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Bookwormmum's books I've read 2008


bookwormmum

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Here are my reads so far for this year. I will update each month. Please feel free to comment on any. :blush:

 

Jan 2008

The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets - Eva Rice

The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini

Practical Magic - Alice Hoffman

Wicked - Gregory Maguire

How I Live Now - Meg Rosoff

The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox - Maggie O'Farrell

The Baby Trail - Sinead Moriarty

 

Feb 2008

The Miracle Life of Edgar Mint - Brady Udall

Girl with a Pearl Earing - Tracy Chevalier

A Gathering Light - Jennifer Donnelly

The Dead of Summer - Camilla Way

Things to Make & Mend - Ruth Thomas

Before I Die - Jenny Downham

Cage of Stars - Jacquelyn Mitchard

The Book of Lost Things - John Connolly

Q & A - Vikas Swarup

 

March 2008

The Only Boy For Me - Gil McNeil

Two Caravans - Marina Lewycka

26a - Diana Evans

The Family Tree - Carole Cadwalladr

Stardust - Neil Gaiman

The Ninth Life of Louis Drax - Liz Jensen

 

April 2008

Finding Violet Park - Jenny Valentine

The Birds & the Bees - Milly Johnson

The Matchbreaker - Chris Manby

Then we came to the end - Joshua Ferris

Growing Up Again - Catriona McCloud

I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith

 

May 2008

Mister Pip - Lloyd Jones

Mrs Zhivago of Queen's Park - Olivia Lichtenstein

Ballet Shoes - Noel Streatfield

On Chesil Beach - Ian McEwan

Cold Comfort Farm - Stella Gibbons

 

June 2008

Things I Want my Daughters to Know - Elizabeth Noble

Knitting - Anne Bartlett

The End of Mr Y - Scarlett Thomas

The Diary of a Young Girl - Anne Frank

Just in Case - Meg Rosoff

 

July 2008

Highland Fling - Katie Fforde

What was lost - Catherine O'Flynn

Samantha Smythe's Modern Family Journal - Lucy Cavendish

The Observations - Jane Harris

Odd One Out - Lissa Evans

Divas Don't Knit - Gil McNeil

Playing with the Grown-ups - Sophie Dahl

Friends Like These - Danny Wallace

Pay it Forward - Catherine Ryan Hyde

The Wedding Date - Liz Young

 

Aug 2008

In My Sister's Shoes - Sinead Moriarty

In the Wee small Hours - Gil McNeil

Addition - Toni Jordan

The Flood - David Maine

Astrid & Veronika - Linda Olsson

The Knitting Circle - Ann Hood

 

Sept 2008

A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers - Xiaolu Guo

Holly's Inbox, Scandal in the City - Holly Denham

New Moon - Stephenie Meyer

The Mother & Daughter Diaries - Clare Shaw

The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood

The House at Riverton - Kate Morton

The Private Lives of Pippa Lee - Rebecca Miller

The Mathematics of Love - Emma Darwin

 

Oct 2008

 

Claudia, Daughter of Rome - Antoinette May

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen - Paul Torday

Needles & Pearls - Gil McNeil

Spa Wars - Chris Manby

A Small Part of History - Peggy Elliott

A Thousand Splendid Suns - Khaled Hosseini

A Guide to the Birds of East Africa, A novel - Nicholas Drayson

By The Time You Read This - Lola Jaye

Me & Mr Darcy - Alexandra Potter

One Night at the Call Centre - Chetan Bhagat

Edited by bookwormmum
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The one that I really loved & still feel sad it ended was the 1st read. The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets - Eva Rice. I'm not sure why I loved it so much, but reading it was like wrapping a huge duvet round me.

I have many that I that I have enjoyed, but I know this one will be a comfort read in time to come.

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I have read a few on your list - I spy a fellow knitter - I don't know anyone else who has read Gil McNeil - 'Diva's Don't Knit' except me!! Are you on Ravelry?

 

What did you think of Joshua Ferris? My review is in the blog. :blush:

 

Oh no, not a knitter at all, I don't know how. My mum was a big knitter when I was a child. Our wardrobe was always full of her creations, but she became ill when I was 10 and cannot control her right hand enough now to continue and I never had the patience before then to learn.

