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What book (s) are you reading now ?

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The Greatest Knight by Thomas Ashbridge.

If you like medieval history (which I do) this book brings so much of it together. The life of a truly remarkable man. Talk about living a full life...... William Marshall.

As a five-year-old boy, William was sentenced to execution and led to the gallows, yet this landless younger son survived his brush with death, and went on to train as a medieval knight. Rising through the ranks to serve at the right hand of five English monarchs, he became a celebrated tournament champion, baron, politician and, ultimately, regent of the realm. He befriended the great figures of his day, from Richard the Lionheart to the infamous King John, and helped to negotiate the terms of Magna Carta - the first 'bill of rights'. Yet at the age of seventy he was forced to fight in the frontline of one final battle, striving to save the kingdom from French invasion in 1217.


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 7:26 pm
pondo reacted
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Just finished Alex Dowsett's book. Very good. 


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 7:38 pm
 beej
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Deep: Freediving, Renegade Science and What the Ocean Tells Us About Ourselves

It's interesting, title pretty much explains what it's about. I'm about half way and it's not dragging yet.


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 9:02 pm
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The Greatest Knight

That sounds great! 🙂 


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 10:13 pm
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Posted by: pondo

The Greatest Knight

That sounds great! 🙂 

It is and very readable as well.

 


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 10:17 pm
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Posted by: masterdabber

If you like medieval history (which I do) this book brings so much of it together.

On a side note that period in history is fascinating and its somewhat odd how its mostly glossed over.

We have the bad King John trope with Robin Hood taking him on plus the magna carta and when he did something (often vague since it undermines the magna carta as a document) the barons went to war with him.

Its rarely mentioned how the future French king launched an invasion in alliance with those barons and was doing pretty well up until the point John died and a bunch of the rebellious barons went "its not you but us" and switched to support William Marshall as regent for Henry.

Going back to Robin Hood there is Willikin of the Weald who ran a guerrilla war using archers in the Kent and Sussex weald (which to get even more on a side note its fascinating to read medieval accounts since they suggest it really was a wilderness with few areas of habitation).


 
Posted : 13/06/2025 10:56 pm
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About half way through Adrian Tchaikovsky’s ‘Salute The Dark’, fourth in his ‘Shadows of the Apt’ series, where humans possess attributes of insect and invertebrate ancestors. Six more books to go.


 
Posted : 14/06/2025 1:26 am
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Night Train to Odessa bye Jen Stout about the war in Ukraine. 


 
Posted : 14/06/2025 7:40 am
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Posted by: dissonance

Posted by: masterdabber

If you like medieval history (which I do) this book brings so much of it together.

On a side note that period in history is fascinating and its somewhat odd how its mostly glossed over.

We have the bad King John trope with Robin Hood taking him on plus the magna carta and when he did something (often vague since it undermines the magna carta as a document) the barons went to war with him.

Its rarely mentioned how the future French king launched an invasion in alliance with those barons and was doing pretty well up until the point John died and a bunch of the rebellious barons went "its not you but us" and switched to support William Marshall as regent for Henry.

Going back to Robin Hood there is Willikin of the Weald who ran a guerrilla war using archers in the Kent and Sussex weald (which to get even more on a side note its fascinating to read medieval accounts since they suggest it really was a wilderness with few areas of habitation).

 

And two women of the period well worth reading up on.....Eleanor of Aquitaine and the Empress Matilda.  Both pretty remarkable. 

 


 
Posted : 14/06/2025 8:10 am
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"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee". Part of my plan of reading around the history of the American frontier. At least, it started that way, now its reading more like a bitter warning for whats happening to the Palestinians.


 
Posted : 14/06/2025 11:39 am
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Got this in today, will start it later 

 

 

 

 

 


 
Posted : 14/06/2025 5:52 pm
pondo reacted
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Posted by: somafunk

Got this in today, will start it later 

 

 

 

 

that looks really interesting, might get that myself but let’s us know what you think when you’ve read it .

