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KindleWorm

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  1. Hi. Yes, I've actually read In The Name Of The Wind. It was very good indeed. I've got the second book The Wise Man's Fear on my bookshelf to be read. My brother was telling me that the third book was supposed to be out in August, but has been delayed.

     

    Excellent! I have already downloaded The Wise Man's Fear to my Kindle (despite it being far too expensive!)... but wasn't aware that the next book was imminent (albeit delayed).

  2. Hi Clive... welcome to the forum! LOTR and Harry Potter are some of my favourite reads too. If you like Sci-Fi/Fantasy then I can heartily recommend the current book I'm reading called The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss - extremely well-written and compelling read. In places it reminds me of a cross between Harry Potter and LOTR :readingtwo:

  3. Thanks for the link... Sounds interesting - I've always like Angela Carter's modern fairy tales and magic realism in general, so these maybe right up my street! (More books to add to my list!)

     

    As for books being labelled "teen" I think it's as much a marketing exercise as anything else, and often there is little difference between them and the so-called adult market (but not that sort of adult market, of course!!! Lol)

  4. The low cost of e-books combined with its portability will definately encourage me to read more. I will have to watch my spending then to make sure I don't get carried away !

     

    Amazon are very clever with their "One-Click" buying option - it makes it way too easy to purchase things on a whim.... I've had my Kindle for about 3/4 months now and I've got about 70 books on it already! I have to admit around half are the free classics that you can download, though. But my most recent purchase was £10.99 which seems ridiculously expensive for an electronic book (but we just had to have it... the sequel to the book I'm currently reading).

     

    I wouldn't be without it though :)

  5. Yes Beautiful place is Burnham Overy, we are in Hunstanton about 7 miles away

    Oooh Hunstanton! That brings back many happy childhood memories!! It used to be the day trip of choice from our home in landlocked Northmapton :D

  6. Glad you're enjoying it, Nollaig - I thought they were very enjoyable too, and I really warmed to the character of Midge (and her uncle). I agree, there is a likeness to the Faraway Tree and Famous Five books of Enid Blyton - but more 21st Century!

     

    The different tribes in the stories (the "Various" tribes) are not what you expect - it is definitely not a stereotypical fairy tale - but for me that makes them all the more believable! :cool:

  7. Right I have read everything on my kindle so now I am looking for something to download and not sure what.......I feel a bit lost...:rolleyes:

     

    Hi Pickle - not sure what sort of books you usually like, but I have just finished reading The Girl on the Swing by Ali Cooper and thoroughly enjoyed it... unusual story, cleverly written (and a real bargain at less than £1! So what have you got to lose! :D - link below)

    My link

  8. Unfortunately my only experience of his writing has been his Frankenstein novels, and they were terrifically poor - so poor I didn't bother buying the latest installment. It's put me off reading anything else by him - despite the fact that my husband has read quite a few of his earlier novels and rates him quite highly. It all depends where you start!

  9. One of my favourite poets has to be TS Eliot... The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock is incredible...

     

    But also, Robert Burns... A Red, Red Rose (second stanza)

     

    As fair art thou, my bonnie lass,

    So deep in luve am I;

    And I will love thee still, my Dear,

    Till a' the seas gang dry.

     

    How can you argue with a sentiment like that! :)

  10. Great review, Michelle... I read this a couple of months ago and I can still recall how it made me feel. I totally agree about the quality of the writing, it is beautiful prose, with a poetic bent, but which doesn't become sentimental or complex.

     

    The interplay between the sombre landscape and the surrealism of Ida's world make for a thoroughly original and sensitive love story. I wouldn't hesitate in reading something else by this author.

  11. I've read several of his books (My Idea of Fun, Cock & Bull, The Quantity Theory of Insanity & Tough, Tough Toys for Tough, Tough Boys) and agree he can be a self-conscious writer and pretentious wordsmith at times. Some of his stories are a little "near the knuckle" and probably an acquired taste (you definitely have to be in the right mood), but he is very funny. One description that remains with me is that of a cat "smarming" itself around his legs. I accuse my cats of doing this constantly now! It's a perfect word to use for a cat's behaviour :P

  12. Love the polarity of views here about the Life of Pi... it really sums up the completely contradictory views my husband and I had after reading it at the same time! He hated it and I loved it. I loved the uncertain ending, because for me that is what "faith" is all about - believing in something when you have no proof - and loved the fact the book ended that with doubt over the legitimacy of the original story. My husband - who likes fact and certainty - hated the way it ended and how empty it left him feeling.

     

    Definitely a "marmite" book as many people have said :D

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