This week I have been reading
Comments
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Just read Tracey Thorn’s My Rock n Roll Friend and Sinead O’Connor’s Rememberings - both excellent. Now onto Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run which is good so far (120 pages in)…2
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This:
He travelled around Eurooe watching at least 1 top flight match in all 55 UEFA countries (before Brexit restrictions kicked and before Covid!).
Really enjoyed it, nice mix of travelogue and football, interesting to see the contrast between thousands in Germany, Portugal, Spain, and then crowds made up of 3 men and a dog/just players' families etc.
Would recommend it.2 -
Also Good Omens on Audible.
Enjoyed it, very dryly funny but somehow wasn't quite as good as I'd expect from Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett, think it had a bit of a rushed ending which could have been it.
Still good though.1 -
Finally finished the Count of Monte Cristo on Audible, definite lull in the middle while they introduced all the characters in Paris, but fantastic first third and final third, great book.
Also read Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, was a nice, funny read until the sudden emotional ending (not a spolier I don't think!), enjoyed it.0 -
Just finished Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Struggled at first with too many posh people swilling drinks and swapping bed partners. But it ain't about the plot for me. The bloody writing is marvellous, with lots of insights into love, desire, insanity.
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The Commitments, The Snapper, and the Van - 3 books in a series in 1 paperback, by Roddy Doyle.
Not bad, The Snapper was the best of the three for me, but The Van has one of the best lines about football I've seen.
It's set in Ireland during Italia 90, there's quite a few pages dedicated to the Romania penalty shoot out win and then the celebrations in the pub, around the whole town afterwards. And then this:
I know it's about Ireland, but it just sums it up for me, years following Charlton and England, enjoying a few highs, a bit of hope, and then it inevitably doesn't last!
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How to Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie.
I wasn't a fan, very formulaic, struck me of someone knowing first person dark hurmour, serial killer stuff is popular and giving it a go as a first novel, without the wit to really do it properly.
Needed the main character to be a bit more of a likeable antihero, I just found her a bit petty and boring. The titular family were all overly stereotypical posh people, there was an attempt at a bit of class war in there that a) didn't really work and b) is a bit disingenuous from someone who is very upper middle class herself.
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Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.
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Oh I also listened to Trevor Noah's childhood autobiography, Born A Crime. That was good - I'm not a big autobiography fan usually but the first hand accounts of the apartheid were really interesting, and he read it really well, too, the narration added a lot.2
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Broken Greek by Pete Paphides. He’s just a couple of years younger than me so his memories of chart music growing up ring so many bells. Fascinating stuff.2
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North Lower Neil said:Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.1 -
Just finished "Be Careful What You Wish For" by Simon Jordon. Don't laugh. I really liked it.Football fans and Charlton fans in particular will enjoy it, especially the behind the scenes at Palace, seeing what goes on with managers, players, and directors. It was a Sunday Times top ten best seller.2
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EveshamAddick said:Broken Greek by Pete Paphides. He’s just a couple of years younger than me so his memories of chart music growing up ring so many bells. Fascinating stuff.1
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Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.
Mild spoilers for anyone else to follow, just in case you want to avoid them.
It was mainly just the lack of depth to the characters for me personally, and their weird obsession over Arthur, who was basically a self-centred arsehole in all the flashbacks - being nice to Kirsten aside, I'll admit, but still, you'd think 20 years of an apocalypse later she'd have more going on that a guy who let her read magazines in his dressing room because it was quiet.
Elizabeth and Clark were barely rounded out, I only realised the closeness of the relationships between Kirsten and Sayid too late, Jeevan disappeared for an age and didn't do much... Miranda was by a long way the best and most interesting character. And The Prophet, in a way.
I did enjoy the flashbacks to the flu itself and the early days a lot, just not the ones further back and not much of the 'present', unfortunately.
I appreciate I'm in the minority here, it's done well by all accounts and had the TV show made (and I'd probably watch), but it wasn't for me.
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Tyson Fury,autobiography,Behind the Mask,only a short book read it in a day.This man like other people who suffer mental illnesses,went through hell,really good read,and once again ,when he was getting slated by the media,no one really knew what was going on.Why are we so keen to jump on people when we have no idea what is happening.1
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North Lower Neil said:Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.
Mild spoilers for anyone else to follow, just in case you want to avoid them.
It was mainly just the lack of depth to the characters for me personally, and their weird obsession over Arthur, who was basically a self-centred arsehole in all the flashbacks - being nice to Kirsten aside, I'll admit, but still, you'd think 20 years of an apocalypse later she'd have more going on that a guy who let her read magazines in his dressing room because it was quiet.
Elizabeth and Clark were barely rounded out, I only realised the closeness of the relationships between Kirsten and Sayid too late, Jeevan disappeared for an age and didn't do much... Miranda was by a long way the best and most interesting character. And The Prophet, in a way.
