Home › Forums › Chat Forum › What book (s) are you reading now ?
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What book (s) are you reading now ?
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desperatebicycleFull Member
Paradise Sky by Joe R Lansdale
Is stuff like Porno and Skagboys worth a read?
Read em all. Irvine Welsh is briliant.
BunnyhopFull MemberThe moon’s a balloon – David Niven.
I read this many years ago and had completely forgotten what an interesting life this actor had lived.
The book is extremely well written and takes one back to a simpler time but not always better.redthunderFree MemberJust finished the Shatner Ashes of Eden
4/5 Not painful to read a rather good yarn.spanishflyFree Member“The moon’s a balloon – David Niven”
Such a great book as is Bring On The Empty Horses
I read them both as a teenager, I need to revisit too
roger_mellieFull MemberSpent ages trying to find some new science fiction that wasn’t the same regurgitated recommendation lists for 2021 and came across Angry Robot publisher. They have a digital sampler on their website (some good, some dire) but I’m currently enjoying Glow by Tim Jordan
Pretty decent debut.
“Reminiscent of the best space opera mixed with the gritty, violent dystopia of cyberpunk. Recommended for fans of Alastair Reynolds and William Gibson.” – Booklist
wordnumbFree MemberDeath in Her Hands – Ottessa Moshfegh.
The last few years I’ve been reading a lot of contemporary fiction, trying to find something beneath the hype of certain newish authors. Lots of difficult second/third novels. Moshfegh can write, best examples probably being the character studies in her Homesick for Another World, but I still don’t get that she has anything much to say, just that if she ever had something to say she’d say it very well. It’s a dickish thing to come out with, “your hyped novel seems more style than substance”, but a book is an investment of time, more so than a film or record, and I really miss that feeling of being introduced to new ideas through fiction. People say all the good writers are doing tv now, and Dan Harmon has skills in both sticking to a formula and subverting it, but there must be people writing ambitious unpretentious fiction somewhere.seosamh77Free MemberDecided I should probably attempt to fill in a big black hole in my knowledge of the USSR, from say 1918 to 1988. 😆 Just randomly picked a book. Went for this.
30 pages in seems decent, fascinating stuff. 🙂
pondoFull MemberParked The Anarchy (and reading in general) over Christmas. Now reading Victoria Coren’s poker book For Richer, For Poorer and The Dillinger Days by John somebody – Steven King recommended it for people interested in depression-era gangsters, and what a bunch of dicks they all were.
NorthwindFull MemberI’m almost certainly going to regret it, but watching the Wheel of Time tv series inspired me to pick up the first book, which I read so long ago that I couldn’t really join in the online hate train against the series, or criticize it for changes, could only remember the broad strokes.
What I do remember is how absolutely shit the middle of the series is, so, no plans to go any further than this one.
Tom-BFree MemberI read another JM Coetzee book over Christmas, The Life and Times of Michael K. He’s fast become one of my favourite authors, so will order some more of his. Currently reading Redhead By The Side of The Road by Anne Tyler…very readable, will have finished it in under 5 hours, both books are very interesting takes on a person’s character.
I have also made good on the first new years resolution that I’ve ever made, by starting a book club.
RonaFull MemberCurrently reading Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum: Glasgow’s Portal to the World, by Muriel Gray. The building was constructed according to the winning entry in the 1891/92 competition to design a new combined art gallery and museum for Glasgow. Initially, the design was to include an art school too, but at a later stage this was dropped from the plans. I had never considered, as pointed out in this book, that if an art school had indeed been integrated into the overall design, there would have been no need for Mackintosh to design the Art School – a magnificent building (in my opinion) and regarded, by some at least, as a masterpiece.
