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message 4851: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments Just finished Peril at End House It always amazes me how I can never guess who did it till just before you are told (if even!)

Think I'll read The King's Speech: How One Man Saved the British Monarchy next


message 4852: by Patti (baconater) (new)

Patti (baconater) (goldengreene) | 56525 comments Dave just finished The Midden
Said it was rubbish.


message 4853: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments My copy of the Kings Speech is actually this one - The King's Speech: Based on the Recently Discovered Diaries of Lionel Logue

Don't know what the difference is meant to be


message 4854: by Jay-me (Janet) (new)

Jay-me (Janet)  | 3784 comments Patti (Fluffy) wrote: "Dave just finished The Midden
Said it was rubbish."


Smiley


message 4855: by Stuart (new)

Stuart Ayris (stuayris) | 2614 comments Well Ignite has just finished the final proof of I Woke Up This Morning...


message 4856: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Hill | 1599 comments Stuart wrote: "Well Ignite has just finished the final proof of I Woke Up This Morning..."

And? And? Oh, I bet it's top secret!


message 4857: by Stuart (new)

Stuart Ayris (stuayris) | 2614 comments Well I have just worked out that there are 78 words that she has left in that Microsoft Word still refuses to recognise. Basically because I made them up. Fair play to the fine lady!


message 4858: by Marc (new)

Marc Nash (sulci) | 4313 comments Stuart wrote: "Well I have just worked out that there are 78 words that she has left in that Microsoft Word still refuses to recognise. Basically because I made them up. Fair play to the fine lady!"

I'm all about the neologisms!


message 4859: by David (new)

David Haynes | 844 comments I think there ought to be some sort of "Ayris Dictionary" to rival the Oxford English. I'm sure it would be far more interesting.


message 4860: by Stuart (new)

Stuart Ayris (stuayris) | 2614 comments I agree! I will put on my author thread a link to the blogpost that gives the list of words...


message 4861: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Hill | 1599 comments Better not go on Countdown, Stu...


message 4862: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments You can have another run through if you like Stu? All part of the service.


message 4863: by Fiona (Titch) (new)

Fiona (Titch) Hunt (titch) | 942 comments I've finished The Morganville Vampires Book Seven: Fade Out - Rachel Caine. Now I am going to read The Morganville Vampires Book Eight: Kiss of Death - Rachel Caine.


message 4864: by [deleted user] (new)

Jud (Disney Diva) wrote: "My copy of the Kings Speech is actually this one - The King's Speech: Based on the Recently Discovered Diaries of Lionel Logue

Don't know what the difference is meant to be"


I read this one some time ago and found it fascinating. It's written by Logue's grandson and he has access to many documents, diary entries and newspaper clippings from the time.


message 4865: by Fiona (Titch) (new)

Fiona (Titch) Hunt (titch) | 942 comments I've finished The Morganville Vampires Book Eight: Kiss of Death - Rachel Caine. Now I am going to read The Morganville Vampires Book Nine: Ghost Town - Rachel Caine.


message 4866: by [deleted user] (last edited Apr 13, 2013 12:06PM) (new)

It's ages since I've commented on this thread, but I've read a lot of mediocre stuff that wasn't worth sharing. I've just read three good books in a row though, two by "our" authors.

The Boy Who Kissed The Sky, one of this months' group reads which I thoroughly enjoyed. Then A Novel Way to Die, a lighthearted cosy locked room mystery by Lynda Wilcox.

Now I've just finished Abandoned Ship: An Intimate Account of the Costa Concordia Shipwreck written by one of the survivors. He describes the lack of care afterwards that was given by the American and Chinese embassies in Rome - even though the embassies from most other countries were quick to visit their countrymen to help them out. What also surprised me was the comments from some of the reviewers on amazon who described the author as "greedy" and why should the embassies give them any help? When people have survived a ship wreck, nearly lost their lives and lost all their possessions except the clothes they were standing up in (which were wet!) of course you would expect some compassion from your country's embassy - especially as the ambassadors of england, ireland, most other european countries, Japan and Australia all personally sought out their countrymen to offer help; both the american and chinese embassies insisted the author and his wife (author is american, wife chinese) get to their embassies by taxi, and when they explained that their money and credit cards were at the bottom of the sea, just told them to borrow the money. They were then treated with rudeness and indifference, in fact they were shouted at and chased away from outside the chinese embassy where they were waiting for a taxi home because they were having a party for the local dignitaries and they didn't want said dignitaries to have to see scruffy damp ship wreck survivors. Some of the reviewers on amazon thought that the author and his wife were unreasonable and greedy expecting to get the same help from their embassies that all the other foreign embassies given to their nationals. I'm just as annoyed by the comments of those reviewers as I was to read about the inhumane treatment of those large organisations.


message 4867: by Michael (new)

Michael Brookes (technohippy) I've posted my impressions of 'I Am Eternal' by Athanasios:

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

If you enjoy vampire tales, then check it out.

