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poppyshake

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Posts posted by poppyshake

  1. I'm over halfway through Lockwood & Co: The Screaming Staircase now and absolutely loving it!  I've seen it in the bookshops so often and never actually picked it up, so very pleased I decided to ask for it for Christmas :smile2:

    What a brilliant title :D Glad it's living up :) 

     

    Just finished listening to Five Rivers Met on a Wooded Plain .. not a cheerful read/listen but a really interesting and absorbing story. Now listening to No Time Like the Past (The Chronicles of St Mary's #5) .. brill as usual and reading Olive Kitteridge which I'm also enjoying.  

  2. Thanks Janet.  I think I might have it on DVD somewhere (probably in storage), so I'll see if I can find it first, but otherwise, I might well go and get it from the library. :)

    Do you mean the Kate Beckinsale one, Claire? (or is there another?) I'm pretty sure I have it on DVD so don't go spending any money :)

  3. I got another book in the mail from Kylie! :o:thud::wub:  Maybe The Devil was my Bday present and today's was my Christmas present? I don't know, but I'm mighty happy and grateful for my news books! Thank you Kylie ever so much!!!  :flowers2:    :friends3:  :readingtwo:   

     

    I got Skippy Dies by Paul Murray, which has been on my wishlist since 2010. As it just so happens, I was in Australia, living with Kylie, when I saw this book at a bookstore or somewhere and read the blurb and added the title to my wishlist. I've been wanting to read it for ages! And now I have my very own copy :smile2:

     

     

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    This is brilliant .. what a great book :wub: I absolutely loved it .. hope you do too :hug: 

  4. Catching up with the last few episodes of Rick Stein's Long Weekends - love these travelogues :wub:

    Oh me too. I hated it that they only showed half of the episodes last year and then stopped for what seemed like months. Even when it did come back on my mum doesn't like him much and so turned it over when I was staying there  :drama:  

    This is comfort telly at its best :)

  5. Magpie Murders - Anthony Horowitz
     
    Synopsis:
    When editor Susan Ryeland is given the tattered manuscript of Alan Conway's latest novel, she has little idea it will change her life. She's worked with the revered crime writer for years and his detective, Atticus Pund, is renowned for solving crimes in the sleepy English villages of the 1950s. As Susan knows only too well, vintage crime sells handsomely. It's just a shame that it means dealing with an author like Alan Conway... But Conway's latest tale of murder at Pye Hall is not quite what it seems. Yes, there are dead bodies and a host of intriguing suspects, but hidden in the pages of the manuscript there lies another story: a tale written between the very words on the page, telling of real-life jealousy, greed, ruthless ambition and murder.

    Thoughts: A bit more involved than Agatha but written along the same comfy, cosy, lines. Quite Midsomer really too with it's sleepy English village theme, red herrings, bicycling vicars and busy body villagers. The main difference here is that the plot is split into two halves .. both mirroring each other but separate. For the first part of the book we hear the story that Alan Conway has written .. his later murder mystery with his leading man .. Atticus Pund .. a Hercule Poirotesque detective. I forgot actually that I was reading a story within the story so it was quite a shock to me when the story broke off abruptly before it's conclusion and took me back to Alan's editor Susan Ryeland who has a mystery of her own to solve involving the author.

     

    On the whole I thought it was a good read, a bit clunky in places and cliched but ultimately absorbing. It's very much in the spirit of Agatha (with several huge nods to her .. including the nursery rhyme title/sub-title) but it hasn't quite got the heart. All the same I love a bit of winter crime and this fit the bill nicely. 3/5

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  6. Grayson Perry: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Girl - Wendy Jones

     
    Synopsis: 
     Every inch of Grayson's childhood bedroom was covered with pictures of aeroplanes, and every surface with models. Fantasy took over his life, in a world of battles ruled by his teddy bear, Alan Measles. He grew up. And in 2003, an acclaimed ceramic artist, he accepted the Turner Prize as his alter-ego Clare, wearing his best dress, with a bow in his hair. Now he tells his own story, his voice beautifully caught by his friend, the writer Wendy Jones. Early childhood in Chelmsford, Essex is a rural Eden that ends abruptly with the arrival of his stepfather, leading to constant swerving between his parents' houses, and between boys' and women's clothes. But as Grayson enters art college and discovers the world of London squats and New Romanticism, he starts to find himself. At last he steps out as a potter and transvestite.

