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France

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Posts posted by France

  1. On 8/5/2024 at 9:38 PM, Madeleine said:

    I've been trying to get into crochet too, a bit stop start at the moment, well more stop than start!  I also got a kit for my birthday, of a sunflower in a pot, a bit complicated for a beginner who's still trying to master double crochet! Harry Potter sounds fun but as you say you need to master the basics first, good luck.

    I knit but can't get my head around crochet at all.

    • Like 1
  2. 2 hours ago, poppy said:

    I've been meaning to read some Barbara Pym, and your review has convinced me, especially being likened to EF Benson 😊

    I'm not sure that I'd necessarily compare Barbara Pym to either Jane Austen or EH Benson apart from happily re-readiing all three of them when I need a comfort read.

     

    I've introduced Barbara Pym to several people and the usual reaction is "Why haven't I read her before?" and "Have you got any of her books for me to borrow?" which is why I can no longer find my copy of Excellent Women.

  3. 1 hour ago, Shin said:

     

    Really looking forward to giving Fourth Wing a go.  I don't think I have heard a bad word about that book. 

    Apart from the sex scenes - too many, far too,detailed! Everyone I know who has read the book agrees even though they loved everything else about it.

  4. 12 hours ago, muggle not said:

    I have read 3 of your books on the list. The 2 by Karin Slaughter and The Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarrows. I thought The Fourth Wing was really great.

     

    I may try reading The Thursday Murder Club as I see that Hayley also liked it.

    I  enjoyed the Thursday Murder Club too MN!

    Shin, I was absent from the form for about 12 years I think, it was s nice that it was still here when I came looking!

    I've only tried one Karin Slaughter and it was so gory that I've never been able to read another but  Fourth Wing is terrific (my daughters adored it too).

  5. 13 hours ago, willoyd said:

    J

     

     

    29. Thunderclap by Laura Cumming  ******
     I found it beautifully written, perfectly balanced, and a totally captivating read (I also learned a lot!). The sort of book where you want to start again immediately. It's also the sort of book I want to write more about, but I think I'll leave that until I've reread it! Comfortably the best book I've read so far this year.

     

     

    I couldn't agree with you more! I learnt so much and it's so enticingly written - my one frustration was that I had it on my Kobo (an impulse buy because it was 99p and looked "quite interesting" which shows why buying ebooks on a whim can be a good thing) and I had to keep on stopping to look up the pictures she was writing about on my phone. I'm definitely going too buy a proper copy to savour.

  6. The Mars House by Natasha Pulley.  Oh what a dire, dragging disappointment this was! 

     

    I loved Natasha Pulley's first books where she delves into a slightly whimsical alternative world; her last one which was based on Russian nuclear experimentation in the 60's less so but it was still enjoyably off beat in places and the characterisation was great.

     

    The Mars House is set in the future with a Chinese colony on Mars and Earth gradually being destroyed by climate change and a war between America and Russia. January, a ballet dancer, leaves behind flooded London to go to Mars as a refugee where as an immigrant he does the menial jobs that the native inhabitants of Mars don't do. The earth immigrants have grown up in a far more powerful gravity than the Martians so are much stronger - dangerously so  and can inadvertantly cause serious injury. The only only way Earth refugees can become actual citizens is by having a highly dangerous procedure to make then less muscular so so less lethal which can cripple them and certainly shortens their lives. Citizens are gender neutral while "Earthstrongers" have gender specific pronouns. There is a movement among Martians to force all Earthstrongers to have the procedure whether they want it or not...

     

    Goodness it all got tedious. She says in her acknowledgements that her London publisher refused to take the book and I'm not surprised. What does surprise me is that she found another one to take it.

  7. I'm currently reading The Cautious Traveler's Guide to the Wastelands which is fantasy/alternative history and most definitely weird and quite mysterious too so I think it counts!

     

    I like the look of The Retreat and I also have Stuart Turton so I think that's me sorted!

    • Like 1
  8. On 7/23/2024 at 10:21 PM, lunababymoonchild said:

    Decided on Stuart Turton's latest, The Last Murder at the End of the World. Not impressed so far but it might grow on me.

    Oh dear! I've got this and am planning to start it fairly soon.

  9. On 7/17/2024 at 8:33 PM, muggle not said:

    15. The Bookseller of Inverness - S.G. MacLean - 4.5/5

    One of my favourite books of last year.

     

    I recommended it to my book group and one member said she thought it was bland! Not sure she'd read the same book as the rest of us!

