Jump to content

France

Member
  • Posts

    647
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by France

  1. On 08/06/2021 at 10:45 AM, Brian. said:

    Pole to Pole by Michael Palin (4/5)

    The next in my audiobook feast of Palin travel books. In this one the team travel from north to south across the biggest land mass possible. Along the way they hit various issues and enjoy some once in a lifetime experiences. Again, I really liked the book. Palin always manages to capture the human side of travel and in this book he speaks against the commercialization of travel and the well trodded tourist path in places like safari parks. I dread to think what he must make of modern day travel habits and sites like Tripadvisor. One thing I always like about him and his writing is that he is very open about feeling awkward or uncomfortable in situations when he doesn't know how to act or what to do. A lot of travel writers skirt around this issue and only focus on the obvious things.

     

     

    This was the first of Michael Palin's books I listened to on Audible and now I seize them every time they come up on a two for one (I'm really mean about my credits). He reads his own books and he's a wonderful narrator: warm, funny, self deprecating.

  2. I'm falling behind with comments on what I've read, so a very quick round up on some of them:

    Abide With Me - Elizabeth Strout, this story of a widowed minister in the late 1950's and his daughters just re-inforced my love of Elizabeth Strout's books. Moving and wonderfully written.

    Close to Home -Cara Hunter. Real page turner of a police proceedural. There are bits which you realise don't quite add up once you've finished but it's such a good read it doesn't matter. Also read The Whole Truth which is no 5 in the series.

    A Country Road, A Tree - Jo Baker. Biographical fiction about Samuel Beckett's life inFrance during the war. She has a dry style but it was an excellent read.

    The Darkest Evening -Ann Cleeves . A welcome return to form after the disppointing The Long View.

    She Lies in Wait - Gytha Lodge. Police proceedural. Don't bother.

    The Killing Season-Mason Cross. Not unlike Jack Reacher but very readable.

    The Midnight Queen - Sylvia Hunter Fantasy set in an alternative England in the 18th century. Very enjoyable.

    The Fifth Season - N K Jemisin. Can't think how I didn't know about her before this came up as a cheapie on Kindle. Winner of the Hugo prize and really, really good. The first of a trilogy, I'll be reading everything of hers I can lay my hands on, fortunately she's got quite a substantial backlist..

     

     

    4

     

  3. 25 minutes ago, Marie H said:

    Yes, most French wines are still estate bottled, rather than the Australian etc. wines tanked, then bottled in the UK. I do remember we had Marks & Spencer Le Froglet Shiraz before, and that was lovely, but I haven’t seen that for a few yeas now.

    A lot of them aren't chateau bottled and if it's labled as say 'Bordeaux rosé' some companies have no compunction about putting an entirely different wine into the second load of bottling to the first providing it's all Bordeaux rosé so two bottles bought at the same time can taste quite different. (Know this for a fact, my husband worked for one of those companies!)

     

    Marks do buy from chateaux and re-lable the bottle (or did) but even so I'd suggest going somewhere like Majestic and getting a bottle that you know comes directly from the chateau.

  4. 6 hours ago, Madeleine said:

    I did read on Philippa Gregory's website that she had very little to go on fact wise for TOBG, even she was surprised to find that Mary Boleyn existed and it's not clear whether Mary was older or younger than Anne.  I really enjoyed this book too.  The Boleyn parents don't come out of it very well do they!

    Really? I knew Anne had a sister who was Henry's mistress when I was about 14. OK, I was a history nut but I wasn't that clever and certainly not obsessed with the Tudors so didn't read an awful lot about them.

     

  5. 23 hours ago, Marie H said:

    Ooh, reading your Bordeaux wines made me thirsty for a glass of wine! I’ve hardly had any French wines, instead it’s Southern Hemisphere red wines. Somehow I just usually feel intimidated by French wines. 

    What a shame. To be honest, and it's not just prejudice because I live here, I think that French wines that cost about the same as Australian ones are often better, because transport costs play a major part. The French also usually go for blended wines rather than single grape varieties.