     

    Thoughts: I really like Grayson so enjoyed reading about his childhood and how he became interested in art and dressing up in frills and bows etc. It's not entirely a comfortable read, art students are often pretty ridiculous or do pretty ridiculous things which of course don't seem at all ridiculous at the time and I always find I'm cringing a bit (a spliff might help with this or some magic mushrooms .. but post Christmas finances meant I could only really run to half a cider! :D) plus there's a sadness in reading about his childhood .. he didn't seem to be properly loved or appreciated but I love the way he tells his story with candour and directness. I guess when you've had a time in your life where everything has to be hidden away and where you can't be yourself or are punished for being yourself then being frank is very liberating. 

    He's a very interesting and complex character and his story is fascinating. 3/5

     

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  7. I tried this late(ish) last year (got a Netgalley copy) and found it... well, kinda' boring if I'm honest. Only got about a quarter of the way through and couldn't stomach the rest. I imagine that I probably wasn't in the mood for it, but hey ho. *shrugs* Judging from your review I should come back to it and give it the space and time it likely deserves. :yes:

    It is boring really :lol: .. I think that's the point of it. It's a peep into Frit's life where absolutely nothing happens that isn't mundane and commonplace (except for in his dreams and thoughts which are disturbingly creepy.) It took me ages to accept that it wasn't going anywhere but where it already was and then I did start finding it funny in a dark, bleak, sort of way and also intriguing.

    Despite me giving it a high rating I actually wouldn't recommend it to anyone though it is highly thought of. Not many people are going to enjoy it.

    I read this Dutch book for my high school Dutch class (along with 14 others), and I have to say I didn't like the book much at all. I found it hard to get through it and only finished it because of school. But it's received lots of good praise from Dutch people back in the day, it's considered literature, a famous book and all that. So, Ben and I seem to be in the minority :shrug:. Maybe I'd appreciate it more being older than 16 or 17, I doubt I'll ever go back to it though. I'm glad you enjoyed it anyway, Kay :)! I enjoyed reading your review!

    No, don't go back to it Gaia :D .. deeply depressing. I know it's a Dutch classic and I can totally see why especially given when it was written .. I think it's outstanding but it's a bit of a trudge and the rewards are scanty.

    It doesn't cheer one up .. quite the opposite .. it disturbs one. 

    Glad you liked the review though :cows: 

    Oof, I though I`d already posted in this, but I haven`t. A belated Happy Reading in 2017 ! :D

     

    Do read the Affair of the Bloodstained Tea Cosy - it`s excellent. James Anderson only wrote three books ( a series) and they`re such good fun. :)

    Happy Reading to you too Pixie :) 

    I will definitely read The Affair of the Bloodstained Egg Cosy. I mean, who could resist that title? (or the cover?) and it's the sort of book to curl up with in winter. Hot chocolate, piece of cake etc and a nice bit of non-threatening murder .. perfect! :D 

  8. The Evenings - Gerard Reve
     
    Synopsis:
    Twenty-three-year-old Frits - office worker, daydreamer, teller of inappropriate jokes - finds life absurd and inexplicable. He lives with his parents, who drive him mad. He has terrible, disturbing dreams of death and destruction. Sometimes he talks to a toy rabbit. This is the story of ten evenings in Frits's life at the end of December, as he drinks, smokes, sees friends, aimlessly wanders the gloomy city streets and tries to make sense of the minutes, hours and days that stretch before him. Darkly funny and mesmerising, The Evenings takes the tiny, quotidian triumphs and heartbreaks of our everyday lives and turns them into a work of brilliant wit and profound beauty.

