Home Forums Chat Forum What book (s) are you reading now ?

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  • What book (s) are you reading now ?
  • fasthaggis
    Full Member

    Mayflies by Andrew O’Hagan.

    Fantastic read, will stay with me for a long time


    @Nobeerinthefridge
    Aye,a belter of a story.
    Really hit home.

    For now I am re-reading Dune

    Please let the film be good,please let the film be good,please let the film be good

    moonsaballoon
    Full Member

    Half way through the The North Water by Ian Macguire , there is a tv series coming soon which is meant to be good so thought I’d try and get the book in first as I really struggle to read the book if I’ve seen a tv or film version first . The book has been great so far .

    pondo
    Full Member

    Ooo, forgot to add Pillars Of Hercules, by Paul Theroux – awesome, long, involving travel book, much more entertaining than I feared! I’d be a rubbish travel writer, I wouldn’t talk to anyone- he talks to EVERYone, and that’s where the good stuff comes from. 🙂

    lister
    Full Member

    Going through a bit of a Iain M Banks rereading phases so currently deep in ‘Matter’ which is ace.
    Just finished battling through ’Feersum Enjin’ again which I just don’t get.

    Still sad I’ll never read another new Banks book again.

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Ernst Junger – Storm of Steel. Factual (if it can be wholly trustworthy) account of fighting on the trenches in WW1 from a German perspective. Astoundingly written – beautiful in its honesty.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    ‘Neptune’s Brood’ by Chris Stross, the follow-up to ‘Saturn’s Chilren’. After that I’m going to read the complete ‘Laundry’ series; I’ve got the first three as dead trees, but I’m getting the whole set as ebooks, it’s far easier to read a book on my phone during breaks at work, having a coffee in town, or whatever.
    After that, there’s a whole bunch of other books that Stross has written that I’ve only read a couple of, so lots to keep me occupied.

    wordnumb
    Free Member

    Just finished battling through ’Feersum Enjin’ again which I just don’t get.

    Helps to read it aloud to yourself. See also Mason & Dixon.

    Rona
    Full Member

    Just Finished: The Watchmaker of Filigree Street – Natasha Pulley
    From the inside cover: ‘In 1883, Thaniel Steepleton returns to his tiny flat to find a gold pocketwatch on his pillow. When the watch saves Thaniel’s life from a blast that destroys Scotland Yard, he goes in search of its maker …’
    Unusual story, interesting characters, well-written – although I did feel it lost its way a little part way through, but rallied for the ending.

    Just started: The Red Notebook – Antoine Laurain
    From the back cover: ‘Bookseller Laurent Letellier comes across an abandoned handbag on a Parisian Street, and feels impelled to return it to its owner.’
    Not sure what to expect really, but I enjoyed the first chapter.

    Next up: The Hidden Life of Trees – Peter Wohlleben
    From the back cover: ‘… makes the case that the forest is a social network. He draws on groundbreaking scientific discoveries to describe how trees are like human families …’

    lister
    Full Member

    It’s the actual thread of the story I don’t get. I’ve read reviews and explanations but there are bits I just can’t work out and link together in my own head.
    I’m the same with Tinker Tailor…there’s a bit about 2/3s of the way through where Smiley suddenly seems to work it all out and I’m never sure how or why…🤷‍♀️

    avdave2
    Full Member

    @jimw Recently reread Winged Victory by VM Yeates, a semi-autobiographical account of the same period,

    I’ve just finished that this week. I found it among the books of of a family friend after he died and it’s a great book. If you haven’t read it I also found a copy of Warriors for the Working Day by Peter Elstob. A fictional but again semi autobiographical account of a tank crews journey from Normandy to Germany. Like Winged Victory a lot of it is about the intolerable strain on the men and it’s an equally good book.

    Currently reading Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens and really enjoying it.

    Bunnyhop
    Full Member

    I’m reading Philip – A final portrait by Gyles Brandreth.

    There are contributions by the Prince himself.
    A war hero.
    Humorous.
    An environmentalist with many ideas which have been put in place now, (tree planting, rewilding).
    Not necessarily a good father to Prince Charles.

    If you have small children – could I recommend ‘Interview with a tiger’ and Interview with a shark’ both by Andy Seed.

    Also available from your friendly local bookshop

    Alex
    Full Member

    Longitude is a great book. If you liked that, let me recommend ‘The Prisoners of Geography’. Different but just as interesting.

    I’m always reading multiple books. Short attention span 😉

    Who Owns England?: How We Lost Our Green and Pleasant Land, and How to Take It Back by [Guy Shrubsole]

    Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men by [Caroline Criado Perez]

    Enjoying all of them. I think – when I last checked – I have around 50 unread books. Mostly paperbacks. I buy whenever I see an indy book shop. I fully intend to read them all when I retire 🙂

    derek_starship
    Free Member

    APT The Untold Story a technical and commercial insight into the development and ultimately the failure of British Rail’s advanced passenger train project. Ten years and £42 million pfft.

