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Nellie

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Posts posted by Nellie

  1. I know we shouldn't judge a book by it's cover and all that, but when I was reading Roxis's post about which versions of a book to buy based on the cover, it got me thinking. Are there book jackets that are so well designed, they really sum up the book for you?

     

    For me, the Everyman Editions of the Wodehouse books do it for me. They are lovely hardback books, and the dust jackets seem to sum up the period in which they are set along with the atmoshpere of the books.

     

    51Ovf-m%2By5L._SL500_AA240_.jpgjeeves_1.jpg

     

    The Pratchett book covers are wonderful too, I think Josh Kirby (I think thats who drew them) really sums up the complete chaos of the Discworld!

     

    On the other end of the scale I though the UK jacket for the Deathly Hallows was awful, and didn't really get over the peril that the wizarding world was in.

     

    Do you have any favourite book covers?

  2. Overall I really like my Sony Reader but I think the price of ebooks is too high.

     

    I've heard this quite a lot, but I am not sure why people think e-books should be significantly cheaper. The still need to be written, edited etc, and although there isn't any paper involved there will be a lot of folks running the coomputer systems to ensure copyright protection. Seems fair to me.

     

    FOr those that missed it I wrote a Review of my SOny E-reader.

     

    I still love it, and it gets good use. :)

  3. Like someone else mentioned earlier, i do prefer my books in paper form, purely as a way to get away from the computer, with so many digital things, it surely can't be good for your eyes to constantly be looking at bright screens, that's my opinion anyway :roll:

     

    Thats the beauty of the SOny E-Reader, the screen isn't backlit, so it doesn't hurt your eyes. It's just like reading paper which is a bit of a shock when you first start! :lol:

  4. I was watching Merlin last night and realised I have never read the legends of King Arthur and his knights. A quick look on amazon showed me a whole heap of books, but I couldn't work out what was a history of the legend and what was a book of actual stories. Can someone recommend a book which has the legends in it?

  5. I'm not at all surprised by this. By nature of being on this forum I love reading, and read alot. And I love the fact that others have read things I haven't, it means new ideas for books to read!

     

    However, when I talk about books with some of my book loving colleagues, others do look worried that they haven't read much, and I am sure many of them lie about what they have read, espcially if they realise up fornt that you havent' read it either. It's the book equivalent of keeping up with the Jones.

     

    :)

     

    By the way, not only have I read Emma and A Brief History Of Time, but last night I read War and Peace twice, once in English, once in Russian. ;-)

  6. I am about two thirds of the way through this book, and I am not sure what to make of it. I am enjoying it, in a slightly uncomforatble sort of way. It really is a very strange story and I was wondering what others thought. This is the first Iain Banks book I have read. Are they all this strange?

     

    Below is a summary taken from Amazon:

     

    Through much of this impressive first novel, almost up until the awkward and misguided finale, young Scottish writer Banks achieves that fine British balance - between horrific content on the one hand and matter-of-fact comic delivery on the other. The narrator, whose cool prose is sometimes a bit too sophisticated for credibility, is 16-year-old Frank Cauldhame, living outside a remote Scottish village - a cheerfully insane lad who tortures animals, imagines that he gets instructions from the "Factory" (the room upstairs where he cremates wasps), and fondly recalls the three grisly/farcical murders he committed from age six to age ten.

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