    Thoughts: This was the book that I bought as soon as I got home from my mum and dad's. I thought it was the ideal book to get me back into reading .. I had a house full of books at home but I wanted to treat myself .. a reward for being kept away from books for so long. WHAT AN IDIOT!!! :D:lol:

    What I should have picked up was one of the cosy comforting Agatha Christie's on my TBR or something by Jenny Colgan .. that was what I needed. It was coming up to Christmas after all and so reading time was still limited and concentration in short supply. But no .. I picked this (I did love the cover :blush2:  :D ) .. a book you have to immerse yourself in, not a difficult book but not a book to take lightly either and not one that you can easily get into. Needless to say, I didn't get far, I had to put it to one side until the last of the Quality Street had been eaten  :blush2: 

    I thought I was reading a modern book and was astounded to see that it was written in 1947 :o (but not translated until now.) It's very experimental for a book written back then. I think this is key though, the war isn't mentioned much but I think Frit's behaviour is a direct response to having lived through WW2. 

    He's not a very nice person .. not a great person to be spending the whole book with and certainly not someone you want to constantly read the thoughts of but he is fascinating. It is comic as the synopsis says but very, very, dark and disturbing. He is insidious, making the most of everybody's insecurities and being that horrible little voice in your ear which underlines and strengthens your fears. He does this out of boredom really. He lives with his mum and dad who he's exasperated with .. bleak house indeed! 

    The ten evenings did seem like an eternity but for all that, once I gave the story space and time I started to really enjoy it .. though I was still constantly revolted by it. It is really a little masterpiece, but it's not easy and it's not pleasant :D Worth reading though. 4/5
     

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  9. I went to a bookstore yesterday, to buy a few brush pens for my Bullet Journal project, and there was a sale... It's the same sale but now it's -60%. There was a book I wanted to buy, The Sense of an Elephant by Marco Missiroli, but in the end I put it back down. Well done, if I say so myself :drama::D

     

     

    Oh, I almost forgot! When I was checking out the Leuchtturm 1917s at the bookstore, I came upon this: 

     

     

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    :thud::lol: She was waving her hand, very majestically! :D

    :lol: Whatever next?!

    Well done for resisting the temptation to buy a book .. very impressive  :yes:

    How is the bullet journaling coming on? Hope you're enjoying it  :hug:  

  10. I read about 100 or so pages of The Children's Book in 2010 but didn't really engage with it, but my Mum loved it and we have quite similar tastes, so I might try it again some time.  On a shallow note, it does have the most beautiful cover!  :blush:

    :DIt is the most beautiful cover and the other one is lovely too .. that's why they had both stayed on one of the main shelves in the living room for such a long time  :blush2: 

    Brilliant, that's very helpful.  :)  Thanks you for the offer of the loan ( :friends3: ).  As it's got Christmas in the title (even if that's a bit misleading!  :D  ), I'd quite like to own it because I really like his books.  I think I will buy it with some of my Christmas Waterstones vouchers.   :)

    I like him too, I love the way he recounts his experiences .. you feel as if you're there. I can't get enough of reading about his family. I think I said to you before, if you can get hold of a copy of Kenneth Branagh reading Cider with Rosie then do (alas .. I only have it on cassette and haven't been able to find it on any other format :( )  It's brilliant!

     

    Oh bother!! Goodreads are already telling me I'm one book behind schedule  :(:D 

  11. Happy 2017 poppy, hope it's a great one for you and Al, lots of lovely books there, hopefully you'll get to Jamaica Inn and The House at Riverton sometime this year, both fabulous reads in my opinion, I have a couple more of Kate Morton's on my TBR (one of the Kobo) that I really must have a go at, the only thing putting me off was how awful I found The Distant Hours, it was far too long and dull, but I did love The Forgotten Garden so she is winning 2:1 at the moment! :D

     

    Perfect weather at the mo for sitting in a cosy room with a book, soon Spring will be here and we can venture outside and be a little more active!  :P

    Thanks Hayley, Happy Reading (and everything else :D) in 2017 too! 

