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Kath
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Jun 11, 2013 01:36AM

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Some familiarity is desirable - knowing who Miss Haversham is, for example, or Heathcliff. But actual liking is not required. And of course it does contain spoilers for Jane Ayre.


http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...
I'm now onto House of Mirrors




http://ignitebooks.blogspot.co.uk/201...

I find I cannot read too many Agatha Christie books at once. A couple, then leave it a year or six :-)
I found that when I read too many Agatha Christie books I started to guess who the murderer was!
I've never read the Eyre Affair but it sounds like something that I would enjoy. I'm also another Cadfael fan - hope the bring them out in kindle format soon, it's so long since I read them that I want to re-read them, only have vague memories of the stories now so would enjoy the twists and turns all over again. I also like the way that Ellis Peters brings that time in history alive.
I've never read the Eyre Affair but it sounds like something that I would enjoy. I'm also another Cadfael fan - hope the bring them out in kindle format soon, it's so long since I read them that I want to re-read them, only have vague memories of the stories now so would enjoy the twists and turns all over again. I also like the way that Ellis Peters brings that time in history alive.

i'm currently reading Life, the Universe and Everything.
i would say i'd finish it tonight but ive done something to my shoulder so sitting down and reading at a long stretch is quite uncomfortable

read The Illegal Gardener and Black Butterflies and now reading The Explosive Nature of Friendship
lovely books good stories depicting the lives of people living in a greek village and how they learn and grow and interact. each book, so far, has different people as main characters and some of the events are shown from different characters' perspectives in the different books as additions to their own stories. (hope that makes sense)


It was good once I got used to the tempo of it.
Now I've just started


http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...
I'm now onto DARK COUNTY


It was good once ..."
Joo
I read JET a couple of months ago and enjoyed it. I was thinking of picking up the sequels.


Here’s a book that glitters. It sparkles with humour and the quality of writing and the pure pleasure that comes across in the telling of this collection of tales.
Mulliner hangs about in The Angler’s Rest chewing the fat, only there is no fat in the book, rather it’s all lean meat.
Whatever the subject, Mulliner can relate a tale of one of his relatives who has experienced something similar.
There are common threads that possibly relate to the gene pool: the wooing of a ladies, sturdy butlers, gentry, a slightly dizzying ineptitude, swirling messes and genius solutions.
As the blurb says, there are a range of subjects covered. Each of them seems rather implausible, but as soon as the tales begin they live and breathe like the best of them.
Reading these stories is as close to pure joy as you’ll find in a book.
The humour drips from the situations and the characters so that I doubt there are many who could read them with a straight face or, indeed, without blurting out the odd titter. Wodehouse can bring a smile simply through his choice of a name.
The sharp wit and repartee is ever present.
The simile is raised to the level of art.
What is particularly pleasing is the way it feels like the author could sit at a typewriter all day, day after day, and produce page after page of the most perfect prose as easily as he might breathe or eat strawberries.
If there are faults in this one, I can’t find them and I don’t really care. Spot them and please don’t bother to point them out to this reviewer as I would rather keep the memory of pure pleasure with me for as long as I can.
Chapter 8. Strychnine In The Soup.



Yes, he's well worth reading from the tension point of view alone. His pacing is excellent, not too fast, not too slow :-)

I like how Lovecraft uses language but I am not really a huge fan of his plots overall.

I'm not a Lovecraft fan, and do find that its better to break them up.

Also, my body clock is so messed up at the moment, I bet I fall asleep reading it.
Oh well. Will be a good excuse to reread a chapter, if necessary.
*snuggles down to read*


One thing that struck me is that Lovecraft is not as 'horrifying' as he was when he first wrote. Indeed some of his stuff is more SF than horror
I think that some of this is that he set a new standard that others have built on, and also perhaps that his ideas no longer seem so blasphemous

The author doesn't describe New Zealand in an obvious way, but if you've been the sense of space conveyed come across well. TThe descriptions of the daughter - Sacha - and her drug problems are also well done.

I've also just started I Woke Up This Morning, which is book three of the same.
I think this possibly says how awesome it is. I absolutely recommend the trilogy. Stuart does an incredible job of exploring issues around mental health and illness, and is an extraordinarily talented author.

Debbie, I'm 80% through The Bird That Nobody Sees having come straight off Tollesbury Time Forever then I'll go straight onto I Woke Up This Morning (FRUGALITY: Book 3 Superb and I too am in awe of Mr Ayris.


If you're pouring out a single-malt, make mine a double, haha...



One thing that struck me is that Lovecraft is not as 'horrifying' as he was when he first..."
I fully agree he's more SF than horror

There was one when the horror aspect did get to me, not sure which one now, might have been the witch house (I genuinely cannot remember)
But from a writer's perspective his work is a master class on pacing and tension. But it might be that 'little and often' is the best way to read him :-)

Upset the moderator, you mean. ;)
But Simon is here in spirit. Cheap and nasty spirit.

OIY. Careful. We Canadians may be cheap but we are never rough. ;)

Read the full review at http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/....
Now starting Chasing Aphrodite: The Hunt for Looted Antiquities at the World's Richest Museum .


http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...
I've also finished Backup, which is another quality story from David's Auto series.
I'm now onto Terminus X, which is off to a fun start.
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