     

    I remember a wine merchant in the Uk telling me that all wine has a certain amount of fixed cost, taxes, duty, transport can vary a little which is approximately the same for bottles costing £5 and bottle costing £10 (or £500), so what the extra £5 reperesents is the quality of the product.

     

    If you want to give French wines a try look for chateau bottled wines "mis en bouteille au chateau" rather than ones produced by companies. It's not an abolute guarentee of good wine but given that most French chateaux sell a lot of their product locally it's usally quite drinkable.

  6. I live near Bordeaux so there's loads of excellent wine made locally (our mayor makes a wonderful rosé and a sparkling pink which is our go-to party wine). Then if you want to up the game a little there are Graves wines just over the river (lovely, flinty dry white and reds) and a little further away there's St Emilion and the Medoc where bottles can get seriously expensive. I went to a wine tasting at Chateau Haut Brion (one of the top 4 Bordeaux chateaux) where they opened two bottles for a group of 15 - 2005 vintage, which retailed at £500-700 and £750- 950 respectively! They don't sell wine at the chateau either!

     

    I also love Sauternes and it's close cousin made on our side of the river, Loupiac, whch are vins liquoreux, sweet and aromatic, and are defintely not the same as most sweet wines (made quite differently) and drunk here with savory dishes, not sweet ones. I occasionally take tour groups of mostly Americans to a couple of the Sauternes chateaux and even those who go saying they hate sweet wines are usually totally converted by the end of the tasting.

     

     

  7. On 15/05/2021 at 2:20 AM, KEV67 said:

    I have started reading War and Peace. It's the greatest novel in the world by reputation, or maybe Ulysses is, but I read that last year and did not understand it. I was rather surprised to find so much French in War and Peace. The translators have translated all the Russian, but not the French (well, they have, but as footnotes). I understand most of it, so all those evening school courses were not in vain. Ulysses had quotes from Latin, Italian, French, and a sentence in Irish. I had particular difficulty with the Latin.

    French was used almost as much as Russian by the upper classes in Tolstoy's day (and in Natasha and Pierre's too). I adored war and Peace when I read it aged 15 (I did skim the battle scenes and masonic stuff though) and can still remember nearly all of the plot which shows how much impact it made. If you aren't getting on with the translation it's worth looking out for another, my book group read Anna Karenina (also read as a teenager and almost completely forgotton) and among 9 of us there were seven different translations in totally different styles.

     

  8. The Penguin Lessons by Tom Mitchell is 99p on Kindle today. It's delightful true story  and not to be confused with Away With the Penguins which is, I believe for I haven't read it and am going on the voews of people whose reading tastes I share, a sacharine novel about an older woman finding herself.

     

  9. 18 hours ago, KEV67 said:

    I was thinking more along the lines of improving welfare for orphans, reducing legal corruption, reducing institutional bureaucracy, improving factory conditions, improving education. He usually criticised some area of society in his books. As he was so popular, I wondered whether he had any effect.

    I'm sure he had an effect, just like Charlotte Bronte did apparently with Jane Eyre and her description of Lowood School (I think that's the name!) which highlighted the conditions for so-called charity cases and they were much improved.

  10. On 10/05/2021 at 10:29 AM, Madeleine said:

    I think it was the Victorians in general who shaped Christmas as we know it today, it was Prince Albert who introduced the idea of the Christmas tree.

    It was Queen Charlotte (wife of George III ) who brought Christmas trees to England. Albert popularised them.

  11. I've read 42 but have to admit that I can barely remember anything about several of them including Silas Marner and The Time Machine.

     

    I do wonder who wrote some of the blurbs, definitely not stylistically equal to the books being promoted - eg " This deeply personal and unforgettable account of a day in the life at a Soviet labour camp in the 1950s is highly considered to be one of the greats of contemporary literature." (I did read it when I was about 18  and I'm afraid the only thing I can remember about it is that the prisoners were made to sleep with their arms outside the covers. )

  12. 6 hours ago, Brian. said:

    Weekly update.

     

    It's been a slower reading week for me this week but I have still finished (sort of) three books.