    I should get to read Jamaica Inn this year, the one thing against it (well .. two .. there's that terrible pub :D) is that I know bits and pieces of the story because I've seen or heard little bits of it. I like all stories to be fresh but then again, I don't really have a clue about it and I love Daphne's other stories so I should just dive in and see. I don't think I've read any Kate Morton yet (I get her confused with all the other literary Kates :D) so she's new to me. Again, the book has been on my shelves for too long so .. hopefully this year :) 

    Yes, this sort of weather makes you feel like you should be staying in with a book, I need to get my audio books sorted out so that, if it does cheer up weather wise, I can go out for a walk and take a story with me :) 

    I loved House at Riverton but was also bored stiff by Distant Hours, more like the Distant Ending!  I have Forgotten Garden somewhere and have bought The Lake House so hope they're better than DH!

    She sounds a bit hit and miss :D Glad to know though that The House at Riverton is one of the hits! :D 

    I remember really enjoying The House At Riverton when I read it years ago, though I don't remember anything about it now, and I own The Forgotten Garden but never got around to reading it.

     

    I also had Possession and The Children's Book - I began the former, but just couldn't get anywhere with it. I think I sent them both to my parents house during my recent cull while moving house.

    I did persevere with The Children's Book but it was a challenge .. and I drifted and struggled (though it left me with a lot of admiration for her as a writer .. parts of it were stunning!) Something has to give though .. I needed the shelf space :D  

    I enjoyed Possession. It's quite demanding, but once in it, it is very absorbing.  I've got The Children's Book on the shelves, but am yet to tackle it.

     

    I notice you're currently reading the first volume of Virginia's letters.  How are you getting on with them?  I've got complete sets of her letters, essays and diaries on the shelves, and really must at least make a start on some of the multitude of those volumes this year!  Where are you with the fiction at present?  I followed your Mount Virginia link, but it's back in 2012 as far as I can see.

     

    Great to here you're back into reading properly.  I can't imagine not reading a word for three whole months - I'd go start staring bananas.

    Thanks Will, I think I did go slightly bats .. hard to tell :D 

    Possession is still in the house as I said, both it and The Children's Book have beautiful covers and that makes me loath to get rid of them  :blush2: .. I still might give it a go. 

    I haven't made any headway with Virginia's fiction sad to say. I will definitely fix that this year. I'm enjoying the letters, I read Vintage's Selected Letters of Virginia Woolf in 2012 and loved them but obviously these editions are much more in depth. I saw Alan Bennett's Diaries on TV at Christmas and was tickled to see that he had the same set as I have on his shelf (all except for one of his editions .. which was different and not matching .. I felt a small victory over him there :D)

    Do you listen to A Good Read on Radio 4? I was catching up with an old edition yesterday which featured Miriam Margolyes and Mark Haddon. Miriam was championing Great Expectations and Mark, To the Lighthouse (the presenter's choice was Breakfast at Tiffany's.) They were pretty universal in their love for Great Expectations and Breakfast at Tiffany's but Miriam wasn't a fan of To the Lighthouse at all (and the presenter wasn't all that enamoured :D) It does seem to be a book that polarises opinion  :D 

  12. We've had a 3D TV for about four years now, love watching a good film on it :)

    Favourite films:

    The BFG, The Jungle Book (the recent live action one which is stunning), Polar Express, Coraline, Avatar, Gravity, TinTin, Alice in Wonderland (the first Tim Burton one.) 

    I prefer animated films in 3D. I find live action ones a bit busy. Al likes live action though .. I'll ask him for faves :) 

    Takes some getting used to. I saw 3D films at IMAX before they were in ordinary cinemas .. I couldn't take to it at first but love it now. 

    I'm with MrCat though .. I don't like the converted ones .. they're rubbish or the ones I've seen are anyway. 

