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  2. Barry, the Fish with Fingers, is another book by Sue Hendra and Paul Linnet. Adrian makes me laugh, because the other fish ask Barry what he can do with his fingers. While Barry explains he can cut paper chains, knit and play with finger puppets, Adrian has taken to walking across the room, because the next page says 'tickling'. This makes me think Adrian has started to recognise words, but it is possible he recognised the picture.
  3. Today
  4. the police said shocking
  5. I loved his book The Moon and Sixpence, loosely based on the artist Paul Gaugin and his life in Tahiti.
  6. a dismal dungeon where
  7. Alone Again, Naturally ~ Gilbert O' Sullivan
  8. Love this song, very familiar with the Nat King Cole version but haven't heard the Roger William's one before. Very dramatic!
  9. I know. That is where I got the info for me to read it. πŸ˜€
  10. Yesterday
  11. I was not aware you had had a child. Belated congratulations.
  12. A very quick round up of just some of what I've read since last clocking in properly: Gabriel's Moon by William Boyd is vintage Boyd, this story about a reluctant spy in the early 1960s iss an absolute gem. Raising Hare by Chloe Dalton Chloe Dalton found a very young leveret and raised it without much hope it would survive. It did and I found the book fascinating, in particular because she took great care to raise Hare as a wild animal in great contrast to my own family where my mother raised a badger from a few hours old who most definitely became a house badger and a pet. Sadly it seems from the ending that The Shadows of Men by Abir Mukherjee is going to be the last in the series, this one was just s good as the previous ones We Solve Murders by Richard Osman is sadly just not as good as his his Thursday Murder Club books but still readable. Out of Time by Jodi Taylor is the sixth in her Time Police series and like the rest very funny. The Last Word by Elly Griffiths is frankly unmemorable. For all those who were worried about Ben Aaronovitch running out of steam, the good news is that in Stone and Sky, Peter Grant's latest outing; he most definitely hasn't.
  13. Just a few ideas: Mick Herron - both series Anne Cleeves Robert Galbraith Abir Mukherjee Peter Lovesey Chris Hammer Peter James
  14. I read this year and loved it.
  15. Moby Dick? As mentioned, I read James Herriot as a teen and he had me laughing out loud. Animal Farm? Nature, Ralph Waldo Emerson?
  16. I read this about 15 years ago and remember it as being superb. I don't know why I always have to be prodded to read Maugham because I love his writing when I do.
  17. Can I suggest Raising Hare by Chloe Dalton (which I read before this topic started). It's a wonderful account of how the author found a very young leveret and raised it, always aware that it was a wild animal and should not be a pet. It's one of those books that stays with you.
  18. Leave me alone - Michael Jackson
  19. Autumn Leaves - Nat King Cole (this is a really nice song) And the biggest selling piano recording of all time
  20. I can't think of anything for this category either.
  21. Forever Autumn - Justin Hayward
  22. a secure station like
  23. Now and Forever - Richard Marx
  24. 14. The Painted Veil - Somerset Maugham - 4.5/5 -Same as what luna said about this book. πŸ˜€ I really, really enjoyed the writing.
  25. for safe keeping into
  26. Another suggestion is My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell or one of his other animal books.
  27. Hold Me Now ~ Thompson Twins
  28. Last week
  29. Why not? I have a Tarka the Otter omnibus and a James Herriot omnibus that I have my eye on - and no, that’s not why I chose the category πŸ™‚ I read James Herriot as a teenager. They will have to go some to beat The Wind in the Willows, though. I am also considering Watership Down.
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