothy West. Hours and hours and hours of listening!
I found Audible in the US has many Trollope's books available for free, narrated by Timothy West. Hours and hours and hours of listening!


For anyone in the UK, both authors have several books in the Audible Plus catalogue, so as a subscriber you can listen to any or all of them. I think this new(ish) business model of theirs has really improved the value of a subscription. I rejoined recently purely so that I could download the Agatha Christie books read by Hugh Fraser, and I was really impressed at how many good books were included in the Audible Plus section. I've bookmarked so many that there is no way I'll be able to get to all of them!
I'm just about to start Nicolas Nickleby, and will read the book alongside listening to the Audible narration.
Has anyone seen the TV adaptation of Bleak House with Gillian Anderson as Lady Dedlock? I thought it was great!

It was excellent - and persuaded me to listen to the audio-book.


It was excellent - and persuaded me to listen to the audio-book."
I'm glad you liked it too. And yes, audiobooks can be a good way of reading Dickens, for me anyway, because there are often so many different characters and it can be hard to remember which is which. If the narrator gives different (and memorable) voices to each character, it can really help.

It was excellent - and persuaded me to listen to the aud..."
So true, about Dickens and audiobooks, this made Bleak House so entertaining.

Very gentle stories of kids with imaginations just being kids like I was way back in the '30s, 40s - I'm no spring chicken! This series really is a classic and well worth another look after a lifetimw
Kindle tells me it will take over 45 hours so it will keep me out of mischief fo a while.

I'm sure you will sail through it (Sorry)

That sounds delightful, enjoy!

I love that Jill, a lovely pun!

I love that book Keith! Such adventures! And in a beautiful location too. For me, it is just that first one in the series that I keep coming back to. I don't know how many times I've read it over the years, but the others in the series I only ever read once.


Sounds like a grand adventure, moving halfway round the world!

I'll be back to 'normal' books again before long

Sounds like paradise, I’m so glad your leap of faith paid off all those years ago. I have several other NZ pals in groups here, I know the horrible cyclone did a lot of damage, I hope you fared all right Keith. Take care and enjoy the rest of your weekend!

It's interesting that you say that Keith, about the amount of freedom you had as a child. Whenever I read Swallows & Amazons, I wonder if children would actually have been allowed to camp alone on an island at that age. We went off to play for hours on the common (open fields with woodland areas) with just the instruction to keep together and be home before dark. This was in the 60s. But we probably didn't have quite the freedom that Mrs Walker gave her family! Or maybe we just weren't such adventurous children to begin with in my family.
NZ sounds like a fabulous adventure, especially the geothermal work. :)

Yes, some of their adventures are most unlikely such 'We Didn't Mean To Go To Sea' but overall. those children are pretty true to life in their rural environment even with Morse and Semaphore which I also learned although I am very rusty now (lack of practice). If you don't use it, you lose it!


As you can tell from this I am getting older although inside myself I am still a young person, it's just that my body will no longer do what I want it to do all the time but I am still here and ready for more years of life. It's all in your mind you know! I certainly don't sit around twiddling my thumbs, I keep busy and involved in the community, it helps pass the time and is good for one's mental (and physical) health and self esteem.


It was the same for us growing up in the Chicago area in the early 1970s - home when the streetlights came on! But same when we moved out to the ‘burbs, times were changing, I guess.
Keith, you’ve got a lovely, lively attitude, I agree - positive attitude, staying busy and active are important!

Keith it's wonderful to hear about your childhood and all the adventures you had. No wonder you had the "get up and go" to travel right across the world to start a new life in NZ.
My adventures have mostly been of a literary nature! I love reading about other places, even imaginary places as in science fiction or fantasy novels, but I'd rather stay safe in my little home, curled up on the sofa, while I explore! :) I went up to London a few years ago and was practically hyperventilating at all the noise and the rush and bustle. Well I'm exaggerating a bit of course, but I was glad to get home.
No, I don't do Facebook either. Or Twitter or Instagram or any of those mainstream social media places. I like Goodreads because it's full of nice, interesting people, and I have a couple of similar places for my other hobbies. They are all on a "human" scale and small is beautiful as far as social media goes. ;)

I wanted a better life for my family and my wife and I both had 'itchy feet' So we eventually migrated to New Zealand in 1962 As I said before, it was a bit of a scary leap into the dark although we researched as much as we could. It really paid off! I was put into the NZ public service in the tax dept and was posted around the country every few years on promotion which enabled me to explore everywhere, the only part I have not really lived in although I have visited is the southern part of the South Islamd, south of Christchurch.. Right now I live in Taupo a small town on the NE shore of Lake Taupo. the large lake in the centre of the North Island, a very beautiful place and a holiday town although don't think of say Blackpool. We have lots of adventure activities, sailing, skydiving. mountaineering, trout fishing, you name it!
Really 'adventure' is more of a mindset, your attitude to life. Anything you do can be an adventure if you approach it like that.

I like that thought Keith!

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
Did the police capture the right person or is the real killer still out there? The protagonist returns to her old New Hampshire boarding school to reckon with her past.
I've read two of author Rebecca Makkai's previous novels, and loved them both, so I'm looking forward her latest.

I'm continuing the Discworld series with Lords and Ladies this time with a new audio version with Bill Nighy supplying the footnotes.


I enjoyed that book. I've not been to Lyme Regis, though I have holidayed along the Jurrasic Coast. I'd love to go sometime. I do rememder going to Kilve Beach; also famed for it's fossils; we didn't have to look much, walking along we were literally walking over them, there were loads of ammonites embedded into the rocks we were walking over.
I am now reading Village in a Valley by Beverley Nichols, the third in the Allways trilogy. Yesterday, I listened to the Backlisted podcast which talked about Merry Hall, another of his books, it reminded me I needed to get to this one.







I had already decided to substitute [book:Surfeit of Suspects with a different Golden Age of Crime - it seems like that was a good decision on my part.
I am rereading the Mitford books during the course of the year. I haven't read them for about 30 years so I decided it was time. Enjoy.

I’m reading the Mitford book for my real-world Jane Austen group. I think it has been even longer for me since I read any Mitford!
I recently finished Shrines of Gaiety by Kate Atkinson. It is the first I have read by her and I liked the characters and the interweaving of the various plot lines.

I really like Kate Atkinson She is one of my favourites I have read all of her mystery books ad a few of her others. Pleased you like her.
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Yes! Audiobooks make “the classics” come alive for me, especially a talented narrator who can act out the various characters.