  13. I did cull Possession though :( It is a beautiful looking book and I did sort of enjoy The Children's Book by Byatt but I heard a bit of Possession on Radio 4 recently .. (dramatised)  .. and I found it hard to keep engaged with it. I drifted off something terrible and I just thought, if they can't keep me interested then my voice droning on about it definitely won't  :blush2: 

    It hasn't left the house yet but it has left the bookshelf :( Oh dear, it is hard!  :blush2: 

  14. Merry new reading year, Kay!  Two books down already ... looks like a good start :D

    Merry reading year to you too Claire  :hug: Hmmm, one of those two books is extremely short :lol: .. still, I am encouraged :D 

    Great to see you here again, Kay! :friends3:

     

    Some books from your TBR pile that I have really enjoyed:

     

    Atwood, Margaret - The Blind Assassin

    Steinbeck, John - The Grapes of Wrath

    Michel Faber - The Crimson Petal and the White

    Michel Faber - Under the Skin

    Alex Garland - The Beach

    Stephen King - The Stand

     

    And on your wishlist you have Ham On Rye, which I read and enjoyed last year.

     

    I hope you have a great reading year! :smile:

    Thanks bobbs, you too  :hug: It's interesting you should list The Blind Assassin as it nearly got culled! :lol: Something stayed my hand ... you must have sent thought waves  :D

  15. Oh yes, I'd forgotten about how the last few months of the year are always your worst reading months, and that the first ones are the best. It was really good timing, after all! I just hope you come up for air in between books in the next months and come and say hello.

    Hello frankie! :D It's a great temptation to spend all my spare time reading but I must spend more time here. Eleven measly pages last year in my book blog :o That is shameful for someone who gabs as much as I do .. must do better! :yes: (I'll probably do ten this year .. this is Goodreads all over again! :lol:

    Indeed! I did some culling of my own yesterday. I'm not exaggerating when I say I removed about 50 titles from my wishlist, and I only got as far as the letter d!

    :lol: I bet you felt better for it, it's like having a hair cut .. one feels all light and refreshed afterwards. Until one looks in the mirror :lol:  

    I went back to read the review...  Not very promising! Yes, probably best to borrow it from the library... I did think you'd like the cover, though.

    They might be wrong but then again they might be right :lol: 

    As long as there's no hair pulling or scratching, I'm up for it! :DOr pulling the other's trousers down!

    :o:lol: No, you're alright, I don't think we need go that far! :lol:

    The cushion Claire made for you is simply gorgeous! :wub: I hope you enjoy all your Christmas books!

    Thank you lovely  :hug: I'm going to enjoy my books and cushion as much as possible :)

    Oh yes, and the Five Give Up the Booze! I saw this on your Goodreads account and had I been drinking coffee, a catastrophy and a damaged computer would have ensued!  I'll have to see if the library has any copies, by any chance. Doubt it...

    You'll crease up with laughter when you read them or this one anyway. If you can't find it at the library I'll send you a copy .. I know it'll cheer you up! 

    Oh my lord, I could kick myself! I can't believe I missed the perfect opportunity to ask you why your wishlist is so short these days. Did the infantry not help you this year? 

     

    Edit: Ooooh! Are they standing guard after and because of Brexit??  

    :lol:Oh, you rotter *shakes fist* I'll never live it down!!

    I am coping with things myself this year and so don't need to engage the militia to help me out .. I might ask them if things get tight :D 

  16. Ooh, can I ask you about Village Christmas, and other notes on the English Year

     

    I kept looking at this (it has Christmas in the title, so of course I did!) before Christmas and trying to decide whether to buy it, but wasn't sure if it was just essays from other books by him in a different volume.  Do you know if some of the articles have appeared in his other books?  :)

    I'm not sure if the essays have been printed elsewhere. They might have been. I was familiar with the Village Christmas one but he seemed to be telling it from a slightly different angle .. not quite as it was in Cider With Rosie. The other essays I hadn't read before at all. It says on the back that some of them are 'newly discovered'. Again, you're welcome to borrow it Janet  :smile: It's not really about Christmas, apart from that one piece. It's about the seasons. 

