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Snowflake

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Everything posted by Snowflake

  1. Just got the whole set of DVDs of Jeeves and Wooster with Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry -yay!!
  2. I have just started reading Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close but just got sidetracked by a few other books!
  3. He had black eyebrows, silver gold hair, dark blue eyes. I thought, Oh, what a man you are going to be, then remembered that women shouldn't think like this anymore. But perhaps I'm old enough to admit to taking unquenchable pleasure in men. 'There's some museli,' said the future heart-stopper, if you're hungry.' From 'The Queen of the Tambourine' by Jane Gardam.
  4. Thanks alot Acesare. I have just got them out of the library.
  5. I have just finished reading Old Filth by Jane Gardam. A really exccellent book that tells the story of Filth a lawyer in Hong Kong (Filth stands for Failed in London Try Hong Kong). The story unravelled brilliantly, Filth born a Raj orphan, sent home to be educated, his experiences through the second world war and through to old age. I read it in 4 days it was that good!
  6. For me... 1. Last of the Mohicans - I gave up on this it was so dull 2. The Divide by Nichloas Evans - just rubbish and cheesy 3. Faithless by Joyce Carol Oates - short stories that were either really depressing, miserable, disturbing or boring 4. A Wedding in December by Anita Shreve - miserable stuff 5. The Way I Found Her by Rose Tremain - weird and disturbing
  7. I have read both Into Thin Air and Into the Wild and loved both. I red them quite a long time ago though. The guy in Into the Wild was a bit of a nutball wasn't he? I love any books to do with the snow and wildness (anything to do with being in the middle of nowhere) and the hardships involved. If you're into reading this sort of stuff I would definately recommend the following (non-fiction) which I have read in the last three years and really enjoyed: This Cold Heaven - Seven Seasons in Greenland by Gretel Ehrlich The Cruellest Miles by G. and L. Salisbury To the Baltic with Bob by Griff Rhys Jones Other fictional stuff set in the middle of nowhere include: Where the Sea Used to Be by Rick Bass Riders of the Purple Sage by Zane Grey The Seal Wife by Kathryn Harrison The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver True North by Kimberley Kafka The Colour by Rose Tremain
  8. I'm in the mood for reading something hilarious. What books make you laugh out loud?
  9. Ummmm.....top five books (non classics) at the moment are: 1. Haweswater by Sarah Hall 2. The Discovery of Chocolate by James Runcie 3. Distant Music by Lee Langley 4. Music and Silence by Rose Tremain 5. Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood
  10. I generally try and roughly remember where I was in the book..I don't like using bookmarks as they always fall out onto the floor (especially when you're standing up commuting and land in a puddle or something) or get lost in the bedclothes when reading at night! Ohhhh...I hate it when people turn pages down...
  11. I love cat books!..... I have a few favourites which are kids books and have lovely illustrations. The Patchwork Cat by N Bayley, William Mayne and Nicola Bayley tells the story of Tabby and her patchwork quilt. The Church Mice at Christmas by Graham Oakley tells the story of the church mice Arthur and Humprey planning a Christmas party which they need to raise money for. Their entrepreneurial schemes include raffling off Sampson the church cat and, as usual, everything goes haywire. This has great illustrations. Another I enjoyed when a was a child was Casey by Joyce Stranger... ...and of course one of my other favourites is The Tale of Tom Kitten by Beatrix Potter.
  12. When I was living in Canada, I really missed British Smoked Back Bacon and sausages and decent tea. You also had to fork out a whole alot more money for decent cheese as well. But now I'm back here there is loads of food I miss from Canada, like huge cartons of freshly squeezed orange juice, mammoth breakfasts of pancakes, waffles, french toast, hash browns and sourdough bread and those flavoured creams to put in your coffee...and not being able to get sushi takeout (which isn't so easy here in the Peak District!)
  13. I have just finished this book recently and really enjoyed it too. It was a very interesting read and makes me want to rewatch The Last Emperor which I watched years and years ago and loved. I am a Landscape Architect by profession so decriptions of the gardens in the forbidden city were very welcome.
  14. I know very yukky...my friend sitting opposite was really tucking into them, I just stuck to eating the dimsum.
  15. I would definately steer clear of eating any insects, I have dissected locusts and cockroaches when I was a biology student and you don't wanna see their insides believe me!!! Crab, lobster and shrimp are crustaceans so don't worry they are not insects. I generally avoid things like shellfish (I call them the alternative name of "bottom dwellers") as they tend to filter their food from the sea and hence any nasties that are dumped in the sea. Avoid buying your shellfish from anywhere near a sewage outlet!!! Weird stuff that I have eaten includes frogs legs (tasted like chicken to me but fishy aftertaste), crocodile (or was it alligator?) (tasted like chicken to me again but fishy aftertaste) and mountain oysters or sweetbreads (sheep's balls - I didn't know this when I was eating them!) I have attempted to eat chicken's feet but just couldn't stomach it. I thought that maybe they would be chopped up a bit but they just arrived on the table completely whole and looking like they had been scratching around in the dirt a few hours ago!
  16. Has anyone read this by Jonthan Saffran Foer? I have just been lent it by a friend and they absolutely rave about it?
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