I Am Eternal by Athanasios


message 4868: by Karen (new)

Karen Lowe | 1338 comments Finished Patricia Cornwell's Unnatural Exposure which didn't really get going, for me, till a third of the way through and I nearly gave up on it, but glad I stuck with it. Pity the end was so rushed tho.
Now looking forward to starting Exiles which sounds like fun - it's set in the Auvergne, which is an area I love. Unfortunately the book isn't on kindle, so it's a secondhand DTB.


message 4869: by Sam (new)

Sam Kates Just finished The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared. Very enjoyable read; in parts, very amusing, though I wouldn't describe it as hilarious. I felt it was a little long and started to drag towards the end, which is why it took me longer than normal to finish. Without spoiling it for others, the protagonist does something very early on in the book that made me stop and think, "No way! Why did he do that? He just wouldn't have done that," and I couldn't shake this thought for the next few chapters. I can see why the author wrote him doing it - most of what follows are consequences of what he did - but it felt too much like author intrusion. Overall, though, I enjoyed and would recommend it.


message 4870: by Lorraine (new)

Lorraine  | 575 comments Finished To Tell The Truth,starting Loisaida -- A New York Story,which is my last stand alone paid for book from 2010.


message 4871: by Miffy (new)

Miffy | 4 comments Sam wrote: "Just finished The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared. Very enjoyable read; in parts, very amusing, though I wouldn't describe it as hilarious. I felt it was a little..."

I just read this too! I found it good but not really funny, more of a first person account of some of the important world events of the past 100 years. But definitely worth the 20p I paid for it! :D


Desley (Cat fosterer) (booktigger) | 12622 comments Struggling to find time to read, Am 4 books behind my target, so think I Am going to have to read a few shorts. Am 67% into Ash, but had to skim read a chapter due to the subject manner.


message 4873: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Just finished Seb Kirby's Regret No More. Thriller, still partly involved with the art world but there are drug barons involved. If you enjoyed the first you'll love this too.

I'm slogging through the one for the village book club though. Dire. Needs editing - and then it'll be average :( Just Whistle


message 4874: by David (last edited Apr 16, 2013 04:12AM) (new)

David Haynes | 844 comments I seem to be following you about Mrs!

Just finished Crowley's Rival by Alex Roddie. It's a cracker!


message 4875: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Good isn't it? I loved the way that for a complete non-mountaineer it wasn't at all off-putting. He's got a way with words that I enjoyed too.


message 4876: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments I finished The King's Speech: Based on the Recently Discovered Diaries of Lionel Logue and actually found it quite moving at the end.

Have started The Boy Who Kissed The Sky


message 4877: by David (new)

David Haynes | 844 comments Ignite wrote: "Good isn't it? I loved the way that for a complete non-mountaineer it wasn't at all off-putting. He's got a way with words that I enjoyed too."

Very good!


message 4878: by David (new)

David Haynes | 844 comments Jud (Disney Diva) wrote: "I finished The King's Speech: Based on the Recently Discovered Diaries of Lionel Logue and actually found it quite moving at the end.

Have started The Boy Who Kissed The Sky"


Oh crikey! I hope you enjoy it Jud!


message 4879: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments David wrote: "Jud (Disney Diva) wrote: "I finished The King's Speech: Based on the Recently Discovered Diaries of Lionel Logue and actually found it quite moving at the end.

Have started The Boy Who Kissed Th..."