  17. Fingers crossed. :P

     

    Those 'Five...' books have really been a great success haven't they? Immensely popular. I haven't read any yet, but rather fancy the Five Go to Brexit Island one. :lol:

    :lol: It's a genius idea. They all sound hilarious .. I like the thought of Five Go Gluten Free .. :lol: .. that's got to play havoc with their picnics!  :D 

    Someone bought Peter (my husband) that one for Christmas.  I'm definitely planning to read it!   I think I'd have preferred one of the other titles though - Brexit is so last year!  :D

    :lol: Sort of .. not over yet though so might still be topical. You can borrow this one if you want Janet, nice little read and what's more, a laugh.

  18. St Lucy's Home for Girls Raised by Wolves - Karen Russell
     
    Synopsis: Charting loss, love, and the difficult art of growing up, these stories unfurl with wicked humour and insight. Two young boys make midnight trips to a boat graveyard in search of their dead sister, who set sail in the exoskeleton of a giant crab; a boy whose dreams foretell implacable tragedies is sent to 'Sleepaway Camp for Disordered Dreamers' (Cabin 1, Narcoleptics; Cabin 2, Insomniacs; Cabin 3, Somnambulists...); a Minotaur leads his family on the trail out West, and finally, in the collection's poignant and hilarious title story, fifteen girls raised by wolves are painstakingly re-civilised by nuns.

    Thoughts: One of the books I was reading when I went to my mum and dad's was Swamplandia! by Karen Russell .. sadly I never got any further with it and it had to be returned to the library but the little I read I enjoyed. At the same time, while browsing the internet, I happened to notice another book by her and put it on my wishlist and lo and behold .. it turned up at Christmastime :wub: Now, the title and the cover were enough to convince me but what I didn't realise (or perhaps I did when I added it .. but forgot later) was that it is a book of short stories and the title story is the last short story!! .. I must admit this caused me some anxiety but only for a few pages because almost all the stories were brilliant and extremely imaginative. They didn't all work or at least some of them felt squeezed into the short story format and ended too abruptly for me but there were a lot of really outstanding tales. The title story thankfully was one of them but also the one about the Minotaur on the trail out West (would love for this one to be expanded upon) and a couple of eerie tales about avalanches and giant conches. Nobody in these tales is 'normal' .. you never know what you're going to be reading about and so are constantly challenged. There is one that's linked to Swamplandia! but that was one of the few that I didn't feel worked as well but all the stories are intriguing, surreal and fascinating. I'll definitely go back to the library for Swamplandia! at some point. 4/5  

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  19. I think I'll write down a few thoughts on the two books I've read so far :o Yes, start as I mean to go on (as I do every January :lol:
     
    Five Give Up the Booze - Bruno Vincent
     
    Synopsis: ‘Maybe you’ve been hitting it a bit hard over the Christmas period?’ suggested George. ‘No more than usual,’ he replied – a statement that gave them less assurance than he thought. George, Dick, Anne, Julian and Timmy confront a new challenge: give up the booze. Give up alcohol you say? Why, of course they can! Talk about an easy challenge!
    Five old friends set about this simple task and find all of a sudden that: the days are longer; they get to see each other for who they really are; the empty laughter of ordinary conversation is so much harder to fake. Yes, they're saving money and losing weight, but the world itself seems to take on a slow, dreary inevitability. Soon they begin to snap at each other, and then fight - until they begin to wonder, have the Five at last found the challenge that will defeat them?
    The perfect gift for anyone who has woken up and promised themselves that they will never drink again… At least until next weekend.

     

    Thoughts: Haha :lol: .. the cheeky monkeys! How they've got permission to have Enid's name on the covers of these little parodies I will never know .. surely she is revolving in her grave! It's a great concept and it is well done, certainly had me smiling away. One of the funniest things about it I thought was the way they had used the original illustrations and sort of shoe-horned them to fit .. some of them matched quite well but some were so obviously wrong .. purposefully I'm sure. That tickled me. 