    • Like 1
  10. I was really looking forward to reading The Angel of the Crows by Katherine Addison as I loved the Goblin Emperor but I found this a real slog. It's winfic (which I didn't realise when I bought it ) - fanfic with wings and a pastiche in a fantasy London of Sherlock Holmes too. Sadly, unless you're ready to read anything Sherlock related I'd give this one a miss.

     

    Another book I was looking forward to was The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl  Her writing about food is wonderful and a yes, you can practically taste the dishes in his novel about a repressed girl finding her true self in 1980's Paris, but otherwise the storyline is so sickly sweet that I was practically suffering from sugar overload by the end.

     

    I enjoyed The Warm Hands of Ghosts by Katherine Arden a lot though it was a bit slow to get going. I've read an awful lot of WWI stories and it was really good to come across one that was decidedly different and yet moving at the same time.

     

    The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley has been on my radar since it appeared on a Books to look forward to in 2024 list and I was given it as a birthday present. In just a slightly distant future a time machine can pull people who would have died anyway out of history into the present day and there is an experiment going to, see how 5 very disparate characters from different eras can adapt to modern life.  Each one has a mentor, called a bridge, and the story is focused on an arctic explorer from Sir John Franklin's doomed expedition and his unnamed female bridge. it's great fun, well written and you nreally can't see where it's going. Recommended.

     

    The Night Hawks by Elly Griffiths , like all the Rutth Galloway books, well written, well plotted, thoroughly enjoyable.

  11. 12 hours ago, KEV67 said:

    If you could read Wind in the Willows when you were six then you were precocious. I think the reading age for that book is much higher than that.

    Wind in the Willows was read to me though I read Black Beauty when I was five (my mother left off reading it to me to answer the telephone and I got so impatient that I picked it up and realised I could read it myself and finished it on my own). I was home schooled, was on my own in the middle of the country and basically barely ever saw children of my own age so reading and going for long walks with the dog were my two chief occupations - passions I still have today.

    • Like 2
  12. I was read the Wind in the Willows when I was about six and I can remember the feeling of being utterly transported by the magic and fantasy of the story. I was already a reader but it was mostly animal stories like Black Beauty and a series about Bob the sheepdog, the Wind in the Willows gave me a taste for the magical and different which I've never lost.

    • Like 3
  13. It seems to me that Ann Patchett has got better and better ever since she first pulished Bel Canto and Tom Lake has to be up there in contention for my best read this year. 

     

    I was initially put off reading it because it was described as a "pandemic novel" and I'm already sooo bored of reading about social distancing, lockdowns and wearing masks but this book isn't one of those. The pandemic is the cause of Lara's three very different daughters gathering on the family cherry farm for the summer to isolate and help their parents bring the harvest in and Lara is profoundly happy to have them around her. While they are working she tells them about when she was an actor and the history of her long ago affair with a now famous film star - some of it, there are things even her daughters cannot know.

     

    It's beautifully written with  quiet unshowy prose that leads you from one sentence to the next, the settings both in the cherry orchard and while Lara was acting are completely immersive and characterisation is superb.

     

    The plot does assume a certain familiarity with Thornton Wilder's play Our Town, I'm not sure that it matters if you've never heard of it (like me) but it's easyn enough to look it up on line.

  14. An Inheritance of Magic by  Benedict Jacka  is the start of a new fantasy series set in a London where the use of magic is a preserve of several vastly rich families who as practitioners control it's use and supply. Stephen Oakwood is an orphan, or is probably one, his mother walked out, his father disappeared, but he does have some magical skill. Then a couple of scions of one of the wealthiest families  turn up, claiming he is a cousin, and hoping to use him in an increasingly heated inheritance battle.

     

    It's fast moving, refreshingly different from much of fantasy since it doesn't take itself seriously at all and Stephen as a character develops and grows. Not high literature but hugely enjoyable, I zipped through it and am greatly looking forward to the next book.

     

    The Golden Gate by Amy Chua The cover is beautiful, the writing is tedious and bangs far too many drums.

     

     Romantic Comedy by Curtis Sittenfeld  I like Curtis Sittenfeld's writing most of the time and I'd heard  many good things about this romantic comedy between two unlikely figures, a writer on a show clearly based on Saturday Night Live and a glamerous super famous rock star. The first part is great, Sally the writer is sympathetic, smart and her insecurities are believable and the background of the show is fabulous. Noah the rock star is a little one dimensional but hey ho, it's Sally's story. The second part is good too, but it starts getting samey and drawn out and I went from loving every page to rather hoping I was near the end.

     

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