I did enjoy the flashbacks to the flu itself and the early days a lot, just not the ones further back and not much of the 'present', unfortunately.
I appreciate I'm in the minority here, it's done well by all accounts and had the TV show made (and I'd probably watch), but it wasn't for me.
Apparently the TV series is out on Starz this weekend. This review sounds promising
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2022/jan/28/an-uplifting-pandemic-drama-how-station-eleven-pulled-off-the-impossible
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stonemuse said:EveshamAddick said:Broken Greek by Pete Paphides. He’s just a couple of years younger than me so his memories of chart music growing up ring so many bells. Fascinating stuff.0
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Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.
Mild spoilers for anyone else to follow, just in case you want to avoid them.
It was mainly just the lack of depth to the characters for me personally, and their weird obsession over Arthur, who was basically a self-centred arsehole in all the flashbacks - being nice to Kirsten aside, I'll admit, but still, you'd think 20 years of an apocalypse later she'd have more going on that a guy who let her read magazines in his dressing room because it was quiet.
Elizabeth and Clark were barely rounded out, I only realised the closeness of the relationships between Kirsten and Sayid too late, Jeevan disappeared for an age and didn't do much... Miranda was by a long way the best and most interesting character. And The Prophet, in a way.
I did enjoy the flashbacks to the flu itself and the early days a lot, just not the ones further back and not much of the 'present', unfortunately.
I appreciate I'm in the minority here, it's done well by all accounts and had the TV show made (and I'd probably watch), but it wasn't for me.
Apparently the TV series is out on Starz this weekend. This review sounds promising
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2022/jan/28/an-uplifting-pandemic-drama-how-station-eleven-pulled-off-the-impossible
Is it weird I'm tempted despite not being that fussed by the book?!0 -
North Lower Neil said:Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Jints said:North Lower Neil said:Station Eleven by Emily St John Mandel.
It's so nothingy and dull, which for a post apocalyptic novel takes some doing.
Bland, interchangeable characters, some that she can't even be arsed to name, they are just called after their place in an travelling orchestra ("3rd Bassoon was walking slowly...."), a few of whom have a vague connection in that used to know the same slightly annoying and self-centred actor before he died. Not that the connection really goes anywhere at all.
A vague threat from a cult leader, and when that finally gets remembered and comes to a head I genuinely didn't care if he killed everyone or not.
The actual good bits were the descriptions of the early post-pandemic survivors settling down in an airport, a bit like film The Terminal but emptier.
Not sure this one would have got any traction but for a few similarities between "Georgia Flu" and Covid.
Mild spoilers for anyone else to follow, just in case you want to avoid them.
It was mainly just the lack of depth to the characters for me personally, and their weird obsession over Arthur, who was basically a self-centred arsehole in all the flashbacks - being nice to Kirsten aside, I'll admit, but still, you'd think 20 years of an apocalypse later she'd have more going on that a guy who let her read magazines in his dressing room because it was quiet.
Elizabeth and Clark were barely rounded out, I only realised the closeness of the relationships between Kirsten and Sayid too late, Jeevan disappeared for an age and didn't do much... Miranda was by a long way the best and most interesting character. And The Prophet, in a way.
I did enjoy the flashbacks to the flu itself and the early days a lot, just not the ones further back and not much of the 'present', unfortunately.
I appreciate I'm in the minority here, it's done well by all accounts and had the TV show made (and I'd probably watch), but it wasn't for me.
Apparently the TV series is out on Starz this weekend. This review sounds promising
https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2022/jan/28/an-uplifting-pandemic-drama-how-station-eleven-pulled-off-the-impossible
Is it weird I'm tempted despite not being that fussed by the book?!1 -
blackheathcanuck said:Just finished Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Struggled at first with too many posh people swilling drinks and swapping bed partners. But it ain't about the plot for me. The bloody writing is marvellous, with lots of insights into love, desire, insanity.2
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Really interesting to see people discussing Station Eleven because I'm considering starting that next. I enjoyed the HBO series. I didn't think u would. I grew up around enough theater kids that the idea of "what I'd only theater kids survived the apocalypse?" didn't sound too appealing to me. But the stuff from just before and around the time of the pandemic is great.
The other one I'm considering is TheMystery.doc. Think I'll probably end up going with that.1 -
I've just stopped XX by Rian Hughes. I got 525/986 pages in. The premise is interesting. The layout is good, what you expect from a graphic designer. But the writing isn't great. And every time the premise sets the book up to say something interesting or insicive about society, it just passes and moves onto another story line. This happened at least three distinct times in the chunk I read. There is a perpetual feeling throughout the novel that it doesn't know where it's going, and by the time I stopped, that felt pretty apparent. It's deeply disappointing.
The best part was a faux serialized pulp sci-fi novella, which was quite enjoyable, but made up about 50 pages of the 500 I read and had ended by the time I stopped.