    The synopsis says they were losing weight and saving money, not true .. George at least got the munchies instead and was tucking into chocolate and Anne lapsed back into smoking. Timmy did not of course give up the booze .. he had never been a boozer but he did feel the effects of it .. now the four were into healthy long walks which tired him and there weren't any trips to the pub so he lost out on all the tidbits. Poor Timmy :(

    I don't know what the rest of the series is like, I would read them if they came my way but not sure I'd seek them out. A great way to wile away an hour or so though and very jolly :smile: 3/5 

     

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  20. Here are some of my Christmas books, I've bought a couple more with Christmas money since then but haven't photographed them yet!  :smile: 

    The mug was from my lovely mum and dad :wub: .. and some of the books!

     

    The three books on the right are from lovely Janet, lovely Sari and lovely Claire :wub: Thank you so much girls  :kissing: It's the start of a new year and I've got new books to read  :boogie:

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  21. Met up with lovely Claire and lovely Janet on Wednesday for coffee, tea, toast, cake and booky chats .. and booky purchases for that matter! :wub: Al and I had a fab time as we always do .. time flew though, we were there over three hours but could have been there for three more. Left to my own devices, I'd still be there now!!  :smile: 

    Claire bought our Christmas presents with her, she made this absolutely gorgeous patchwork Christmas cushion for us :wub: :wub: You can see from the photos how gorgeous it is but it is even more fab in real life. She is so, so, clever! 

    She also bought the book in the pic .. for Al .. but I will be reading it for sure  :D Fair's fair .. it's in my house and it's a book so open season  :D 

    Thank you so much Claire .. you star!  :doowapstart:

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  22. Apologies for the emoticon cull but you know how it is!  :blush2: 

    I'm very happy to see you've set your new reading log up! I saw it yesterday and immediately came in but I saw it was still under construction, so I tried to be patient and stay away! I wish you a truly wonderful reading year in 2017!! I can't wait to see what books you read this year, and watch how my own wishlist increases in size by ten-fold because of it!

    I exhausted myself constructing yesterday .. I know it was all copy & paste but all the same  :drama:
    Hope you have a brilliant reading year my love  :hug:

    When I look at these totals... You're a lean mean reading machine! You spent three months last year reading absolutely nothing and you still managed to come to 91 read books?! You're an inspiration!

    Thank you, bless  :hug:  I was saved by audiobooks last year really .. I 'read' more of them than usual. Also, if I had to have three months of virtually reading nothing then they were the best three months as I hardly ever read much, if anything, in December and November can be a bit lean .. and October for that matter. The worst three months would have been Jan, Feb and March when it's so drab outside and cold and one can think of nothing better than to curl up with a book. I have great hopes for the first three months of 2017. Just watch me zoom off into the distance and then flag! :lol: :lol:

    I have to say I'm liking your short wishlist. I've been entertaining the idea of culling my own wishlist for a while now... There are many titles whose existence on the list makes me yawn. In my own wishlist that is!!

    Haha .. one of the main reasons for culling was to provide variation and stop me being bored to death with all the copying and pasting and looking at the same old lists a thousand times over :lol: 
    You can't help but think, 'well if it's boring me then what are other people making of it?!' :lol:  :giggle: 

    I wonder if I have My Salinger Year on my wishlist. I must have. If not, it's going there

    I browsed it in Waterstone's and it looks fab! 


    I noticed another book by Joanna Rakoff at the bookstore in December and wrote the title down (or rather took a picture of the cover on my smartphone, in order to then add it to my wishlist): A Fortunate Age. Seems interesting!

    I love the cover :wub: but that first review doesn't inspire .. 'utterly awful' :lol: 
    It might be a good one though to get from the library :yes:  


    That happened with me, too  :empathy:   Let's egg each other on to read those challenge books, aye!  Hurrah, 2017!!!

    I'm all for egging :lol: .. and can you get a bit pushy, shovey, as well .. when egging won't do?  :D 


    You have quite a few books on your TBR that I want to read too so looking forward to seeing what you think of them! Hope you have a great reading year.

    Thanks Hayley, you too  :hug: I must try harder with the TBR this year .. the longer a book stays on the shelf the more reluctant I am to pick it up .. nearly always going for the newer books. It won't do!!!! 

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