Anyway, this ties in nicely with one of my next reads – The Flower and the Green Leaf: Glasgow School of Art in the Time of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. Have had a browse through and it looks really interesting.
pondoFull MemberFor Richer, For Poorer was good, bit indulgently overlong in places and she uses poker terminology that meant nothing to me when it would have been interesting to know more clearly what was going on, but good stuff. Kind of ploughed through The Dillinger Days out of spite but I was glad when they were all either dead or banged up. Made a start on Carrie Fisher’s Surrender The Pink because Summer was reading it in a Mint Sauce scene but it’s not for me, got about two thirds through and decided to draw a line, now on the excellent You Do
n’tWant To Know by James Felton – one to pick up for short stints rather than dive into for a lengthy sitting, short chapters, much grossness and genuinely laugh-out-loud funny if we share the same sense of humour. Also tackling Stanislavsky’s An Actor Prepares – tried it (and failed) before but now just reading rather than studying it, which is making it much easier going!metalheartFree MemberJust finished the Living Mountain by Nan Shepherd (no idea why it took me so long to get around to it).
Started Play it as it lays by Joan Didion. Think the last time I picked a Didion book was due to Rattlesnakes… 🤣🤪🤣🤪🤣
Tom-BFree MemberI’ve just finished The Trial by Kafka….not sure it was worth the effort as I found it fairly tough going.
I think that I’m going to start The Handmaid’s Tale tonight.
desperatebicycleFull MemberBloody Scotland short stories by various artists. Very good. But that last one “Paradise Sky” was wonderful. Should be a Netflix series
sandwicheaterFull MemberErnest Cline’s Ready Player One, enjoying it.
Have the final Expanse book (Leviathan Fall) by James Core to start when i’ve finished the above.
Booked marked this as need to cast my net passed all the sci-fi nonsense i usually read.
onewheelgoodFull MemberHaving recently watched the film for the first time, I’m reading The Man Who Fell To Earth.
pondoFull MemberFinished You Don’t Need To Know – grotesque, sweary, ace.
Finished Pound For Pound, a biography of Sugar Ray Robinson – so-so, rolls along pretty quick but lacks depth and rather skips over less savoury aspects of the man – if anyone knows of a decent biography of him, let me know!nickcFull MemberThis way for the gas, Ladies and Gentlemen
Read this when I was younger, and thought I’d just remind myself given the resurgence of the American and UK right wing.
white101Full MemberLast year I challenged myself a book a month and hopefully going to get through that again this year.
Over xmas (or as it was known in this house the omicron period) I managed to finish off Simon Armitage’s book Walking Home. A trip down the Pennine Way. Very entertaining.
My first of the year was Robert Twigger Walking the Great North Line.
My daughter picked up a couple of books for me at xmas and I’ve started Catch-22. Possibly not something I would look at but none of the books I read last year were overly similar (with the exception of my last two, but they were in different years!) anyway must admit I’ve struggled through the first 50 chaotic pages but that may just be my brain struggling with stuff after covid brain fog.
northernmattFull MemberStill got Tehanu on the go with Cibola Burn (Expanse book 4) waiting in the wings. That was months ago I wrote that.
Got slightly distracted from them as the wife got me Bob Mortimer’s autobiography for Christmas so I’ve been chucking my way through that. Also, got the two Thursday Murder Club books so I think I’m taking a break from sci-fi/fantasy for a while.
WattyFull MemberSad Little Men – Private Schools and the Ruin of England, Richard Beard.
timbog160Free Member@tom-b I’ve got an anthology of Kafka’s from 20 odd years ago and tried (but failed) to get through the Trial. I think the trial is referring to the reading experience rather than the subject matter!!
At about the same time I read Kelmans how late it was – another bag o sh**e – I’ve now decided life’s too short for rubbish books just because they’re seen as worthy 😂
Tom-BFree MemberHahaha yeah I’d tend to agree!
@white101 Catch 22 is well worth persevering with. I think that I’ve said earlier on this thread, the none linear nature of it means that it can be hard to realise where you are with it (it was for me anyway) Maybe switch to something easier and come back to it post Covid brain fog? We suffered exactly the same post Covid issues 😔white101Full Member@Tom-B I think thats good advice. I’ve popped it back on the shelf and picked up The Thursday Murder Club.
