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[Closed] It's World Book Day.

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[#6014263]

So, let's see the cover of the book(s) you're currently reading, and how about a little description of why you're reading them/how you're finding them.

I've gone back to this after a few years away;
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A heavy, meaty tome covering the founding of Australia as a penal colony. Vivid descriptive writing that really captures the journey and isolation. He likens it to sending man to the moon, and to be honest, it was probably easier to do that by the sounds of it.

A very, very good history, highly recommended.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:11 am
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Much more fun than I thought it would be. He's gloriously scathing about the quality of many of the politicians he comes across.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:14 am
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getting a little bored of it to be honest.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:14 am
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when I found out there was a Deadpool spin off from Marvel Zombies featuring the last surviving zombie in our universe- 'Headpool' teaming up with Deadpool, I was in, out of print so only just tracked down the complete graphic novel (that wasnt £100)


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:15 am
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Jambo - Count yourself lucky you're not reading this...
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Nearly finished this for my own enjoyment though...
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Posted : 06/03/2014 10:18 am
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I'll wait for the film.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:18 am
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:24 am
 DezB
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[img] http://tinyurl.com/np8plou [/img]

It's about a couple making a documentary about Somali pirates.

I think there's only 1 more Leonard crime book that I haven't read. He died last year, so there won't be any more 🙁


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:25 am
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Reading this as a kind of vaccination against any upcoming tendencies to "celebrate" the centenary of World War I. Maybe someone could sling a copy in Michael Gove's direction.

A beautifully written book. As illuminating on the solace of comradeship/friendship as it is on the horror of the trenches.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:26 am
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Just finished [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/One-Man-Bike-Mike-Carter/dp/0091940567/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1394097749&sr=1-3&keywords=mike+carter ]Mike Carter's "One Man and His Bike"[/url], about riding around the coastline of Britain.

Just started [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Generation-Douglas-Coupland/dp/0434019836/ref=la_B000APW60C_1_7?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1394097831&sr=1-7 ]Generation A, by Douglas Coupland[/url]. Read it when it first came out, but it was included in a #shelfie I sent to an English teacher at work for World Book Day; she said she'd hated and I couldn't remember if I did, so I'm reading it again.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:27 am
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Just finished Mike Carter's "One Man and His Bike", about riding around the coastline of Britain.

I read that this year, I thought it was just fantastic. 🙂 Currently reading...
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My little drama group is doing The Accrington Pals, based around the Somme, thought I should do some research. And it being the centenary of the start of the war and all, I thought I should learn a bit more about it.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 10:36 am
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[url= http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01749/mandelastory_1749764f.jp g" target="_blank">http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01749/mandelastory_1749764f.jp g"/> [/img][/url]

got it as a birthday present last month.....cant tell you how good it is yet as i've not started reading it yet.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:24 am
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(sorry for being so mainstream!)


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:37 am
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Almost finished this... I love Kim Stanley Robinson, greatest sf author IMO, this is a bit of a diversion into speculative past rather than speculative future, and a smaller/more human scale for him, which does work well but I think maybe he does better when he cuts loose a bit more. There's always a bit of reworking old ideas with KSR too, but it's still good.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:37 am
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Savour this day, folks - in future, it coud be known as [url= http://elitedaily.com/news/technology/this-insane-new-app-will-allow-you-to-read-novels-in-under-90-minutes/ ]World Book Hour[/url]


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:46 am
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A book I come back to regularly. If you only know of him as a yachtsman, they were predated by flying exploits that were perhaps more amazing. A genuine adventurer and toughie.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:48 am
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I'm reading (listening to audiobook actually) it because I like a bit of fun/rubbish to listen to while I mess around the house & TBH I get through so many books in audio format, I grasp whatever I can just to try. It's not exactly riveting and I'm struggling to see how the other 9 books in the series would pan out but at the same time it's entertaining (easy listening) enough. I would preferred to have said I was reading (listening) to the next A Lee Martinez "The Automatic Detective", but I'm saving it for next week - I'm enjoying his humour/stories a lot.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:52 am
 D0NK
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[img] [/img]Again


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:53 am
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Well duh 🙂

I should probably try and find an uptodate version. Im reading a loaner written in 1978 and printed in 1992.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:56 am
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I'm a big fan of his stuff so far but this is probably the hardest to get into. Currently on my third attempt.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:59 am
 DezB
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StefMcDef - Member
Savour this day, folks - in future, it coud be known as World Book Hour

Takes a lot to amaze me, but that's amazing! I thought, nah, everyone sees words differently, but nope, it worked perfectly.. 500 wpm was easy.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 11:59 am
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That's pretty clever... I'd like to try it on a novel though, reading comprehension isn't all there is to it, I read back and forth on the page and build images and that...


