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message 8601:
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Steven
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Jun 28, 2015 10:54PM

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I will get round to reading your books, and Michael's as well, but I've got so many books to read, it's going to take a while! I'm addicted to looking for books at charity shops.




Like the title suggests this takes stories apart and shows how the various parts all work together to make a whole story work together.
Just finished

Just started (again) Fiction Unboxed


So now I'm trying again.
Also just started The Girl on the Train



Just started



I've just finished reading Scott Nicholson's The Scarecrow and it's a good horror read:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...


Just finished Rough Country by John Sandford, a really good VirgilFlowers book, and just started Heat Lightning. Also a (effing) Flowers book.


I've just finished reading Mark Matthews' MILK-BLOOD: A Tale of Urban Horror and it's one of the finest horror reads for me this year so far:
http://thecultofme.blogspot.co.uk/201...

Fans of Big Bang Theory will enjoy the references.
Stephen King is bloody fantastic.


Off to find something meatier!

Fans of Big Bang Theory will enjoy the references.
Stephen King is bloody fantastic."
Got this one reserved at the library. Looking forward to it.

I've just started You're Next, which so far I am really enjoying and having fun trying to unravel it.




Also finished,

Just started Broken Homes



Leather
*spit*

Pithily expressed!

I think my problem with it was that the writing style was for a younger audience than the material dictated. And the narrator didn't help, with her 'book at bedtime' voice. I'd have been lulled into quite happily letting my 9 year old nieces (assuming I had 9 year old nieces) listen in the car, right up to the point when a chap waved his not-so-dangly bits in the heroine's face. Then I'd have been well told off by said imaginary nieces' parents. IYSWIM.



Me neither. I was more irritated by it than anything else.



Funny, cheeky and... well, a darned good read.
http://ignitebooks.blogspot.co.uk/201...

Reading the reviews on that link it looks like a few people have confused the two books.
I might give this one a go too.

Also What Dreams May Come by David Hadley. Speculative fiction and it touches on the nature of dreams - and death. Enjoyed it.
And Windhorse Burning which is a real departure from Lexie Conyngham's usual style. Give them a go!

I've also re-read a couple of Robert Asprin's MYTH books. Just nice light fun.
And Finder's Keepers was fabulous. There won't be any whinging about the ending, either. So there, Geoff.

I've downloaded the complete set. There's oodles of them. Don't want to read too many in a row though. I expect they are rather samey.


Also What Dreams May Come by David Ha..."
Thanks for the review, Kath!

Also What Dreams May Come by David Ha..."
What Dreams May Come looks like an interesting read - bought!

The idea of casting Sean Connery as a 14th century Monk is so ridiculous as to be disastrous, but it bloody works. :) Great film.
The book is first class as well. Highly recommended.

The idea of casting Sean Connery as a 14th century Monk is so ridiculous as to be disastrous, but it bloody wor..."
Brilliant book, and yes, film also pretty good, though at the time Adzo became a by-word amongst my acquaintances for sheer dumbness. Shame Eco went on to become more pretentious and less entertaining - I've been trying to read The Prague Cemetery, according to my Goodreads shelf, since February 2013!

The idea of casting Sean Connery as a 14th century Monk is so ridiculous as to be disastrous, but..."
Genius is allowed to become pretentious. :)

The idea of casting Sean Connery as a 14th century Monk is so ridiculous as to be d..."
Well, fine, but don't expect me to read it! I'm far too shallow!

Glad you liked it.


Just started


Blimey, I thought I was the only one who'd ever heard of Robert Aspirin. I've still got the paperbacks. They were really tricky to track down when I was buying them.


Now reading Wrong Place by Mel Comley.


Well, if you're reading that, you won't be going through an insomnia phase. :)
A pretty dull book.

Same here, Gilgamesh I re-read a couple of years ago.
On the heap to be read soon is Njal's Saga which I read many years ago and daughter just fetched me a copy back from Iceland


Now getting into Ann Cleeves' Burial Of Ghosts
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