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Stuart
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Aug 23, 2013 11:03AM

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Just started Kainanbut as I have only read a couple of pages is too early to comment on, but the synopsis looks ok. Also just about to start Marlowe and the Spacewoman


That's a bit of a contrast! I loved Natural Causes, though the title annoyed me until about the second last page. I thought it was one of those just imposed by a publisher and that it barely related to the book - till then.

Now reading First Activation: A Post Apocalyptic Thriller by the Wearmouth brothers. Stonking story. I thought it was going to be a comma-fest for the first few pages but it settled down!

A smashing little book about 3 sisters moving from rual China to the Town for work, a real cultural shock for them.
And I have just started The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory http://www.amazon.co.uk/Red-Queen-Cou...

That's a b..."
Yeah, two different challenges, an A-Z, and reading 4 classics including one childrens



Just started Organized Murder by Lynda Wilcox. I'm a relatively late comer to the Verity Long stories but I'm really enjoying them.

Just to second that, they were excellent on the radio and I keep meaning to buy them


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

Thanks Ignite! I really appreciated Bo's efforts with the Colt & Kane interview. It was fun.



Just to second that, they were excellent on the radio..."
They're a great laugh. Lindsey Davis addressed the Classical Association some years ago and said her books were a prolonged resignation letter from the Civil Service!


http://www.amazon.co.uk/Les-Mis%C3%A9...
And I have started Behind Janes Austen's Door by Jennifer Forest
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Behind-Jane-A...


Onto something rather heavier, a book I've been looking forward to reading for years: Man Made Language by Dale Spender, in which she demonstrates how language was formulated by men and how its structure maintains the patriarchy.

When I was in the library a couple of weeks ago, it was there face out and calling to me. It seemed so slight and vulnerable among the weighty tomes that I just had to do it. Boy, am I glad I did.
Unfortunately, I forgot to write down my memorable quotes before returning it, but there's so much for you to find out about this one that my lack of input is hardly going to matter.
I was somewhat taken aback by the brilliance of this story.
First of all, there's the way the story is revealed in snapshots. The disquiet and the sinister aspects of the story bite straight away, but I was always hungry to unpeel another layer to get to the bottom of things, even with my prior knowledge of what I would eventually find (imagine reading a book like this with no sense of what it was about - how amazing that would have been).
The language is exquisite. A vocabulary that's at least a couple of pegs above my own is used to keep things tight and minimal. With very few words, Stevenson manages to offer a complete picture of a scene or an idea.
The characters are superb, from the upper strata of the social set to the butlers and servants of the world.
Extraneous story elements just don't exist. In one scene, the lawyer Utterson visits a doctor to find out information. The scene is set and time and place are perfectly fixed. In terms of the conversation, there's no fluff. All the preamble is missing and all that's offered is the meat that is necessary to feed the tale.
I'd love it if some of the craft and skill on show here were to seep into my words and wonder how much better I might be as a writer if I'd come to this a long time ago.
The book's brilliant. The horror and darkness are cold and clammy. The plight of Jekyll is terrible yet understandable (who wouldn't enjoy that liberation from the cerebral ways of the human for a while?) and absolutely tragic.
The only question I am left with related to the pronunciation of the author's name. A friend of mine tells me the middle name should be pronounce 'Lewis' and he generally knows. Maybe drop a comment if you concur.
All in all, it's a must read - don't hesitate and pop down to the library or load that kindle right away - either way, it's free.

Quite agree with your assessment of his writing though, everything I have read of his is brilliantly written, as well as cracking stories :)

I wonder if you'd recommend anything in particular - there's such a lot out there.


Still reading The Holy Thief, which is going well.

Going to start Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, which I've been meaning to read for years after falling in love with The Hitchhiker's Guide.


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


started Peter Pan and Wendy. the writing style took a bit of getting used to but starting to enjoy it now.

Finished The Cleansing,i bought this book in 2011 and it's quite clearly never had an update,there is an error on nearly every page,i can only assume that the author doesn't give a monkeys as i was going to buy the 2nd book in the series, but the reviews say that it is also littered with errors.Started One By One.

Just started The Doors of Perception by Aldous Huxley. This is his account of taking mescaline (the active ingredient of the Mexican peyote cactus).

Or am I more confused than normal?


Now I'm back cataloguing and have chosen Bullied: The Complete Series. I've read a few of his Fifth Avenue books and enjoyed them, but this is different.
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