Despite my lack of ability I can't get enough of knitting themed prose at the moment. In fact I started a thread on it because I'm looking for more reads. It all started when I read The Friday Night Knitting Club last year. I loved Divas Don't Knit and I'm currently waiting to get hold of the follow up Needles & Pearls from the library.

 

I was a little bit disappointed by the Joshua Ferris. I wanted it to be funnier than it was and it was just a little depressing, but all the too true. I will have to have a look at your review hun. :)

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You certainly get through more books than me!

 

I spead a lot of time on the bus to work to an office bang in the middle of nowhere, so I have nothing else to distract me.

 

I'm hoping to read I Capture the Castle at some point although I'll probably get it from the library.

 

Do, it's lovely. It also has one of my favourite first lines, second only to Pride & Prejudice

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The one that I really loved & still feel sad it ended was the 1st read. The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets - Eva Rice. I'm not sure why I loved it so much, but reading it was like wrapping a huge duvet round me.

I have many that I that I have enjoyed, but I know this one will be a comfort read in time to come.

That sounds lovely! What is the book about?

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That sounds lovely! What is the book about?

 

It's a coming of age novel set in the 1950s. It's one of those books where not a lot seems to happen, but really a lot is happening, if you get what I mean. It's all about friendship & family and learning about what love really is.

 

Set in the 1950s, in an England still recovering from the Second World War, THE LOST ART OF KEEPING SECRETS is the enchanting story of Penelope Wallace and her eccentric family at the start of the rock'n'roll era. Penelope longs to be grown-up and to fall in love; but various rather inconvenient things keep getting in her way. Like her mother, a stunning but petulant beauty widowed at a tragically early age, her younger brother Inigo, currently incapable of concentrating on anything that isn't Elvis Presley, a vast but crumbling ancestral home, a severe shortage of cash, and her best friend Charlotte's sardonic cousin Harry... Eva Rice's novel is an utterly engrossing read, in the tradition of Nancy Mitford and I CAPTURE THE CASTLE.

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Oct 2008 Books

 

Claudia, Daughter of Rome - Antoinette May

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen - Paul Torday

Needles & Pearls - Gil McNeil

Spa Wars - Chris Manby

A Small Part of History - Peggy Elliott

A Thousand Splendid Suns - Khaled Hosseini

A Guide to the Birds of East Africa, A novel - Nicholas Drayson

By The Time You Read This - Lola Jaye

Me & Mr Darcy - Alexandra Potter

One Night at the Call Centre - Chetan Bhagat

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I spead a lot of time on the bus to work to an office bang in the middle of nowhere, so I have nothing else to distract me.

 

*laughs* I know what you mean. I spend 2,5 hours commuting between home and work every day. It was a real pain until I started taking a book with me... now it's turned into 2 hours of reading time to look forward to every morning when I wake up :)

 

You have a very impressive list here, with some great books! I read The kite runner recently and loved it. How did you find A thousand splendid suns y comparison? I plan to read it soon.

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*laughs* I know what you mean. I spend 2,5 hours commuting between home and work every day. It was a real pain until I started taking a book with me... now it's turned into 2 hours of reading time to look forward to every morning when I wake up :)

 

You have a very impressive list here, with some great books! I read The kite runner recently and loved it. How did you find A thousand splendid suns y comparison? I plan to read it soon.

 

While I loved The Kite Runner, I adored A Thousand Splendid Suns. I warmed & understood the characters more But I don't know if that was down to the book being set from female eyes. Like TKR its not always comfortable reading, but worth it. I'll like to see what he could do with a story set outside the history of Afghanistan.

 

BTW - how are you enjoying The Stepmother? I've had it on by TBR for ages.

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While I loved The Kite Runner, I adored A Thousand Splendid Suns.

 

That means I have a fantastic read ahead of me! *grins*

 

BTW - how are you enjoying The Stepmother? I've had it on by TBR for ages.

 

I just started it today and I'm finding it a bit difficult to get into. The first person voice is annoying me a bit... But it's just the beginning so hopefully the story will pick up soon.

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