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:13 pm
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Just started, my first Fleming. I'm enjoying the writing style so far.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:20 pm
 DezB
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Yeah, I thought similarly about the Kindle, until I got one.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:21 pm
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Finished this last night. Dark and hilarious at the same time!

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Got home and flipped a coined between this

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and this

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Alison Moore won, so she's next (though I ought to have chosen Marilynne Robinson, as the intention is to finish the book by the end of Lent*, and the subject matter would be loosely appropriate).

*not being a person of faith, I have no special attachment to Lent. So rather than do that glib "give something up", I decided I'd do things instead. One of them is to make time to read - Lucky Jim took me four months. But since Home is a book connected to faith (it's a sequel to the superb Gilead, which is an examination of Grace), the connection with Lent could have been appropriate. But the coin said otherwise.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:30 pm
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Savour this day, folks - in future, it coud be known as World Book Hour

Handy for reading stuff you have to read, however is the point of reading a novel to get it over with as quickly as possible? Surely I'm not the only person who sometimes takes weeks over a book (currently 30 or 40 pages into the one pictured above - not because it's rubbish, but because I've been picking at it). I have to admit I also missed a word or two - maybe I wasn't concentrating enough.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:36 pm
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Stef 😯

The death of paper books makes me feel sad.
How easy it was to blink in that high speed text ,made me feel sad.
It will all be downloadable neural implants next . 🙁


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 12:51 pm
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Boy off to nursery with this

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A classic


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 1:13 pm
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I have read a few of Patterson's books and this looked a little different from his detective novels.

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This is the book my daughter wanted for her bedtime story last night.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 1:15 pm
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Starting to work my way through the SF masterworks series, almost finished the above book and really enjoying it.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 1:27 pm
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Reading this at the moment - very good, an account of his own adventures but with loads of historical data about previous expeditions.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 1:43 pm
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Paul Sussman (sadly no longer with us) I've read all of his books and found them facinating and gripping. This says it all really....

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Posted : 06/03/2014 1:49 pm
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Last nights bedtime reading for my two boys.

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I was enjoying it too.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 2:00 pm
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Gaiman is one of my favourite authors. It's very good, so far: Very difficult to put down at times.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:05 pm
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Just finished this:

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A must read after his excellent Bad Science and it doesn't disappoint (well other than crushing any faith you had in the pharmaceutical industry. They'd sell you arsenic labelled as antibiotics if they thought they could get away with it).


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:11 pm
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edit: I find the concept of World Book Day strange.
It seems like something one shouldn't criticise but
just comes across as a bit of a love-in for literary
mediocrity. I'm probably wrong but going up to an
adult and suggesting they should read more seems a
bit weird. Read or don't read if you want.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:19 pm
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Currently trying to learn more about Israel/Palestine conflict. Definitely worth a read.

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Just purchased Bad Pharma, looking forward to being depressed by it.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:27 pm
 edd
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Recommended by a friend and it's good. Reading Gone Girl next.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:32 pm
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People read books? ...for fun?


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 3:54 pm
 tang
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Clear waters rising - Nicholas Crane
Picked it up in a charity shop this week. Walk across Europe from Cape Finnisterre to Istanbul along the mountain chains. He's a good writer; the last book of his I read was his Kilimanjaro bike ride, which really inspired me as a young cyclist.
Bloody hell I feel like a long adventure, it's been too long.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 4:07 pm
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wiggles - Member

People read books? ...for fun?

"Whatcha reading for?"
"So I don't become a ****ing waffle waitress"


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 4:14 pm
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Ooo! Ooo! I know who said that! 😀

"Hey, you - come 'ere!"


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 4:16 pm
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Enjoying this at the moment:
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Posted : 06/03/2014 4:28 pm
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Mmmmmm waffles.


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 4:42 pm
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If it ain't about literacy, what is it for?


 
Posted : 06/03/2014 5:03 pm
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