    Garry_Lager
    Full Member

    About 3/4 done with Under the Volcano (Malcolm Lowry) – was on holiday last week so wanted to read something large. About as glorious as you’d expect, and very sad.

    Not a book to read if you have a drink problem – you’ll think you’re a picture of health because no one has a drink problem compared to the consul.

    Thinking of going full Wirral and reading something from Olaf Stapledon next – formative SF writer (1930s). Star Maker gets a lot of praise.

    wordnumb
    Free Member

    @lister – apologies, I shouldn’t have assumed it was the phonetic spelling you were referring to.

    I struggle to remember which culture novel is which.

    Garry_Lager
    Full Member

    Also read The Last Unicorn with my daughter at bedtime recently – high quality for sure but found it a little underwhelming, I know some folk have it on their all time lists. Daughter liked it but was a bit too young for the very metaphoric / dreamy style.

    Was reading that the author Peter Beagle has had an absolute torrid time with a criminal agent exploiting him (he’s quite old – the book sold millions, was made into an animated film, but a long time back). He recently won a lengthy court battle to own his own work.

    https://www.tor.com/2021/03/25/peter-s-beagle-last-unicorn-lawsuit-resolved-ip/

    roverpig
    Full Member

    It’s fun to see what other people are reading, but it would be good if people could give a quick summary of what these books are about. I read loads but have never heard of most of these books or authors and can’t really tell if I want to read them or not.

    I’ve just finished That Old Ace in the Hole by Annie Proulx. She has a great ability to produce little thumbnail sketches of the (usually hard) lives of people living in rural communities. She creates a great sense of place and the plot itself often feels like it’s just a device to allow her to weave these stories together. This time we’re in the modern day Texas panhandle following somebody scouting sites for industrial hog farms. But the stories go from the early pioneers, through the dustbowl era and the oil boom along with reflections on industrial scale farming and water shortages. She leaves a few loose ends, which can be frustrating for the reader, but is part of her style and while it’s not quite up there with the Shipping News (or even Postcards) in my opinion, it is still an enjoyable read.

    Next up is a short story: Men in the Sun by Ghassan Kanafani, which is part of an attempt to read more by authors from cultures outside my normal diet of British, American and Australian authors. Kanafani was an author and also a leading figure in the PLO, before being killed by Israeli agents in 1972. From Wikipedia “originally published in 1962. Men in the Sun follows three Palestinian refugees seeking to travel from the refugee camps in Iraq, where they cannot find work, to Kuwait where they hope to find work as laborers in the oil boom.”

    PS. Thanks @stevenmenmuir I think I’ll give The Young Team a go.

    @matt10214
    I’ve read most of Tim O’Brien’s stuff. It was a long while ago but I seem to remember that The Things They Carried was one of his best.

    gordimhor
    Full Member

    Alternating between various (mostly political) non-fiction books, and the books by Dodge, Fante and Bukowski from this list.

    timbog160
    Free Member

    A few there Ive read Alex, esp Hastings and Holland, both good but very different historians.

    Currently reading Black Earth by Timothy Snyder. It’s a history of the Holocaust, predominantly in Eastern Europe. It’s grim but really fascinating. It details the miscalculations and apathy of established states that led to catastrophe and murder. Frankly it feels more relevant today than ever.

    matt10214
    Free Member

    @roverpig As someone who enjoys reading about the Vietnam War i’m a bit late to the party regarding Tim O’Brien!

    No_discerning_taste
    Free Member

    I have just finished reading Lost Baggage written by me! The last proof-read before hitting the publish button. It is the sequel to His Favourite Hole that our fine Scottish forum members help me with earlier this year.

    jimmy
    Full Member

    Happy to pass on once done

    roverpig
    Full Member

    @matt10214 After reading Tim O’Brien I remember I got into the short stories of Thom Jones. I think the Vietnam war featured in a few of those. Especially his first collection (The Pugilist at Rest) if I remember correctly. Might be worth checking out, although again it was a long while ago and I can’t remember much more than that I enjoyed them at the time.

    BillMC
    Full Member

    About to start ‘A People’s History of London’ (L.German)
    Rover, check out Accordion Crimes, if you haven’t already, it’s superb.

    donks
    Free Member

    Reading bill Brysons: the body which I’m enjoying as usual. Quite like his books, humourous and informative but without too much technical depth…just right for a simpleton like me.

