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Where in the World Have You Been?!?! (Book Finished and Review Linked)
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Jan 06, 2012 08:34PM
Leaving Guinea-Bissau: Amílcar Cabral: Revolution in Guinea: Selected Texts. Review here.
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Soda bread, boxty or barmbrack? Or if you're looking for something less traditional I have a great recipe for a guinness chocolate cake I can share.

Soda bread, boxty or barmbrack? Or if you're looking for something less traditional I have a great recipe for a guinness chocolate cake I can share."
Guinness chocolate cake?? I want, I want.

If someone wants this one, I'm releasing it via a Bookcrossing Bookray (a book that is sent sequentially to a list of readers and then eventually is set free in the wild), if you want in on the bookray, let me know.

And now I am off to Albania witht Chronicle in Stone: A Novel. I have read The Three-Arched Bridgeby this author and liked it, although I did not find it as good as The Bridge on the Drina by Ivo Andric. The two books are both about a bridge and about life that circles around it. This book I will be trying now concerns WW2 in Albania through a child's eye. I believe the writing will be excellent. Although it is historical fiction there are also biographical elements.

My review is here

I'll now do a break to read a bit of fantasy, and after that I'll join Chrissie in Albania with The Concert.
Chrissie wrote: "I just completed Cathedral of the Sea, which I am very glad I read because I learned a lot."
I had that on my list, and I've decided against it. But the year is long, maybe I'll reconsider again ;).
Pragya, I'm glad I'm not the only person with fantasy books on my list ;).




I was just thinking the same thing, Gaeta1, but about myself. I've got one read and about 1/2 way through two others.


I'll now do a break to rea..."
Oh my, you are not only off to Albania but then soon after to China. What you have ahead looks interesting.
Me, I am seeing Albania and absolutely loving my stay. Why? Well, because the descriptions are so imaginative. Imagine yourself a little raindrop jostling other raindrops and then falling into a dark cistern....... One has to read the book to understand the dramatics! This book is hf and disguised biography. I have only just begun.

I'll now do a break to rea..."
I think it as a break between serious books. :)

I'm also in France with Julia Child. :)

One down, fifty-one to go!!!"
Good job, Barry! :)

One down, fifty-one to go!!!"
Phew, we're all saved and the project can continue! Way to go Barry. Travel somewhere with light colored sand and a lot of sun next.

One down, fifty-one to go!!!"
Don't say I didn't warn you ;).
I prefer Theodor Fontanes poems to whatever else he did, but I guess you also need the right translation for that. I don't like Effi Briest that much either; mostly because I felt the female characters were all either daft or shrewed.
Hope your next book is better ;).
Btw, it's "Auf Wiedersehen" ;). And you probably would rather say "Tschüß!", since "Auf Wiedersehen" implies you'd like to meet again ;).



In all this traveling our 9 lives may be useful! :-)"
True! We've a few kitties here so we'll see how they fare. We also have some flowers so hopefully they won't begin to wilt.

Hahaha. That's so cute. 2 cute kitties chatting. I don't see the flower now, but I know where she is. And, you, little girl, you're a very good traveler for your age. Did you need the booster seat on your flights?

You might have come across caraway seed cake though, it dates way back. Hehe! What is it about Ireland that causes us to linger so?

Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Hahaha. That's so cute. 2 cute kitties chatting. I don't see the flower now, but I know where she is. And, you, li..."
Yes and the nice flight attendants help too.

I finished my visit to Kigali, Rwanda with Baking Cakes in Kigali. It was a sweet and sour visit with the descriptions of the cakes, the feelings of hope, and the rebuilding set amonst the memories of the genocide. I'll be thinking about this book for a long time.
My review is here.

Far North was such a disappointment for me - I'd been waiting two years to read this book :( http://theaussiezombie.blogspot.com/2...

Far North was such a disappointment for me - I'd been waiting two years to read this book :( http://theaussiezombie.blogspot.com/2......"
Kat, it's not the book that goes with the movie is it? (The one with Sean Bean and Michelle Yeoh).
Hope your next book is better. Maybe your expectations were really high after wanting to read it for so long.



With



http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."
As a Canadian, I'm rather surprised at the ..."
Although I have several books set in Canada, I was actually looking for one dealing with Canadian First Peoples. I looked at I Heard the Owl Call My Namebut I decided that I wanted something intended for an adult audience. I scrolled down to the books that members also enjoyed on that page and found Klee Wyck by the Canadian painter, Emily Carr, who used First Peoples as subjects in her work. I put it on request through interlibrary loan, but this reminded me that I have The Forest Lover, a novel about Emily Carr by Susan Vreeland if I can only find it in my closet.

Now I will go to Croatia and read The Tiger's Wife? I have heard such good things about this book, and I enjoyed the Kindle sample. I realize now that what is most important to me, more than plot, is an author's writing style.

I liked the first half. Very well-written. But the second half did not deliver, especially the ending. I've given the book a new title: The Nonsense of an Ending.

I liked the first half. Very well-written. But the second half did not deliver, especially the ending. I've given the book a new..."
I love your suggestion Anne for the alternative title. Very apt!

I liked the first half. Very well-written. But the second half did not deliver, especially the ending. I've given the book a new title: The Nonsense of an Ending..."
So clever!


Soda bread, boxty or barmbrack? Or if you're looking for something less traditional I have a great recipe for a guinness chocolate cake I can share."
Oh my goodness I missed this earlier. I would love your recipes! I made caraway seed cake, which is kind of traditional I guess (a version of Madeira cake). I recently used Guiness in a gingerbread and it was amazing!

Next up is Nigeria with Little Bee.

I saw the recipe on your blog and can't wait to try it out for myself. I like the idea of caraway cake, as it's quite an unusuual flavour. Guiness gingerbread sounds lush too, so you'll have to go back to Ireland for more recipes!

I, likewise, enjoyed this Victorian adventure. It was a good romp.

Soda bread, boxty or barmbrack? Or if you're looking for something less traditional I have a great recipe for a guinness chocolate cake I can..."
The caraway cake also sounds like a good recipe to try. If I have time I would like to make this and the pepper cookies so there may be a photo of them up at some point.


Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
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