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Currently reading anything by a British writer?
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Werner
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Sep 04, 2018 10:02AM


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I'm watching the TV show The Woman in White based on Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White. It's really good! I haven't read any of his books. Sometimes with classics, the closest I get to reading them is watching the tv show or movie.


Pam, good question! We use the term "British" rather than "English," which broadens our scope beyond England to include all of the British Isles. Since we include Scottish and Welsh writers as British, I'd say that would certainly apply to Irish writers, too. Many of the leading figures that are generally studied in any typical British literature class were Anglo-Irish or of Irish ethnicity, born in Ireland or long resident there. (So, short answer: yes! :-) )




Hmmm! I'm taking it that by "fun reading," you mean lighter stuff --not necessarily humorous as such, but not demanding much brain power and having a high degree of entertainment value. (Of course, I mostly read for pleasure, and I can derive it from more demanding reads too. I have some 17 British authors that I officially list as favorites, and they're mostly classical authors that would be thought of as more cerebral.)
In the sense that it's meant here, the two British authors that I've turned to most for "fun reading" are Agatha Christie and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, both for their mysteries (the same genre as Beaton); Doyle's science fiction fits the bill too. A third is the late Sir Terry Pratchett, who had a wonderfully exuberant sense of humor (it's best known in his Discworld series, though I actually like his The Bromeliad Trilogy better). And although I've read relatively little of her adventures, I really like Peter O'Donnell's Modesty Blaise. :-)

I used to read the M.C.Beaton mysteries but stopped after a while, since there were just too many of them, and Agatha Raisin really got on my nerves.


As well, I am reading a collection of short stories called Silent Nights: Christmas Mysteries collected by Martin Edwards.

Terry Pratchett is wonderful. I am not familiar with the other series by him, thanks for the heads up Werner!

You're welcome, Sarah! If you read it sometime, I'll be interested in what you think.



I have been fishing in my entire life, and won't be in the future either since I have been a vegetarian for 20 years.

I read his Vienna Spies earlier and recommend that one too.


I have been reading re-issues of mysteries from the Golden Age of British mysteries. There is a whole series with lovely vintage looking covers from lesser known British authors. They are a lot of fun.



I went to Apple books and I downloaded Fifth Business for $3.99. Feel guilty, should have gone to library, but got so excited reading the first few pages for free that I bought it. Another Canadian author I love is John Buchan.


Although I've heard of Robertson Davies --decades ago, I read, or skimmed, a magazine article (I forget what magazine it was in) that described him as "Canada's preeminent man of letters"-- I've never read any of his work. Probably I should; but with 398 books already on my to-read shelf, at present I'm looking more to cutting down that total than adding to it. :-) If I read a new Canadian general fiction author right now, I'd be more apt to pick Mazo de la Roche, whose Jalna series we have at the BC library. (I don't believe we have anything at all by Davies, though I should remedy that!)
Here's the Goodreads link to the novel that Sarah mentioned: The Rebel Angels.

America. He was known for his sense of humour.


Well, I've just added A Voice from the Attic to my "maybe to read" shelf (thanks for the link, Rosemarie!). What the hey --that shelf only had 115 books. :-) (I use it as a sort of annex to my "to-read" shelf.)
If you do read anything by Mazo de la Roche sometime, Sarah, I'll be interested in your review. I've never read any of his work; but the Jalna series was mentioned in an encyclopedia article on Canadian literature that I read as a kid (okay, I was sort of a weird kid, and I read encyclopedias at times for the fun of it!), so that was what put it on my radar.





Cool! :-)



Highly recommended WW11 espionage.
This is the second book I've read by Alex Gerlis and I can't wait to read the next one.

Yes his books are hard to put down, Sarah. I've just bought "The Berlin Spies".
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...
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