My main take aways were "what if centuries could talk, the 19th would be a social dandy, the 20th an industrial machine, and the 21st a tweeting mosaic of screens."
And it's main morals seem to be "if aliens came down, SJWs would ask them their pronouns and Alex Jones would call them an Illuminati conspiracy" and "kids b on they damn phone too much."
Like I said, interesting premise, nothing to say. If that style of novel intrigues you (and it is very intriguing) read House of Leaves. Danielewski is an excellent writer, and he understands the novel and form so well that he can deconstruct it. Hughes does not. After HoL, read Steven Hall's books. Not as good, but along the same lines.
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SDAddick said:Really interesting to see people discussing Station Eleven because I'm considering starting that next. I enjoyed the HBO series. I didn't think u would. I grew up around enough theater kids that the idea of "what I'd only theater kids survived the apocalypse?" didn't sound too appealing to me. But the stuff from just before and around the time of the pandemic is great.
The other one I'm considering is TheMystery.doc. Think I'll probably end up going with that.
Unfortunately the flashbacks further back and the years later bits I didn't enjoy.1 -
HG Wells short stories - fantastic5
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Recruit - Robert Muchamore. OK, it's a children's book, but my 11 year old daughter is ploughing through the series and loved them, so got me and the mrs to read it. Basic premise is that children are drafted into the secret service, and follows basic training and a mission. I really enjoyed it, though not planning on reading the rest (my to-read pile is groaning on the shelf), but for those with kids aged 10 or so, I'd recommend them. The Alex Rider books as well.0
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stilladdicted said:
'There was a low mist. You could see the glare of headlamps reflected on the high-voltage cables beside the road. It hadn't rained, but the ground was still wet with dew; the traffic lights cast blurred red spots on the asphalt. You could sense the breath of the camp from miles away. Roads, railway tracks and cables all gradually coverged on it. This was a world of straight lines: a grid of rectangles and parallelograms imposed on the autumn sky, on the mist and on the earth itself.'
Thus begins the book Life And Fate written by Vasily Grossman who became a correspondent for the Red Army newspaper, the Red Star. He reported on the defence of Stalingrad, the fall of Berlin and the consequences of the Holocaust. He was unnusual in that he was trusted by the soldiers with whom he lived. This book is regarded as his masterpiece and, indeed, the heresy of saying that it is better than War And Peace has been heard on quite a few occasions.
The KGB was fearful of arresting Grossman so it arrested this book instead until a microfilm copy was smuggled into the West in 1980 with the help of Andrey Sakharov. It's a hefty read but I can't wait to get tucked into it. I wondered if others have already read it and what their opinions are?
I don't necessarily agree but that's how it is nowadays.
Here's an example:https://youtu.be/5c-1SlOKPN8
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blackheathcanuck said:Just finished Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Struggled at first with too many posh people swilling drinks and swapping bed partners. But it ain't about the plot for me. The bloody writing is marvellous, with lots of insights into love, desire, insanity.1
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jimmymelrose said:stilladdicted said:
'There was a low mist. You could see the glare of headlamps reflected on the high-voltage cables beside the road. It hadn't rained, but the ground was still wet with dew; the traffic lights cast blurred red spots on the asphalt. You could sense the breath of the camp from miles away. Roads, railway tracks and cables all gradually coverged on it. This was a world of straight lines: a grid of rectangles and parallelograms imposed on the autumn sky, on the mist and on the earth itself.'
Thus begins the book Life And Fate written by Vasily Grossman who became a correspondent for the Red Army newspaper, the Red Star. He reported on the defence of Stalingrad, the fall of Berlin and the consequences of the Holocaust. He was unnusual in that he was trusted by the soldiers with whom he lived. This book is regarded as his masterpiece and, indeed, the heresy of saying that it is better than War And Peace has been heard on quite a few occasions.
The KGB was fearful of arresting Grossman so it arrested this book instead until a microfilm copy was smuggled into the West in 1980 with the help of Andrey Sakharov. It's a hefty read but I can't wait to get tucked into it. I wondered if others have already read it and what their opinions are?
I don't necessarily agree but that's how it is nowadays.
Here's an example:https://youtu.be/5c-1SlOKPN8
Life and Fate certainly isn't short of characters but it's the way the world/system is imposed on them and their powerlessness (even leaders like Krushnev) that is theme of the novel. The opening paragraph is a perfect introduction in that sense.0 -
Read so many books over the past two years I have lost count, fiction and 'fact' (as perceived by the author)
A T M I am reading 'Empire of Pain', the history of the Sackler dynasty, notorious for the oxycodone 'epidemic', but they are much more than that .. I like a fast paced biography that reads almost like a novel .. this is a superbly written story
Another great read is 'Fall', the Robert Maxwell story .. makes you feel almost sorry for his ill fated children1 -
Empire of Pain is great, really well-researched and written. If you haven't seen it already, Dopesick is a great TV series on the same subject.0