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SueK

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Posts posted by SueK

  1. Thanks for recommending those books Sue. I can see this forum is going to cost me money. I already give the guys at Amazon far too much from my wages!

    :readingtwo:

     

    Oh yes, we've all been there too. It's all the good recommendations on this site and makes one rush out and buy the book. By the way, you're not Roman Abramovitch in disguise are you? :giggle2:

     

     

    Yes, London Belongs To Me is a great book. If you're interested in this sort of stuff (and I'm a sucker for books on London low-life myself), London Books is a small publishing house which has re-issued some classic stuff from the same era by the likes of Gerald Kersh, James Curtis and Bob Westerby (www.london-books.co.uk is their website).

     

    That sounds right up my street Roland. I'll check out the website (oh dear more money .... :lol: )

  2.  

    I really enjoyed that book too. Her descriptions of vintage fashion was just great.

     

    I've just been writing on another thread here called "London Belongs to Me" by Norman Collins. This book was written in 1945 and it is centred solely around London Life. In the same era is Angel Pavement by J P Priestley which is centred around an office in 40s London. If you are a doorstep challenge, then there is "London" by Edward Rutherfurd which is historical fiction of London from Bronze Age (I think) to present day.

  3. I agree with Milo, this is a lovely book. I've been a fan of Norman Collins since my dad introduced me to his books a long while back. You should also try to get hold of Bond Street Story - a booked centred around a Department Store - which is just as good as LBTM. I love the way he deals with the minutiae of London Life. (There was a good black and white film of LBTM with Richard Attenborough playing Percy).

     

    If that style of book appeals I would also recommend Angel Pavement by J P Priestley which I have listed on my profile as my favourite book. Similar in some ways to LBTM but with the added warmth of Priestley's wonderful prose.

  4. We only have freeview and that is quite enough for us. I look through the programmes on satellite sometimes and I don't think I'm missing anything. My preferrred channels are ITV3 (I love the Poirot and Sherlock repeats) and Yesterday with their Nazi Hunter stories.

  5. I've started the third Agatha Raisin book on kindle today (Agatha Raisin and the Potted Gardener) - they are a funny light hearted series and I've enjoyed the first 2 so far. I'm also going to start on Rebecca West's The Birds Fall Down. I also ordered The Red Dancer which is the story of Mata Hari.

  6. Finished The Welsh Girl and started Vampirates: Demons of the Ocean by Justin Somper

     

    Did you like the Welsh Girl chesilbeach? I've had this book for quite a while now and I haven't felt like picking it up yet.

     

    The Book People came in yesterday and I bought the complete boxed set of Inspector Morse for £12! :D (plus a cookery book and a lovely book on British wildlife). I'm still enjoying The Interpreters and should finish it later today.

  7. I finished Roger Ackroyd last night and started reading Crippen by John Boyne. I read about 43 pages and I'm utterly fascinated.

     

    I'll be interested to know what you think of Crippen Frankie. I like John Boyne's books and have thought about getting this one.

     

    I am reading Interpreters by Sue Eckstein at the moment and it is brilliant.

  8. On a more historical note, JB Priestley's English Journey is a sharp and entertaining account of England in 1933 - a classic. So (as a classic) is HV Morton's In Search of England, a view from the 1920s.

     

    I couldn't agree more regarding JP Priestley's book. I was fortunate to find a beautiful copy of this book complete with photographs and is one I treasure . His writing is just wonderful.

  9. Hi Vodkafan, I have a Sony MP4 and I can confirm you can download from iTunes. I tend to download direct from Amazon music store too, you need to download their music transfer software to your PC and then on to the MP4 library. I can't say about music videos but I have downloaded some stuff from BBC iplayer inr the past. The screen is very small but I can manage to see a programme reasonably well. Hope you enjoy it - I wouldn't be without mine! :D

  10. Hi there

     

    Wow Victorian fiction is such a big genre. I love Victorian fiction but mostly of the mystery type such as Sherlock Holmes, Rider Haggard, Lee Jackson's books etc. If you go to Amazon and click on Catherine Cookson - they often give recommendations of similar authors and you can see if any of those take your fancy.

  11. Hello Honeygirl

     

    I too read quite a lot of books on WW2 but not necessarily from the actual fighting point of view, more of the darker side of it like "Far to Go" by Alison Pick which is about the kindertransport that took jewish children out of Germany before the start of the war and such like. There is a book series you may be interested by David Downing :

     

    1. Zoo Station (2007)

    2. Silesian Station (2008)

    3. Stettin Station (2009)

    4. Potsdam Station (2010)

    5. Lehrter Station (2012)

     

    which, as the titles suggest, are based around Berlin leading up to and after the war.

     

    Also the Bernie Gunther books by Philip Kerr are centred around Berlin at the same time.

     

    Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky or Charlotte Grey by Sebastian Faulkes are also worth looking at.

  12. I picked this up this week and am absolutely engrossed. I remember having it read to us at school but I had almost forgotten it. She wrote this after the success of Rebecca and Jamaica Inn and it centres around Menabilly where Du Maurier lived in Cornwall which was fictionalised in Rebecca as Manderley (unnamed in this book). It has the same brooding atmosphere of Rebecca but this is more a novel of suspense right to the last page.

     

    Philip Ashley has lived with his older cousin Ambrose for years in the grand house in Cornwall and both are devoted bachelors. Every winter Ambrose travels to warmer climes due to bad bouts of rhuematism. This time he travels to Florence where he meets Rachel who is a distant cousin. Totally unexpectedly, he marries her but never returns to his beloved Cornwall as he dies in sudden circumstances. Philip has to convince himself that Rachel had no hand in his death .....

     

    Needless to say, Daphne du Maurier's descriptions of the Cornish coastline and by contrast, the Tuscany landscapes, are just wonderful and the plotline is excellent.

  13. The Novel in the Viola is a lovely read, very easy to get into yet compelling too, much better than The Distant Hours in my opinion...

     

    The Novel in the Viola was one of the best reads this year for me. I loved it because it had traces of Daphne du Maurier in the descriptions and she is one of my favourite writers.

  14. Thanks, Sue. I've just looked it up - not a "beach" read, for sure, but I'll definitely get hold of a copy very soon. It's a bit of a whopper too, by the look of it.

     

    No definitely not a beach read :blush: but very engrossing and readable and I got through it quite quickly.

     

    I'm still reading My Cousin Rachel - I'm taking my time to savour it because it's such a good story.

  15. I read The Death Maze a while ago, Sara, and I'm sure you'll enjoy it. Not heard of The Emperor of Lies before, but it sounds interesting - I'll look out for it. Have a good break!

     

    The Emperor of Lies is an excellent book. I've got it on Kindle. It is actually a work of fiction but centred around the real Jewish Council in the Lodz ghetto. Well worth reading in my opinion.

  16. I have been reading A vengeful Longing by R N Morris however I did not get on with this book, it was very long winded and slow moving, I did not relate to the characters, in the end I felt it was not improving and gave up on it.

     

    Oh that's a shame Dawnbird :( I've read all the Petrovich books by R N Morris and really enjoyed them. It does take a while to get into the characterisations. Once I'd read the first ones, the rest sort of fitted like a glove - but then I love that period of history.

     

    I've just finished The Black Madonna and have now started on The Holy Thief by William Ryan

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