IdleJonFree MemberOver xmas (or as it was known in this house the omicron period) I managed to finish off Simon Armitage’s book Walking Home. A trip down the Pennine Way. Very entertaining.
I’d recommend anything by Simon Armitage, book or TV. Often very funny, always well written. I think in All Points North he has a few pages about dealing with his car insurance company after he makes the change to full time writer. It puts his premium up, and they justify it by saying that he’ll be more at risk from the public as a poet than as a probation officer. 😀
jcaFull MemberJust finished Martha Well’s murderbot diaries series, which are mostly novellas, but Network Effect just won this years Hugo for best novel. Not only good stories, but seriously funny as well. A cyborg designed for killing things which has overridden the systems designed to control it and like to spend it’s time watching soap operas…
desperatebicycleFull MemberAlso just started Bob Mortimer’s “And Away”. A jolly read.
johndohFree MemberI have just started John Nichol’s ‘Lancaster’ (a history of the legendary bomber and its crews) – I was almost in tears on the train and that was only three pages into the Foreword.
jimmyFull MemberHalf 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
I’d watched the TV series and then got the book for Christmas – halfway through. Both great, and the TV series is a great adaptation of the book.
nickcFull MemberSad Little Men – Private Schools and the Ruin of England, Richard Beard
Listened to the audiobook, and while it’s a good listen/read, I did find it a little repetitive. I think it’s really a good long essay rather than a book?
I have just started John Nichol’s ‘Lancaster’
Len Deighton’s Bomber is always a good recommendation if you enjoy Lancaster.
nbtFull MemberHad a spurt recently after not reading very much for a while. Got through three LJ Ross crime thrillers set up in Northumberland, they were mildly entertaining.
Picked up some Stephen King books for the first time in a LONG time – I’d forgotten just how good a read he is, I properly tore through The Outsider and Billy Summers. Let It Bleed is on the reading pile (along with a few more LJ Ross books) and I will be picking up Mr Mercedes, Finders Keepers and End Of Watch from the library (or charity shop) in the near future.
Currently reading the latest John Connolly novel, “The Nameless Ones”. Cracknig read, as always
also on the reading pile are two christmas presents, Mark Cavendish’s new “Tour de Force” about this years tdf and the green jersey, and Dave Grohl’s “The Storyteller”
pondoFull MemberI have just started John Nichol’s ‘Lancaster’ (a history of the legendary bomber and its crews) – I was almost in tears on the train and that was only three pages into the Foreword.
D’you know, that went back onto the “To Read” pile for me – I was expecting the story of the plane rather than the crews, and everything I read seemed a tad hysterical and one-paced (I didn’t get very far, TBH). Not saying it’s not good, and I definitely WILL read it, I was just expecting it to be something slightly different.
timbog160Free MemberJust pulled the Cruel Sea off the shelf after 3 decades! This in spite of having lots of new books to read too. I have to say it is utterly brutal compared to the film.
Also keen to learn a bit more about the Spanish Civil War so have bought Beevor’s book on the subject. Although it is criticised by some it seems to give a good overview.
Tom-BFree MemberJust finished The Handmaids Tale and The Testaments…..both were stunning. I suppose ‘a feminist 1984′ is a phrase that could be used to both praise and dismiss them depending on your stand point. For me, they are a sort of feminist 1984, slightly more accessible as she doesn’t delve as deep into the thought process behind the totalitarian regimes’ workings as Orwell did. Certainly not books that I’ll forget in a hurry.
Next up is No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood. It seems fairly batshit, it’s the first book for my new book club that starts next Thursday.
tjagainFull MemberThe “old mans war” series by John Scalzi some fine military SF with a lot of of humour. Some of the best I have read for a long time. aliens are weak tho – they just behave like people
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