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Bel-ami

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Posts posted by Bel-ami

  1. ACK! I loved Weaveworld! It's still one of my favorites...and due for a re-read, I think.

     

    But I agree with you about To the Lighthouse. Bo-ring.

     

    Re: Weaveworld - yes, its inclusion says more about my tastes than the book itself, so perhaps not fair that one. I should have thought it through better - if you like horror/fantasy, then Clive Barker is to be recommended I'm sure :D

  2. I've been enjoying reading through this thread and like others have gasped when someone wrote that they didn't like some personal favourites like War of the Worlds, Madame Bovary or Stendahl's Scarlet & Black.

     

    I would include Lord of the Rings in that, but Freewheeling Andy's comment made me think about whether I would still like it now as an adult. I read it when I was eleven and was totally captivated by it. I wonder whether it would have the same effect if I read it now - probably not.

     

    So, my turn to upset someone perhaps. The books I wouldn't recommend:

     

    The Alchemist by Paolo Coelho

    Father Brown by G.K. Chesterton

    To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

    Weaveworld by Clive Barker

    The Influencing Engine by Richard Hayden

     

    Reasons? apart from boredom, I think the first three were partly because I don't like being preached at or having an author's philosophical or moral preconceptions forced upon me. Weaveworld proved to me that fantasy horror wasn't my cup of tea and the last one was simply the dullest, most pointless, badly written book I have ever waded through (sorry Mr Hayden).

  3. I really like the Falco books as well. Although I have by no means read them all, my favourite has also been The Silver Pigs, I enjoyed the darker mood too.

     

    I had never been to an author's 'event' until recently when Lindsey Davis was appearing locally. She is funny and down-to-earth and it was a very interesting evening learning about her background and inspiration.

     

    She devoted a fair bit of time to her new venture, Rebels and Traitors, a novel of the English Civil War, which seems to have been a lifelong ambition of hers, which the success of the Falco series has now enabled her to achieve.

     

    Looking foward to Rebels and Traitors which launches, I think, in the UK on 3rd September.

  4. Thanks BookJumper. I was thinking along the same lines with purposely hidden as well. I found it irritating because I wanted to know which county they were in! :D

     

    This has long puzzled me as well. I like your explanation BookJumper :D I always assumed that the suppression of characters' names in fiction was to give some credance to them - as though the author was protecting their identity (for political/social reasons as BookJumper refers to).

  5. Welcome Flashman! I am a fellow fan of these books which I was inspired to read after watching the BBC series Tom Brown's Schooldays back in the early 1970s, starring Richard Morant as Flashman.

     

    Like Bel-ami, Flashman was a 'cad and a bounder'; the bully who made life miserable for Tom Brown at Rugby School. Author George MacDonald Fraser takes the Flashman story beyond Tom Brown's Schooldays written by Thomas Hughes) and into an illustrious career in the British army in the Victorian era. Lots of adventure, scandal and romping. Great escapist fun.

  6. Does anyone recall a film starring George Segal and Glenda Jackson in which George undergoes some sort of mid-life crisis and barricades himself in a room vowing not to come out until he's read War and Peace?

     

    Was it called 'Lost and Found'?

     

    Doing that has always rather appealed to me :)

  7. I haven't read this one, but would recommend "Fathers and Sons" which (as I remember it) is an interesting tale and explores a number of issues such as friendship and the divide between generations, against a backdrop of provincial Russian society undergoing a period of change. Serious literary students will probably put me right here......and expand on all the underlying themes. :D

  8. 1 Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen

    2 The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien

    3 Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte

    4 Harry Potter series - JK Rowling

    5 To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee

    6 The Bible -

    7 Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte

    8 1984 - George Orwell

    9 His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman

    10 Great Expectations - Charles Dickens

    11 Little Women - Louisa M Alcott

    12 Tess of the D

  9. I read a lot of Enid Blyton. And Roald Dahl. Oh and Just William(can't remeber who that was by though)!

     

    I think Richmal Crompton is the name you are after.

     

    Some of my early favourites were:

     

    Rupert annuals

    Winnie The Pooh & The House at Pooh Corner, A.A. Milne

    Secret Seven series & Mr Twiddle books, E. Blyton

    Just William series, Richmal Crompton

    Worzel Gummidge books, Barbara Euphan Todd

    The Adventures of Paddington, Michael Bond

    Swiss Family Robinson, J.R. Weiss

    The Otterbury Incident, C. Day Lewis with wonderful sketches by Edward Ardizzone

     

    Later on I enjoyed:

     

    The Viking Trilogy, Henry Treece

    The Marsh King & The Namesake by C. Walter Hodges

    Coot Club, Arthur Ransome

    Watership Down, R. Adams

  10. My son has read all the Cherub series and the first of the Henderson Boys books which he thought was as good as, if not better than Cherub.

     

    I've read a few of the Cherubs as I was concerned that perhaps they were too 'adult' for his age. I thought they were exciting and very readable. MI6 meets Grange Hill.

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