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haniirani

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Posts posted by haniirani

  1. I've started Knots and Crosses by Ian Rankin, the first in the Rebus series. I'm only about 30 pages in but am really enjoying it so far and am very excited to have discovered a new author. I've got that great feeling when you know you're going to enjoy a book, and best of all, I know there's a whole series of them to be read. :D

     

    Thanks, Andrea. I'm in the process of finding series to read so I might check out this particular one!

  2. Here's my updated list.

    Finished:

    - March, Geraldine Brooks. Beautiful writing.

    - The Road, Cormac McCarthy. Bleak yet hopeful. Beautiful father and son relationship.

    -Of Mice and Men. A good read.

    A 5/5 week!

     

    Reading:

    - Swallows of Kabul, Yasmina Khadra.

    - Blood Memory, Greg Iles

    So far so good!

     

    Somewhat decided future reading:

    - The Library Window, Margaret Oliphant

    - Turn of the Screw, Henry James

    - Out, Natsuo Kirino

    - Blackwater Lightship, Colm Toibin

    - Angela's Ashes, Frank McCourt

    - L'assomoir, Emile Zola

    - Cannery Row, John Steinbeck

    - Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen

    - Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut

    - The Echo Maker, Richard Powers

    - Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides

    - Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys

    - Skipping Christmas, John Grisham

     

    And these are shelved. Another time perhaps?

     

    - Good Earth, Pearl S Buck

    - Bouvard & Pecuchet, Gustave Flaubert

    - The Birth House, Ami McKay

    - Next, Michael Crichton

    - Utopia, Lincoln Child

  3. Needs immediate attention!

    - March, Geraldine Brooks (due 25th, wait, that's 2 days ago!)

    - The Road, Cormac McCarthy (oh my 25th as well...)

    - Atonement, Ian McEwan (30th)

    - The Glass Castle, Jeanette Walls (31st)

    - Water for Elephants, Sara Gruen (31st)

     

    Not-so-urgent

    - Come to me, Amy Bloom

    - Of Mice & Men, John Steinbeck

    - Swallows of Kabul, Yasmina Khadra

    (got to check out their library due dates soon)

     

    Undecided

    - The Library Window, Margaret Oliphant

    - Turn of the Screw, Henry James

    - Out, Natsuo Kirino

    - Middlesex, Jeffrey Eugenides

    - Wide Sargasso Sea, Jean Rhys

    - Cannery Row, John Steinbeck

    - Good Earth, Pearl S Buck

    - Skipping Christmas, John Grisham

    - Bouvard & Pecuchet, Gustave Flaubert

    - Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut

    - L'assomoir, Emile Zola

    - The Echo Maker

    - The Birth House, Ami McKay

    - Next, Michael Crichton

    - Utopia, Lincoln Child

    - Blackwater Lightship

    - Angela's Ashes

    - Northanger Abbey

    (Help please! Which titles do I need to axe out, and which would you recommend from this list?)

  4. Wow, thanks for all your welcomes! I feel at home already. I look forward to reading your posts and discussing with everybody as well!

     

    You'll find plenty to choose from on here, with people recommending books all the time...so get ready to buy another bookcase.

     

     

    Suggestion taken! :D

  5. Hi everybody!

     

    I'm really not good with introductions. Hmm, I'm open to all kinds of genres. Contemporary, classics, young adults. I read non-fiction a couple of years ago, but currently fiction has taken the reins! Some books in my list: Out by Natsuo Kirino, The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls and Atonement.

  6. I would be interested to know what is your favourite young adult/children book. So please share with us. :lol:

     

    The most memorable book for me is this :

     

    Caught on a Train by Carlo Gebler

     

    I read it a few years ago, (or is it a few more years back?? my memory's playing tricks!) and it totally enchanted me with its bizarre, magical stories. It has 3 short stories captured in one main story. It's about a 14 year old boy who experience the most extraordinary train journey across Ireland. Unusually, there are only 3 passengers that day and he is supposed to judge which of the three tells the best story. So commence the Irish fairy and folk tales storytelling which includes visiting the seabed, visiting the moon on an eagle's back. Hope that gives you an idea of the book.

     

    All I know now is that just writing this has spurred a desire to revisit this book again! But let it wait. Because I have 8 more books waiting!

  7. I've been meaning to read Curious Incident but never gotten around to do it. As for A Spot of Bother, I wanted to join in the discussion but it seems there's a long queue for it in the library, so I don't think I'd get it very soon.

     

    I'd also be interested to know the difference between these two books, as asked by Kell above. :)

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