    Just finished the most recent Ben Aaranovich novel following Peter Grant “false values” which was ok…not as good as the others in the series but I read it on a kindle for the first time and for some reason found it less engaging that a hard copy??

    roverpig
    Full Member

    Thanks @BillMC Not read that one yet, so I’ve just asked the good folk at Word of Books to send me a copy. Along with The Young Team as recommended by @stevenmenmuir, The Rotter’s Club recommended by Geoff Norcott (I think it was) on R4’s A Good Read and Tatiana, the 8th Arkady Renko novel from Martin Cruz Smith. I enjoyed Gorky Park and have been working my way through the rest of the series. Should keep me occupied for a little while.

    matt10214
    Free Member

    @roverpig thanks for the info! Matterhorn by Karl Marlantes is a brilliant read if you haven’t already had the pleasure.

    YoKaiser
    Free Member

    Last book was Dune. Very good.

    Currently reading The Cairngorms by Patrick Baker. Which has also been very good.

    Next is Legends, Stories in honour of David Gemmell. Which is a book of short stories. I also have Cairngorm John to read after that too.

    roverpig
    Full Member

    Thanks @matt10214 I’ve added that to my World of Books wishlist so I can include it with the next order.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    It’s Charles Stross who wrote the books I mentioned, for some reason I put Chris!
    Anyway, here’s a Wiki synopsis;

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn’s_Children_(novel)

    There’s a short story he wrote called ‘Bit Rot’ that links the two, the second book takes place quite some time after the first; like several centuries.

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    Just finished: Malibu Rising, Taylor Jenkins Reid. Really enjoyed this tale of one night of 80’s excess.
    Reading: Billy Summers, Stephen King. Had a bit of a thing for King’s novels the last few years, loved The Institute, but this is a fairly standard, and low key, redemption story. 3.5/5

    Philby
    Full Member

    Recently finished The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy which is a former Booker Prize winner. Beautifully written, and occasionally humourous, tragic story of an Indian family and its interactions with the caste system.

    Currently a third of the way through Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart which is the 2020 Booker Prize winner. Set in Glasgow it’s about family disintegration due to poverty, alcohol and domestic abuse (among other things)

    Also reading The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins which makes some very interesting arguments against the existence of God. The major issue is that Dawkins seems to have the ability to over-complicate most of his arguments and also make them far too long – he could have condensed the whole thing into less than 100 pages rather than the 400+. As a result it’s an extremely turgid read and has taken me months to wade through. He also, annoyingly, keeps including his own little humourous anecdotes, particularly where he has got one over another academic or religious commentator.

    Daffy
    Full Member

    Reading this one through the day:

    Harrier 809

    This one in the evenings:

    Re-reading this after having re-read all the Dune books.

    Currently having this read to me (Audible) at work:

    A Promised Land - read by The Man himself.

    And this read to me (Audible) while running:

    The Bear and the Dragon

    nickc
    Full Member

    Currently making my way through Command and Control

    Command and Control (book) - Wikipedia

    Which is a history of the efforts to both develop and control and make safe the most destructive weapons ever created, while at the same time looking closely at a fire in an ICMB silo in rural Arkansas in the 80’s, and givinbg an alternate historical view of the cold war.

    Also have Max hasting’s history of the Korean War on the go, although it’s now a bit dated, and (like most of his work) is overlaid by his small C leanings and a somewhat “colonialist style” : He can’t resist (for example) referring to the Chinese or North Koreans as a “Hoarde”, or “Swarm…”

    And finally going to re-read

    The Forever War - Wikipedia

    Last read it as a teenager, and it stayed with me. I wanted to see if my views had changed about it at all.

    StuF
    Full Member

    Salt: A World History by Mark Kurlansky.

    Thoroughly recommend this fascinating book, I never realised how important salt had been to the developing world – I guess I’d never thought about it tbh.

    johndoh
    Free Member

    Re-reading this – such a vivid account of life in the trenches in WW1 from a German perspective.

    kayla1
    Free Member

    Fast Trains- Europe at 186mph by Tom Chesshyre. See also: **** Brexit you brexitty ****, you **** the job for everyone, didn’t you? Arseholes.

    I have The Little Book Of Humanism by Alice Roberts and Andrew Copson to try next. I will admit to a girl crush on Alice Roberts (and Hannah Fry)… 😊

    footflaps
    Full Member

    I’m always reading multiple books. Short attention span

    Some good ideas there, might order a few….

    z1ppy
    Full Member

    Another sci-fi reader (or audible listener) here, listening to the Alex Benedict series by Jack McDevitt’s, has more a of an ‘old skool’ 50’s Sci-fi feel, which is surprising, as the majority were authored since 2000.

    stevenmenmuir
    Free Member

    I’m now reading The Boys In The Boat by Daniel James Brown. It’s the story of the eight man rowing team from the USA that went to the 1936 Olympics. It’s a fascinating and gripping tale. Would make a great film.

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