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[Closed] Please recommend me a book for a long flight

 GJP
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Long flight first thing monday morning - No iPod so any recommendations on what may be a suitable read to distract me from the fact that I will be flying for 10 hours with just two engines.

Had thought about getting Boy Racer but it looks like complete tosh, so I am now thinking about Geoff Thomas' book but that might be only marginally better looking at the chapter format

Any other bikey books or crime thrillers that come strongly recommended.


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:04 pm
 Drac
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Posted : 10/07/2009 4:06 pm
 aP
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The Geoff Thomas book is OK, not great but certainly better than the "I'm a Texan don't you know" book from a decade ago.
Just bought the Gobby Scouser book, from a quick flick it appears that he has a well defined sense of humour.


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:10 pm
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Posted : 10/07/2009 4:17 pm
 ski
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Airframe by Michael Crichton?

I read that on my last flight to Hong Kong

Actually don't! its not that good a read ๐Ÿ˜‰

The other option is to walk up to the magazine selection at WHSmiths before the flight and grab 4 magazines with your eyes closed, remember pay for them without looking, then and only then when the flight is on its way, reveal your jems for the Journey ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:18 pm
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Cool! I got Practical Fishkeeping, Grazia, Poultry Monthly and Anal Rampage Readers' Wives.


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:20 pm
 ski
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That would cover most bases then BD, would love to see the face of the passenger sat next to you reading that lot ๐Ÿ˜‰

I always seem to to pick the seat next to the 18st American who has an unhealthy interest in firearms and cheap beer!


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:24 pm
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Reading this at the moment. I didn't know much about him before, other than he's a bit of a nutter.

Turns out he's a bit of a nutter. Good read though.

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Posted : 10/07/2009 4:36 pm
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I dont normally read fiction books but we got this at the airport last time

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2007/jan/06/featuresreviews.guardianreview26

Is very readable.

however I thought this book was great but a bit dry

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Britannia-Failed-Tribal-Conflict-Britain/dp/0752446142/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247239312&sr=8-1

Also I'd recommend this very very readable

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Critical-Mass-Thing-Leads-Another/dp/0099457865

Guns Germs and Steel - Jared Dymond
Origins of the British - Stephen Oppenheimer


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:37 pm
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The count of monte cristo got me to Thailand and most the way round it: it's 1000+ pages but pacey


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:38 pm
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I can full recommend the books of Simon Winchester or Peter Hopkirk. Non-fiction, but thoroughly engrossing reading.


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 4:39 pm
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i downloaded the first couple of episodes of lost when it was first on and watched it on my laptop on a plane. the woman sat next to me asked me to turn it off ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 10/07/2009 5:01 pm
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Well, it's not bikey, or crime orientated, (actually not [i]quite[/i] true), but I'm reading a book by Kate Griffin called [i]A Madness Of Angels[/i], which is a sort of Fantasy fiction, set in modern day London, involving Urban Magic, and it's utterly wonderful, Kate is a brilliant prose writer, and she does great characterisation. Her first childrens book was published when she was 14, apparently. Really worth checking out. Plenty of violence in it, too.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 1:15 am
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Given that you're looking for distraction on a flight, then, rather than disappear up my own backside telling you all about the great and worthy books I read, I'll just recommend page-turners that you have a chance of finishing on the flight:

Touching The Void - Joe Simpson (no further explanation needed...but if you haven't read it, try it, I couldn't put it down once I started)

If you'd prefer fiction (seemingly poo-pooed by some here...why??), then how about a nice well crafted thriller? I can recommend two writers: anything by Harlan Coben or Tess Gerritsen will keep you turning the pages. Hey, they're never going to win the Nobel Prize for literature, but I can't resist a good old thriller sometimes.

Enjoy the flight.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 8:55 am
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Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides is a good big read. I thought it was great.

Talking about critically acclaimed worthy shite though, I strongly recommend you DON'T take Infinite Jest by David Foster-Wallace. It's unmitigated bollocks and will also tip you over your baggage allowance.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 9:54 am
 hora
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Posted : 11/07/2009 9:59 am
 ojom
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NOC by NICHOLAS ANDERSON, isbn 978-1-929631-85-8
He was getting his bike serviced here yesterday, interesting man to say the least.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 10:03 am
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I picked up The Brass Verdict in WHSmith the other day from a very succesful 'placed by the till so people buy this on a whim' stand. It turned out to be a pretty good legal thriller, very much in the can't put it down category, but an easy read as well if you know what I mean.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 10:21 am
 Bez
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[i]would love to see the face of the passenger sat next to you reading that[/i]

Nah, if you want to scare them you want this.

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Posted : 11/07/2009 10:31 am
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A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth is one to sink into.

Its also the best book to take when you're waiting at the doctors or at A&E. It makes the time go, and when the Indian doctor sees you're reading an Indian book, its just like being in BUPA. Nothing is too much trouble.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 10:43 am
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I'm really enjoying the dangerous book of heroes. Small bite sized tales of all sorts from marlborough to the gurkhas.
I'm embarrassed to think that this may be a childerens book, but I've learned a lot; how britain introduced the abolition of slavery, the magna carta barons loads!
Very easy reading and simply written.
http://www.borders.co.uk/book/the-dangerous-book-of-heroes/1216921/


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 10:44 am
 Keef
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Bronson.


 
Posted : 11/07/2009 10:49 am