 


 
Posted : 15/06/2025 11:02 am
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Ditto. Ploughing my way through Seabag-Montefiore's Jerusalem, and it just reinforces how culpable the UK for the horror show in the ME. 


 
Posted : 15/06/2025 11:40 am
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Read Franzen's last one Crossroads recently - the master of character in domestic crisis, effortless skill and sense of place (1971 US for this one), although it was hard to like most of the cast. Some tragic personalities and decision-making. He structures different time periods of the parents' lives in a way that reads seamlessly, but I suspect is technically a very hard thing to get right in a novel.

Towards the end of Scott Bakker's The Great ordeal at the moment - an apt title. Second sequence of books hasn't really landed for me, although I'm going to see it out. One of the more ambitious, epic, and horrible fantasy series I've read - grimdark without the humour or cynicism allows him to do some very original stuff, but it can drag terribly.

He had some problems with this one (meant to be a trilogy, turned into a tetralogy) so it's possible this is the weak link that is typical for multi-book fantasy series, hoping that the final one delivers.


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 11:35 am
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After enjoying the easy reading fun of Mikey 7, I've moved on to the follow up (Antimatter Blues). Sadly it seems that he's forgotten all the parts that made the first book fun and turned the sequel into a fairly generic alien world romp. ~60% of the way though at the moment, so hopefully it redeems itself but I'm not really seeing it happening


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 11:47 am
 Alex
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Had a bit of Max Hastings bookathon to give me things to do with a busted collarbone. Finished "Chastise" which I'd started about 3 times (and after watching a couple of YT vids to remind me why I wanted all the detail) and Abyss which is his take on the Cuban Missile Crisis which I really enjoyed. Proper tense even when you know the outcome. And really interesting how JFK was making decisions.

Now reading the "HippoSync" series recommended by a fellow Pratchett nerd who reckoned it's written in a similar style. It's not really, but it's currently getting me through these lovely light and warm evenings without resorting to extensive beer fridge shuttling. 


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 12:45 pm
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Fazzini. I too Have really enjoyed this book.

 

 

Just finished Alex Dowsett's book. Very good. 


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 2:27 pm
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We have had a slow few days at work and this leaves me with 8 hours of nothing to do. In the last 3 days I have been indulging in my guilty pleasure of splatterpunk ( an extreme horror genre that focuses on graphic gore) books and have read .Cows, The Bighead, Exquisite corpse, Horror in the woods, Family Tradition,The Backwoods and a couple more that I can't remember the titles of. I am now pretty much desensitised to anything that can be written on a page!


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 2:58 pm
 beej
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Posted by: scammell

We have had a slow few days at work and this leaves me with 8 hours of nothing to do. In the last 3 days I have been indulging in my guilty pleasure of splatterpunk ( an extreme horror genre that focuses on graphic gore) books and have read .Cows, The Bighead, Exquisite corpse, Horror in the woods, Family Tradition,The Backwoods and a couple more that I can't remember the titles of. I am now pretty much desensitised to anything that can be written on a page!

You could try some Dan Brown, see how that goes.

 


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 5:40 pm
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Nobody is that sick!


 
Posted : 16/06/2025 11:23 pm
pondo reacted
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Thought I'd give Conn Igguldon a go, Dunstan. 

Not sure I like his style of writing, but it has been a fascinating read.


 
Posted : 17/06/2025 5:21 am
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masterdabber
Posted by: pondo

The Greatest Knight

That sounds great! 🙂 

It is and very readable as well

Took a punt on this - I'm halfway through and it is indeed ace! Great shout, thanks. 🙂 


 
Posted : 02/07/2025 8:37 pm
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Had to go into hospital for a day of check ups earlier in the week - wanted something easy to read and interruptible....took Slash's autobiography. Hugely repetitive and predictable (drugs, booze, sex, violence, more drugs etc etc) but had some interesting details about the LA music scene in the late 70s/ 80s and about LA in general during that period. America really is a foreign country (as if we didn't know). 

I like music biogs and this is not the worst I've read.  


