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pontalba

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Posts posted by pontalba

  1. Great review, Anna. Back in the day I read tons of books on WWII/Hitler, and I am pretty sure I've read that one. I do remember the two names of volumes, one by John Toland, Adolph Hitler. Also, The Arms of Krupp by Manchester. Good stuff.

     

    I think I read so much back then that I'm kind of "hitlered out". Heh.

     

    Anyhow, Happy Reading! :D

  2. We saw the mini series of The Night Manager, loved it. I'm about a third of the way through the book. The show was quite close to the book, fortunately. Several areas are verbatim.

     

    I have read The Spy Who Came inFrom the Cold, and years ago saw the Richard Burton film version. Bleak? Oh, yeah. But excellent.

  3. Got it, and responded, thanks. :)  I couldn't see your books there though. 

     

    Finally finished my first book of the year/month!

     

    The Children's Home by Charles Lambert 4/5

     

    A terribly scarred and disfigured man, a grand secluded estate, furniture and carvings from all over the world are well described by Lambert, creating the centerpiece of our story.  How was he so maimed?  Where is this place? When is this place? And most of all, where are all the children coming from?  All ages, both genders they simply arrive/appear on the estate.  He and his housekeeper are the only inhabitants of the house and they care for the children unquestioningly.  Mysterious wax figures are discovered, and a mission seems to be forming around the man.  He is only told that he will know what to do when the time comes.

     

    The reviews on GoodReads are quite mixed, and tend to be lesser rather than more.  I can understand why, but was compelled to rate it as highly as I have because of the ambiance of the story, the mixture of tragedy, love given and received, and total weirdness  truly swept me along.  There is an air of magical realism about the story, not a genre I enjoy.  But, somehow, this works for me.  I would have appreciated a little more.....body to the ending, but it is what it is, and that's ok.

     

    Interestingly, there is a small comparison for me to the book The Adventurers by Harold Robbin in that there is a past revolution apparently fueled by an Army that is now in disarray.  That is part of my sympathy for the story, I believe. 

     

    Recommended, if you can stand open endings that don't explain everything.

  4. Great review, Ian. I loved the trilogy, but unlike you I did go back and reread the first two...phew! But I have to say that was, for me, a wise decision. My memory was vague, and the reread actually clarified some points for me. It was a great experience to read all 3 in one-felled swoop. I wonder if that unmasks a certain amount of masochism on my part......? :D

     

    Happy Reading Year!

  5. Happy Reading Year!!

    Amazing lists, BB!  Ambition, thy name is.....BB!   :readingtwo:  :giggle2:

     

    You have quite a few excellent ones that I've read, The Road, Outlander, and more....yays!

     

     

    You're brave listing your Kindle books 'to be read'.   I've no idea how many books I have on my Kindle - I'm going with the ostrich approach!  :lol:  (Do they really bury their heads in the sand, or is that a myth...?)

     

    ostrich_zpsxfjldoxt.jpg

     

    I have started keeping a tally of Kindle books that I've paid for in the last few years, but I have tons of freebies that I haven't listed.

     

    Happy reading in 2017  :)

     

    I love this, it's an approach that has worked for me!  :giggle:

  6. LOL at your clown reference above, muggle! 

     

    We watched Longmire, and enjoyed it......up to a certain point.  When

    Longmire grabbed up the gun, or knife ( I forget now) after the Gerald Rainey character was killed in Longmire's living room, I thought that was the absolutely DUMBEST move anyone could make, much less a Lawman!!!!

    That finished me with the show.

     

    Happy Reading Muggle!!

  7. Last year was  a slow reading year, but not as slow as some, thankfully.  :)

     

    I'm still in the middle of The Greatest Knight, and something else that escapes me atm.  heh

     

    Also I'm reading, and will finish today I believe, The Children's Home by Charles Lambert.  Excellent so far, it is reminiscent of Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle.  Not in actual content, but tenor. 

  8. Books Read in 2017


    JANUARY

    The Children's Home by Charles Lambert 4/5
    The Greatest Knight by Thomas Asbridge. 4/5
    The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson 4/5
    The Long Surrender by Burke Davis 5/5
    A Death in Sweden by Kevin Wignall 4/5

    FEBRUARY

    The Night Manager by John LeCarre 5/5
    A Constellation of Vital Phenomena by.
    (Read 36%, couldn't finish, depressing)
    The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood 3/5
    The Edge by Dick Francis 5/5
    Hawaii by James Michener 5/5
    The Perseid Collapse by Steven Konkoly 3/5
    Event Horizon by Steve Konkoly 3/5
    Watchman by Ian Rankin 4/5
    Assignment: Amazon Queen by Edward S. Aarons 3/5

    MARCH

    Extraordinary People by Peter May 4/5
    The Confessions of Young Nero by Margaret George 5/5
    The Nightwalker by Sebastian Fitzek 5/5
    If Kennedy Lived: The First and Second Terms of President John F. Kennedy: An Alternate History by Jeff Greenfield 3/5
    The Girl in the Spider's Web by David Lagercrantz. 2/5 (if that, I'm being kind)

     

    APRIL

     

    The Mists of Avalon by M.B. Zimmer 3/5

    Triple Crown by Felix Francis 3/5

    The Quiet Game by Greg Iles 5/5

    Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon 5/5

    As Chimney Sweepers Come to Dust by Alan Bradley 4/5

    How Dogs Love Us:  A Neuroscientist and His Adopted Dog Decode the Canine Brain by Gregory Berns  5/5

    Bird Box by Josh Malerman 5/5

     

    MAY

     

    The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter by Malcolm MacKay 3.5/5

    Furious Love: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and the Marriage of the Century by Nancy Schoenberger   3/5

    Mystic River by Dennis LeHane 4/5

    A Pillar of Iron by Taylor Caldwell 5/5

     

    JUNE

    Days Without Number by Robert Goddard 5/5

    How A Gunman Says Goodbye by Malcolm MacKay 4/5

    The Sudden Arrival of Violence by  Malcolm McKay 3.5/5

    U is for Undertow by Sue Grafton 4/5

     

    JULY

     

    Since We Fell by Dennis Lehane 4/5

    Star Trek:TNG, Vendetta by Peter David 3/5

    The Drop by Dennis Lehane 4/5

    The Dark House by John Sedgwick 4/5

     

     

     

  9. It is pouring down right now, cool, and the electricity just came back on after a couple of hours off. Fingers crossed it doesn't go out again. How those repair guys manage to fix it that fast is a miracle to me! It was out all over the area, several cities around here were dark.

     

    It's been raining for several days now, not like this right here, but the rivers are at flood stage. Thankfully not right by us. They say it'll be clear tomorrow though.

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