Holiday reading

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    • #9994
      Tim
      Keymaster

      This is entirely off-topic, but it’s my* website so I’ll do as I please. I’m browsing through Amazon looking for suitable reading material for my forthcoming holiday – has anyone read any good books lately that I should peruse?

      * and Alison’s, of course

    • #12945
      Annette A
      Participant

      For your Kindle: Miss or Mrs by Wilkie Collins. Not girly (almost but not a love story, but basically a period drama type thing with a bit of suspension thrown in.) And its free, so doubly good!
      Also for Kindle (think this one cost me about £1) How to Live Safely in a Sceince Fictional Universe by Charles Yu. Highly enjoyable. You do need to be a bit geeky to follow it, so it might well suit you down to the ground…

    • #12946
      Dave
      Participant

      For non-fic I’m a Dave Gorman fan so his latest (Dave Gorman vs The Rest of the World) kept me entertained in the sun a few weeks ago.

    • #12947
      Tim
      Keymaster

      @Annette – Wilkie Collins duly added to the Kindle and Chales Yu added to the pondering list.
      @Seasiderdave – I’ve read all Dave Gorman’s books and didn’t know he had a new one out, so that’s added to the list too!

    • #12950
      Alison
      Keymaster

      Life of Pi by Yann Martel is good if slightly surreal, about a 16 year old boy who gets stuck in a lifeboat in the middle of the ocean with a tiger. Quite amusing and a great ending.

      I’ve just finished Bill Bryson’s At Home which is basically the history of everything to do with the private life of humans, set in the context of his house. Not quite as entertaining as his travel books, but still pretty good.

    • #12951
      Dave
      Participant

      Oh, yes another one I did a few summers ago as thoroughly entertaining and informative at the same time – An Utterly Impartial History of Britain by John o’ Farrell.

    • #12952
      Annette A
      Participant

      Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance (R.M.Pirsig), and also by John O’Farrell, and just as good as the first: An Utterly Exasperated History of Modern Britain: or Sixty Years of Making the Same Stupid Mistakes as Always.
      Agree with @Alison – Life of Pi is a great read, and At Home was mildly educational and reasonably entertaining.

    • #12953
      Alison
      Keymaster

      Salmon Fishing in the Yemen was good too.

    • #12956
      Cecile
      Participant

      I’ll condemn you to a working holiday with “How the mind works” by Steven Pinker, so you’ll know why Darwin performed on the bassoon* for his earthworms (Pinker’ll cost you, the Darwin etc. is freely available at Project Gutenberg)

      *wonder if he concentrated on the notes D&E to aid their decomposing task?

    • #12957
      Tim
      Keymaster

      @seasiderdave – I read An Utterly Impartial History of Britain a little while ago, I quite enjoyed it but found his formula of historic fact followed by ironic joke (possibly involving Thatcher) slightly tiresome after 400 pages; but aside from that good stuff.

      Life of Pi sounds interesting – I’ll have a look at that. [edit: Kindle version was only £2.50 so just bought it]

      @ckoei – Pinker sounds entertaining; I’ve herd of him, but I’m not sure why – possibly read about him in New Scientist or somesuch. Have you come across The Man Who Tasted Shapes by Richard Cytowic? That’s a moderately entertaining thing in a similar ilk.

    • #12958
      Tim
      Keymaster

      If anyone’s interested, at the minute I’m reading Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year – which is somewhat copyright expired and therefore free. On the bus this morning I was reading a charming anecdote about how the driver of a cart piled high with dead plague victims himself died of the plague while driving; this caused the horses to bolt and run through the streets, scattering putrefying plague-ridden bodies throughout the centre of London. It’s a laugh-a-minute I tells ya!

    • #12962
      Alison
      Keymaster

      If you wanted something a little more light hearted than thousands of people dying of the plague, I reread The Diary of Adrian Mole for the first time in about 10 years the other month and it still made me laugh. Plus Sue Townsend, the author, is diabetic, so you’re morally obliged to read it.

    • #12963
      Tim
      Keymaster

      I think I know SDoAM off by heart I read it so many times when I was a nipper. I’m actually reading a Stephen King book at the minute, probably the first one since I was about 14. He does tell quite a good yarn it has to be said.

      In related news check out my very own brother’s book – Bob the Bamboo Monkey here: http://goo.gl/deFrV. – Ideal for small people and at £1.71 you can hardly go wrong…

    • #12972
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      @Tim on the slender off-chance that you are actually the last person in the world not to have read them (I was the last but 3 I think) I’d suggest the three ‘The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo’ novels. Massively hyped, maybe, but they really are quite good, and have a pleasingly high quota of gently nostalgic nerdy/intermaweb computer references :)

    • #12973
      Tim
      Keymaster

      @Mike – I read the first in the trilogy and thought it wasn’t bad. The pacing was a bit off though; interesting start, sagging, slightly dull middle and then the denouement was slightly rushed at the end. @Katie has the other two, so I will probably read them sooner or later. :-)

    • #12980
      Alison
      Keymaster

      @mike I am the last person on earth who hasn’t read that trilogy, I keep meaning to, but that would mean giving up my now unique status.

    • #12981
      Cecile
      Participant

      @alison: I’ve only ventured as far as @tim – it comes down to countless* cups of coffee, lighting of cigarettes, hacking (strangely, not cough) and a big bit of bondage…so if there’s massive crop failures of both beans & tobacco, you flip off the mains and burn all belts, the only memorable beacons that remain shining are mentions of Astrid Lindgren’s Pippi Longstocking (& Kalle Blomkvist).

      *a dedicated source says it is mentioned 90 times – don’t know if it includes the Cafés and Kafés that are frequented

    • #12982
      Annette A
      Participant

      @alison – sorry, me neither.

    • #12983
      Tim
      Keymaster

      @ckoei – he he! harsh but possibly fair – have you ever thought of doing a book review blog? I would read that! :-D

    • #12985
      Alison
      Keymaster

      Damn, I’m not as unique as I thought!

      @ckoei What a fabulous summary, I now feel I have to read it to see it it matches up to your description.

    • #12987
      Cecile
      Participant

      @alison: Rather go for the Pippi Longstocking (if you haven’t laid eyes on her yet) – I’d love to know what the English translation of “spolk” is (she goes hunting for it in the 3rd story of the book that recounts her voyage to Kurrekurredutt Isle)

      And now for something completely different: The gruesomely beautiful “Triomf” by Marlene van Niekerk, translated by Leon de Kock…please read it so you can tell me what happens to the horde of onomatopoeic words she used, especially “tjierie-tjierie-tjoeps”?

    • #13032
      Tim
      Keymaster

      Just finished Life of Pi – a great wee book! Thanks for the recommendation. I’m now on to the fourth island in Gulliver’s Travels – such angry, bitter satire. Good stuff!

    • #13048
      Anonymous
      Inactive

      @Tim Have you read ROOM yet? Might be worth a punt.

    • #13049
      Tim
      Keymaster

      I haven’t, I will check it out.

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