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Scarlette

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Posts posted by Scarlette

  1. I still stick by my original post though, the only books I actively avoid are over-the-top romance novels with almost nude guys on the cover. They scream boring to me!

     

    Agreed. No Mills & Boon or historic romances with panting heroines for me. I simply cannot take them seriously. I also dislike chick-lit in general - although I'm open to suggestions - and science-fiction.

     

    Authors I will never give another chance are Jackie Collins (she should try using her imagination to come up with something other than filth) and Danielle Steele (I know you love her, gran, but she's a bit over-sentimental for my tastes).

  2. We have a new thread already? Wow, I've missed out on a lot, haven't I? :D

     

    Let's see... I've been reading Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, now busy with One, Two, Buckle My Shoe.

     

    And I bought today, Train to Triste by Domnica Radulescu and The Guernsey Literary and Potatoe Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows. *deep breath*

     

    :)

  3. This is an interesting topic. I have to say that Disney's versions of classics have never made me feel cheated out of a more accurate version of the story. I realized very quickly growing up that what Disney had in its colourful, jolly films were lightyears away from, say, the cut-off-her-toes version of Cinderella my gran used to tell me. I love the orginal slightly gruesome versions of Disney's tales, but the musical fluff is greatly entertaining, too.

  4. Then I read a book on writing stories and novels, and in it is a discussion on said. The upshot: don't try and be too clever. If said fits, said does.

     

    I agree with that, although I am all in favour of a well-placed "muttered", "whispered", etc.

     

    In general, though, I prefer dialogue to be as uncomplicated as possible. I feel that if a flowing dialogue is suddenly interrupted by a "said" or "joked", it's distracting. I also feel that punctuation, if well used, can be very effective in describing emotion, etc - why waste paper writing "he exclaimed", when this little guy "!" can do the job for you?

  5. Has anyone read The Dante Club by Matthew Pearl? I'm not into murder mysteries because you can't really read them twice, but I really like the premise of this. Can tell me whether a non-mystery reader would enjoy it enough to keep? I don't want to be getting something I'll then have to give away. Thank you.

     

    Although I haven't read The Dante Club, I'll throw in my two cents worth of what I do know. I own (the yet to be read) The Poe Shadow - by the same author - and while looking about online for reviews of said novel, I soon came to the realization that I might have bought the wrong novel... What I should have bought is The Dante Club, which according to reviewers is brilliant. I doubt this rambling has helped you in any way at all, though... :irked:

  6. People who let their pet (dogs) do their 'business' in YOUR yard and then don't clean it up! :(

     

    We've had a spat with our neighbours about just that. And not only did their dogs do their "business" in our yard, they also tried attacking me in my own yard. Said neighbours also have no fence or wall around their front yard, which means the dogs are free to walk about as they please. I suppose what really bugs me are our neighbours. :friends0:

  7. This is a good topic, Katrina. :lol:

     

    I have a great variety of novels on many different subjects - some less Christian-like than others - but I've never felt that any book I've read has led me to doubting my faith or influenced me in any negative way. I'm a very curious person and I've rather live out that side of me through books and imagination than actually doing things that would be against my beliefs and morals.

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