     

    Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome (4/5)

    I had a vague knowledge of the plot for this book from the BBC series of the same name featuring Dara O'Briain, Rory McGrath, and Griff Ryhs Jones. The book tells the story of three friends and a dog called Montmorency who take a trip along the river Thames in a boat. Along the way we learn a little more about the characters and enjoy the mishaps that befall them. This book is really funny and it's heartening to see that the comedy carries over to modern life perfectly despite being written in 1889. I don't often laugh out loud when reading but this book had me doing so on numerous occasions. I also really love the insults that are dished out, they are far more creative and cutting than modern ones.

     

     

    Connie Willis's To say Nothing of the Dog is a time shift novel that pays homage to Three Men in a Boat who make a fleeting  appearance. It's about three historians from the twentyfirst century sent back to Victorian times to find out what the Bishop's Bord Stump, supposedly destroyed in the bombing of Coventry Cathedral looked like. It's very funny.

     

  13. I enjoyed A Room of One's Own which I read for a book club but one of our members, Welsh from the valleys, was so enraged by it that he could barely  say "Pheasant, we never got pheasant!".

     

  14. On 24/04/2021 at 3:17 PM, Raven said:

     

    Does the Kobo not tell you how far through a book you are? The Kindle has a page count, percentage read and other stats you can cycle through at the bottom of the screen (you can also turn them off if you don't want to be discouraged when reading a long book!)

     

    Yes it does but it's not the same psychologically as judging by eye!

  15. I hate reading long books on Kindle. It's something to do with not knowing how far in you are and how far you've got to go and also to do with the concentration, I don't absorb as much when reading on Kindle (Kobo in my case), I think it might have something to do with the smaller page area. I'm thinking of upgrading my Kobo to one of the bigger waterproof ones anyway, my current one is beginning to show its age, and will be interested to see if it changes my reading patterns.

  16. The Watchmaker of Filagree Street, a slightly-alternative world fantasy set in London, was one of my favourite reads a couple of years ago. I'm happy to say that The Lost Future of Pepperharrow, the sequel and set in Japan is every bit as good, perhaps even a little better. Very highly recommended.

     

    The Penguin Lessons is totally different and an absolute joy. Tom Mitchell was a  23 year old paying for his travels in South America by teaching in a boarding school in Buenos Aires when he came across an oil covered penguin that he took back to the flat he was borrowing to wash clean and return to the sea. Except the penguin refused to leave so Tom ended up by smuggling the penguin, by then named Juan Salvador, back to his school where Juan rapidly became an unoffical mascot. I It's a short book, and not the best written stylistically speaking but that doesn't matter at all, I can't believe anyone reading  it wouldn't fall for penguin charm! Very well worth searching out.

  17. Yes I do - I never write in them but I turn down corners if I don't have something to use as a bookmark, I do break spines (I read and knit so like the book to lie flat in front of me) and I read in the bath so the page edges can get a bit damp even though I have a towl to hand to dry my fingers before turning.

     

    That said, if anyone lends me a book I treat it like gold-dust and return it in the state it was lent to me.

     

  18. 13 hours ago, poppy said:

     

    The narrator makes a huge difference when listening to audible books. I've used LibriVox in the past and found several books unlistenable because of this.

    I'm a huge fan of E M Forster, so glad you love the actual book. 

    I agree about narrators - I never enjoyed Trollope until I listened to Timothy West reading The Warden, but then I think Timothy West could make the telephone directory sound brilliant.

     

  19. 13 hours ago, poppy said:

    Did you enjoy  A Room With a View, France? It hasn't got any stars.

     

    I love the book but have abandoned the audible version half way through, somehow the narration is just uninteresting. I might pick it up again later or might return it, I've got 9 months to make up my mind.

  20. 23 hours ago, Hux said:

    The lack of speech marks was probably the only thing I liked. 😂

    Let's agree to disagree on that one! What I really enjoy about most book groups if that in general people don't feel that you're attcking them personally if you don't share their opinion or liking for a book. Unlike most Facebook groups! (And a real life book group where one of the members got furiously angry when you didn't agree with her.)

×
×
  • Create New...