You and me both David


message 4880: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 832 comments Just finished The Rules of Wealth by Richard Templar. (My review)

Just starting Practicing the Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle. I hadn't realised there was a follow-up to The Power of Now (one of the few books I've read twice), but this has just been recommended to me by a friend.


message 4881: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Just - this very minute - finished Just Whistle by Alfie Robins. I hasten to add that I'm reading it for the village book group or I wouldn't have persisted. Off to write a review.


message 4882: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Well; done that, washed my hands! Just about to start Ali Cooper's The Cat and the Cathedral. YA novel from the author of The Girl on the Swing - one of my first indie reads. It's not on here. :(


message 4883: by Cornelius (new)

Cornelius Harker | 830 comments Ignite wrote: "Well; done that, washed my hands! Just about to start Ali Cooper's The Cat and the Cathedral. YA novel from the author of The Girl on the Swing - one of my first indie reads. It's not on here. :("

Is 'The Girl on the Swing' the one that's been likened to 'The Time Traveller's Wife'?


message 4884: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Not by me! ;)


message 4885: by Michael (new)

Michael Brookes (technohippy) Qualia by Marie Browne

I've just finished Marie Browne's 'Qualia', a fantastic novel based around Lucifer's fall.

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

I'm now onto The Clearing by Thomas Rydder.

The Clearing by Thomas Rydder


message 4886: by Marc (new)

Marc Nash (sulci) | 4313 comments when I was still writing theatre plays and when Saatchi & Saatchi determined what everyone in the UK could think and aspire to, I wrote a play about Lucifer's return to Earth being managed by an advertising and PR company, in which Lucifer realised he couldn't compete with the evil advertising men... It never got produced


message 4887: by Jim (new)

Jim | 21813 comments Just got into The Otherand enjoying it


message 4888: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Last evening (because it's not very long) I read and really enjoyed The Cat and the Cathedral by Ali Cooper. First part of a YA trilogy and I really look forward to the next!


message 4889: by Scott (new)

Scott Collins | 34 comments Recently finished The Book Thief. Now working on Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West and Trading Poisons. Both are good so far!


message 4890: by Elle (new)

Elle (louiselesley) | 6579 comments I only got about half way through wicked before I have up!


message 4891: by Jud (new)

Jud (judibud) | 16799 comments I just finished The Boy Who Kissed The Sky which was random but I loved it. Have started My Mother Wore a Yellow Dress


message 4892: by Jim (new)

Jim | 21813 comments Jim wrote: "Just got into The Other and enjoying it"

Just to say I just finished The Other and enjoyed it ;-)


message 4893: by Lorraine (last edited Apr 17, 2013 01:37PM) (new)

Lorraine  | 575 comments Finished Loisaida -- A New York Story,can't believe i paid for it,awful,didn't like the characters and if ingrid hadn't have been murdered, i would have been quite happy to do it.Started Dancing With The Virgins.


message 4894: by Elle (new)

Elle (louiselesley) | 6579 comments LOL Lorraine. Best. Review. Ever.


message 4895: by David (last edited Apr 18, 2013 12:57AM) (new)

David Haynes | 844 comments Just finished A Letter for Maureen by Jonathan Hill - a wonderful and funny story, if you haven't read it, you should do!

Just starting An Odd Quartet by Michael Brookes


message 4896: by Kath (new)

Kath Middleton | 23860 comments Just read The Rocks Below by Nigel Bird. I've read and enjoyed some of this stuff before and this one's a little corker. A novella. Will be reviewing it when I've got outside of my cuppa!


message 4897: by Michael (new)

Michael Brookes (technohippy) David wrote: "Just finished A Letter for Maureen by Jonathan Hill - a wonderful and funny story, if you haven't read it, you should do!

Just starting An Odd Quartet by Michael Brookes"


Seconded on the A letter for Maureen and good choice on your new book :-)


message 4898: by Marc (new)

Marc Nash (sulci) | 4313 comments just finished A Tomb for Boris Davidovich
and started Trawl Trawl by B.S. Johnson


message 4899: by Joo (new)

Joo (jooo) | 1351 comments I'm most of the way through my favourite book of the year so far Don't Need The Whole Dog! by Tony James Slater, author of That Bear Ate My Pants.
Again, it is a snortlingly funny book (well I was snortling as I was eating my lunch at the time).
The first part is where he and his family are doing up a house in Treorchy in the Welsh Valleys - whilst being filmed for Property Ladder. It's certainly interesting reading his version before watching it on youtube.


message 4900: by Lance (new)

Lance Charnes (lcharnes) The Dawn Patrol (Boone Daniels #1) by Don Winslow Just finished The Dawn Patrol by Don Winslow. Another exercise in authorial style and attitude from the creator of Savages, this one somewhat more tethered to reality and more accessible. Southern California noir mixed with surfer culture; four stars.

If you're interested, check the review at http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/....


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