 
Posted : 02/07/2025 8:51 pm
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Reading Mark Morris - the Anglo Saxons - good so far. His book on the Norman Conquest was decent too.


 
Posted : 02/07/2025 8:59 pm
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Error of Judgement by Chris Mullin. Birmingham pub bombings,159 pages in and their still being battered from pillar to post.


 
Posted : 02/07/2025 10:00 pm
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Posted by: pondo

 
 
 
masterdabber
Posted by: pondo

The Greatest Knight

That sounds great! 🙂 

It is and very readable as well

Took a punt on this - I'm halfway through and it is indeed ace! Great shout, thanks. 🙂 

I'm pleased you're enjoying it. The man is so remarkable and lived through so much turmoil.

 


 
Posted : 03/07/2025 6:33 am
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Have just been recommended "Project Hail Mary" in advance of the film being released. It will go on the list for this weekend.


 
Posted : 03/07/2025 8:53 am
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Having read Stuart Maconie's Full English a while back I picked up the book it follows, English Journey by JB Priestley. JBP has a trip around the UK between the WW1 and WW2 to see what is going on with England and the English. SM's followed the route around the same towns and cities 90 years later. Some remarkable similarities.

Not long finished the Benji Waterhouse book, which is an excellent read about his life in the NHS as a psychiatrist. 


 
Posted : 04/07/2025 9:16 am
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Have just been recommended "Project Hail Mary"

It is very good, though for me the Martian still is the better book (if you've read that, if not go read that too). I just hope they haven't butchered it too much (& wish the trailer hadn't given so much away), though apparently Mr. Gosling did push for the project, so may be...


 
Posted : 04/07/2025 10:37 am
 DrJ
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Big Dunc. (Duncan Ferguson's autobiography) That's what I call literature!!


 
Posted : 04/07/2025 10:39 am
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Bram Stoker's Dracula.

Pretty good and an interesting window into the past re. the delicate flowers that are the fairer sex.


 
Posted : 04/07/2025 12:41 pm
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On holiday and Mrs Pondo has discovered cross-stitch, which means I have loads of reading time - ace! 🙂 

I left The Greatest Knight at home - just 50 pages or so left, really enjoying it but wanted to bring whole books, not almost-read ones. 🙂 

The Looming Tower, by Lawrence Wright - really interesting history of bin Laden and Al Queda, sort of destroys the myth that it was (by 9/11) a huge, well-financed movement. Surprisingly readable. 

Homage To Catalonia, by George Orwell - interesting read, if a bit overloaded with acronyms. 

A Book Of Secrets, by Derren Brown - Almost brilliant, he can be genuinely laugh-out-loud funny, but the way he writes can sometimes be a little indulgent, it can get in the way of what he's saying. 

Endeavour, by Peter Moore - a really enjoyable, very readable history of the bost that took Cook around the world. 

just started The Call From The East, by Peter Frankopan, about the first crusade - a lot more readable than I was expecting! 🙂 

 

 


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 7:27 pm
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Finished With the Old Guard by EB Sledge last week. Very readable, fascinating book about the Marines' island by island assault on the Japanese at the tail end of WW2. 

Now moved onto The Tour According to G from Geraint Thomas, which I found in a free library. Not hugely well-written, but an easy read with lots of interesting little insights and nuggets about the Tour de France the year he won it. 


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 8:30 pm
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Still enjoying myself with the Wheel Of Time, thought I'd take a break but I've just kept going, partway through the 6th book now,- they're getting fatter and slower but when it's good, it's very good. And when it's bad it's properly terrible.

Also this is the longest I've spent reading paper books for a long time, because I have the whole series that way from when it first came out. I'm a total ebook convert, absolutely love it but even I have to admit a fat book has its moments, sitting down to read another million pages of Nynaeve and Egwene being absolute arseholes somehow works better on paper.


 
Posted : 19/07/2025 2:41 am
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I upgraded my ereader the other day to get me to stop doom scrolling. 

I'm still on Seirian Sumners endless forms. 

I've still got a pile of books upstairs that I need to finish reading. 


