Fans of British Writers discussion

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Group news and business > Currently reading anything by a British writer?

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message 851: by K. (new)

K. (writerkalib) Werner wrote: "E.L. wrote: "I just re-read The Hound of the Baskervilles. I’m wanting to read more Doyle, but, I’m not sure where to start. Did you like the memoirs?"

Yes, E.L., I did! I gave it four stars, and ..."


I had no idea he wrote science fiction. I need to look into his other works. It's summer now, so that means cloistering myself up in the library, and reading for hours at a time. I think I've heard of The White Company.


message 852: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments Maybe something by Doyle, such as The White Company, might be a possible choice for our group's annual common read next year?

E.L. wrote: "It's summer now, so that means cloistering myself up in the library, and reading for hours at a time."

That sounds like a great way to spend a summer!


message 853: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I would enjoy reading The White Company next year. I really enjoyed Doyle's Lost World too. I am glad he wrote so many books because I have all the ones I have read so far.


message 854: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments Rosemarie wrote: "I would enjoy reading The White Company next year."

I've mentioned it over on the "Common reads" thread just now, Rosemarie!


message 855: by David (new)

David Dennington | 8 comments I just read James Herriot's 'All Things Bright and Beautiful' and am now finishing 'All Things Wise and Wonderful'. The writing certainly is bright and beautiful and wise and wonderful! Recommended.


message 856: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments My dad loved the James Herriot books. I read the first one and I understand why. I loved the TV series.


message 857: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments My wife and I both loved all of Herriot's books, so I can heartily echo that recommendation. I've occasionally seen parts of the PBS TV adaptations, and definitely liked what I saw.


message 858: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments I'll be taking part in our group's common read of Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis Till We Have Faces by C. S. Lewis next month. Although I'm a day early, it's not practical to start on anything else at this point; so I'm going to go ahead and start on that one later this afternoon.


message 859: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments Peril at End House is a good one, Rita. And so is your review.


message 860: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I am reading Gothic Tales by Elizabeth Gaskell and The Professor by Charlotte Bronte.


message 861: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments As part of my continuing program this year of reading the four Jane Austen novels which, as of Jan. 1, I still hadn't ever read, I've now started on Lady Susan by Jane Austen Lady Susan. This novella, written possibly as early as 1794 but not published until 1871, is untypical for Austen in some ways (it's her only work to use the epistolary format, for instance), and probably her least known work --I'd never heard of it until I stumbled on it some years ago in the BC library's copy of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women: The Traditions in English.


message 862: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I have read every Mary Stewart book over the course of the years, and was never disappointed.


message 863: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments In another of my Goodreads groups, there was some discussion recently of British travel writer H. V. Morton and his books, including In Search of Scotland by H.V. Morton In Search of Scotland. I thought that might be the same book I read back in the mid-60s, but had forgotten author/title information for; and when I checked it out by ILL, it proved to be! Before I can do it justice in a review, I need to reread it; so, having a copy in hand, I'm proceeding to do that now. :-)


message 864: by K. (last edited Aug 09, 2019 04:06PM) (new)

K. (writerkalib) I marked it as TBR. Once I'm finished with Assassin's Quest I am going to start The Monarch of the Glen. My husband really enjoyed it, and I saw the sitcom years ago. I am a sucker for anything set in Scotland.


message 866: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments E. L. wrote: "I marked it as TBR."

Whenever you read it, E. L., I hope you like it!


message 867: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments E.L.,
I liked the show Monarch of the Glen when I saw it eons ago. Sounds like an interesting read!


message 868: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I like anything by Compton Mackenzie. One of my favourites is Whisky Galore.


message 869: by K. (new)

K. (writerkalib) Whisky Galore is after that. I saw the movie they recently made. It wasn’t bad. The book is probably better. :)


message 870: by Oksana (new)

Oksana | 134 comments I have just started reading Graham Green’s The Quiet American.


message 871: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments Compton Mackenzie’s books are probably very different than the series which is okay by me. They seem like they’ll be a lot of fun. Thanks for letting me know about them E.L. Everyone reads such interesting books here!


message 872: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments The Quiet American is a book that has stayed with me. I think it is one of his most important books.


message 873: by Oksana (new)

Oksana | 134 comments Have you read any of his other books. It is my first book by Graham Green , and I am loving it.


message 874: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I read The Third Man, Our Man in Havanna and The Heart of the Matter in the past three years.


message 875: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) I just started The Porpoise by Mark Haddon. This is my 2nd book by Haddon, the first being The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.


message 876: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I'm reading an Agatha Christie mystery-Lord Edgware dies.


message 877: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments Closing in on my goal for this year of reading all four of the Jane Austen novels that, as of Jan. 1, I still had never read, I've now started on the last one (last one to be read by me, that is --not the last to be written, since I've read them out of that order!), Mansfield Park by Jane Austen Mansfield Park. This one and Lady Susan are the only completed Austen novels that I've never seen an adaptation of, so I'm coming to it with relatively little previous knowledge.


message 878: by ShanDizzy (new)