 
Posted : 19/07/2025 6:58 am
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Blindsight by Peter Watts - I do like a bit of sci-fi, in fact I should probably make an effort to read more non-SF stuff!

I'm technically also reading an Ian Rankin Rebus one, but I've read a couple of others since I last picked that up so it may or may not ever get finished. When I was younger I was a bit of a stickler for finishing books I'd started but these days I CBA with that if it's not really grabbing me.


 
Posted : 19/07/2025 2:38 pm
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The Trial by Franz Kafka which I picked up in my local Amnesty bookshop. Apparently Kafka didn't want his writings published, but without them being in print we wouldn't have the term kafkaesque which is amply demonstrated throughout this book by the bizarre situations the main character seems to find himself in through no fault of his own.  It's the sort of book that I wouldn't have picked up if it hadn't been a quid in the Amnesty bookshop, so I'm glad that I did.


 
Posted : 20/07/2025 2:25 am
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Just finished Proto. A book about the origins of European languages, less captivating than I was hoping, but still interesting enough, before that was Heresey Genuinely fascinating look at all the apocrypha (the Gospels of the early Chrsitianities* ultimately rejected) Jesus murdering people, Jesus getting imposters to take his place on the cross, Peter resurrecting sardines, Mary and her flaming vagina, Joseph wondering if he and Mary had drunk sex and they don't remember...It's all here, it's insane and wild. 

Now on 38 Londres Street, about Nazis and Pinochet. 

*not a typo.


 
Posted : 21/07/2025 2:30 pm
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I am just about to finish Ann Cleeves Shetland series. I read the first book at the start of June and now I am on the eighth and final book. They are very well written, good character building and interesting plots.

 

The books also differ from the tv show so if you have watched the show it won't spoil your enjoyment of the books. Though it's hard not to make comparisons with the tv take on the characters, both the books and tv show are excellent. 

 


 
Posted : 22/07/2025 9:23 am
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I have read the Wheel of Time series about four times now. They are slow in places. However when Brandon Sanderson took over the writing for the final three novels the pace of the story telling increases dramatically!

 


 
Posted : 22/07/2025 9:48 am
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Reading the "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series. Very amusing.


 
Posted : 22/07/2025 10:18 am
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John Fowles - The Collector. Fascinating book. Saw that it was made into a film with Terence Stamp.. who is absolutely nothing like the character in the book! Interesting 


 
Posted : 22/07/2025 10:26 am
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Following on from my earlier recommendation which I believe some here have now read of Thomas Asbridge's "The Greatest Knight" I've now started on his book "The Crusades". So far I've found it very readable as with the Greatest Knight. It's quite a complex subject and the various politics and alliances are always interesting on both the Christian and Muslim sides. 

Some familiar names from the Greatest Knight have started to appear.... Stephen of Blois (later to become King Stephen who spared the life of our old friend William Marshall - the greatest knight).


 
Posted : 18/09/2025 10:53 am
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George Pelecanos "3 Great novels" all in one massive volume. I have to rest it on my chest when reading in bed 😆 


 
Posted : 18/09/2025 11:21 am
 nbt
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I've been re-reading the Robin Hobb "Realm of the Elderlings" novels - I own and had read the first three trilogies, but realised that although I was aware of the four-book "Rain Wild Chronicles" series I hadn't read the later ones and wasn't sure I had read any of them at all -  turns out I hadn't read them at all, and was unaware of the subsequent "Fitz & The Fool" trilogy. I've got to the end of RWC and am taking a break to read a few other books (Luke Rowe's "Road Captain" and Ned Boulting's "The Accidental Tour-ist" are next up having just quickly read the latest ones from Ann Cleeves and James Oswald) before I go back for the final trilogy. Got a few others lined up on the shelf, mostly older books from the Charity shop - couple of Charles Cummings (espionage) books, three from Rachel Lynch (crime), a Paula Hawkins (also crime), Hugh Howey's Wool (which I recently discovered is the source material for the excellent Silo TV series I've been enjoying) and a few others...


 
Posted : 18/09/2025 11:54 am
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