ShanDizzy  (sdizzy) Of the 7 books on my currently-reading list, only one is NOT by a British writer. I am reading Forever and a Day by Anthony Horowitz Sweet Danger (The Albert Campion Mysteries) by Margery Allingham Inspector French’s Greatest Case (Inspector French Mystery, Book 1) by Freeman Wills Crofts He Didn't Mind Danger (Inspector Hazlerigg, #2) by Michael Gilbert THE THORPE HAZELL MYSTERIES - Complete Series 9 Thrillers in One Volume Peter Crane's Cigars, The Affair of the Corridor Express, How the Bank Was Saved, ... Engine and The Stolen Necklace and more by Victor L. Whitechurch Sherlock Holmes The Complete Stories by Arthur Conan Doyle


message 879: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments That is great, Shan!


message 880: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments ShanDizzy, if Sherlock Holmes were here, I think he might deduce that you're a fan of British mysteries! :-) (You can tell that I've learned from his deductive methods....)


message 881: by ShanDizzy (new)

ShanDizzy  (sdizzy) Werner wrote: "ShanDizzy, if Sherlock Holmes were here, I think he might deduce that you're a fan of British mysteries! :-) (You can tell that I've learned from his deductive methods....)"

That's brilliant Werner! Hahahaha! I am an unashamed anglophile. Many of the American authors I've read are too macabre for my taste. It appears to be more about the violence in the mystery than the solving of the mystery itself.


message 882: by ShanDizzy (new)

ShanDizzy  (sdizzy) Rosemarie wrote: "That is great, Shan!"

Thanks Rosemarie.


message 883: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments I hear you, ShanDizzy! :-)


message 884: by K. (new)

K. (writerkalib) Werner wrote: "I hear you, ShanDizzy! :-)"

I am reading Holmes right now! Also, I am writing a book that takes place mostly in England and France. I think British literature has definitely rubbed off on me.


message 885: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments Best wishes for success with your book, E.L.!


message 886: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I second that thought,E.L. I hope everything goes well with your book.


message 887: by ShanDizzy (new)

ShanDizzy  (sdizzy) E.L. wrote: "...I am reading Holmes right now! Also, I am writing a book that takes place mostly in England and France..."

I hope all goes well with your writing, E.L. That's an AMAZING undertaking!


message 888: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments I agree with you ShanDizzy about the difference between English and American literature. We seem to take far too much interest in the violence over the mystery itself. I tend to read more cozy mysteries than regular blockbuster mysteries these days anyway, but on occasion I am drawn in by a good one. That being said, I always I go back to the British mysteries as I am sure to be satisfied and enjoy them thoroughly.


message 889: by ShanDizzy (new)

ShanDizzy  (sdizzy) Sarah wrote: "I agree with you ShanDizzy about the difference between English and American literature. We seem to take far too much interest in the violence over the mystery itself. I tend to read more cozy myst..."

Thanks Sarah, British mysteries is my preferred genre, especially the GA authors. I am always grateful to GR friends when they mention a British mystery that I haven't yet read.


message 890: by K. (new)

K. (writerkalib) Thank you all!


message 891: by Jane (new)

Jane Jordan | 11 comments Thank You


message 892: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments No problem, Jane!


message 893: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments I am rereading or rather listening to Midnight Riot also know as The Rivers of London from the series of that name by Ben Aaronovitch. I don’t read a lot of paranormal or paranormal fantasy books anymore, but add an English mystery to it and it’s fascinating. There are seven books in the series and a few short stories, but since it was so long ago that I listened to it, and my memory isn’t very good, I figured I’d listen again before I moved on to the next in the series. This isn’t a cozy mystery; it’s got some gory bits to it. While I wouldn’t want a steady diet of that, every once in a while keeps things interesting and is a big change from the Alexander McCall Smith, Ladies No. 1 Detective series I am also reading and love. Smith is from Zimbabwe and Scotland so not completely a British writer.


message 894: by Werner (new)

Werner | 1137 comments Yes, I'd think of Smith as British, too. "British" is a broader term than "English" (Scotland is just as much a part of the British Isles as England is). And British children of British parents, born overseas but identifying as scions of the mother country, are still British; after all, Rudyard Kipling and Rumer Godden were both born in India, but nobody questions that they're British writers. :-)


message 895: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments I wasn’t sure if a writer born in Zimbabwe would count as African or English so I left it ambiguous. But as he lives in Scotland now we can let him have the distinction.


message 896: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments I liked Pullman’s books. They were exciting reads!


message 897: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I started rereading War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells. The first chapter is incredible. It really sets the stage.


message 898: by Rosemarie (new)

Rosemarie | 702 comments I finished reading The 12:30 from Croydon by Freeman Wills Crofts late last night. The 12 30 from Croydon by Freeman Wills Crofts
It was a suspenseful read because other than the first chapter, the book deals with the thoughts and actions of the murderer. Will he get away with it?


message 899: by Melanie (new)

Melanie Fraser (melaniefraservoiceuk) I've just started reading volume 1 of
A History of the English-Speaking Peoples
by Sir Churchill Winston.

Also, currently reading Endymion by Benjamin Disraeli.

It will take a while to get through them but it's so good to read words written so beautifully.


message 900: by Sarah (new)

Sarah Booth (boothacus) | 109 comments Just started listening to Graham Norton’s book Holding. It’s read by a properly so it flows well and doesn’t sound contrived like when someone tries too hard on an accent that isn’t familiar enough.
There is a gossipy feeling to folks thoughts and the authors description of things. If feels like someone is telling you a secret that they’re not supposed to tell anyone but can’t resist a good natter.


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