What are you reading now?

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  • smittims
    Full Member
    • Aug 2022
    • 4159

    It's one of the Dickens novels I like, and of course it has a high reputation amongst 19th-century English literature. I'm afarid I'm not likely to read the other book you mention as I don't care for books deliberately based on other books, except perhaps for Thackeray's 'Rebecca and Rowena' a delightful spoof of 'Ivanhoe'.

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    • Mal
      Full Member
      • Dec 2016
      • 892

      Just finishing Lessons by Ian McEwan, which I think deserves the high praise given to it by most of the reviewers. But don't look to it for light relief; it's a long, serious, read! Might be his Dombey & Son. (There is a strong "classical music" thread to the book, the "Lessons" referring (wryly) to piano lessons...)

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      • Bryn
        Banned
        • Mar 2007
        • 24688

        Vincent Perez Benitez: Olivier Messiaen's Opera, François d'Assise. Very pleased to have found it from WOB (as new) for £4.15 (after multiple order 20% discount).

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        • Serial_Apologist
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 37691

          Originally posted by Bryn View Post
          Vincent Perez Benitez: Olivier Messiaen's Opera, François d'Assise. Very pleased to have found it from WOB (as new) for £4.15 (after multiple order 20% discount).

          Amazingly reasonable, Bryn!

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          • Pulcinella
            Host
            • Feb 2014
            • 10949

            Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
            Amazingly reasonable, Bryn!
            Especially if it's as long as the opera.

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            • Bryn
              Banned
              • Mar 2007
              • 24688

              Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post
              Especially if it's as long as the opera.
              328 pages. An ebook version appears to be available free of charge with a trial period of allcoastmedia: https://allcoastmedia.co/get/book.ph...042909&c=music

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              • DracoM
                Host
                • Mar 2007
                • 12972

                Ann Cleeves: Blue Lightning.
                Her Shetland books are great 'last thing at night time' reading

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                • gradus
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 5609

                  A book of excerpts from Richard Jefferies works.

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                  • Petrushka
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 12252

                    'Putting the Record Straight' by John Culshaw.

                    I bought this when it first came out in 1981 and re-read it every few years,, though it's a long time since I last picked it from the shelf.

                    Once finished, I'll be tackling 'Abyss: The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962' by Max Hastings.
                    "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

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                    • Stanfordian
                      Full Member
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 9312

                      Originally posted by DracoM View Post
                      Ann Cleeves: Blue Lightning.
                      Her Shetland books are great 'last thing at night time' reading
                      Must mean 'Anne of Cleves'. Clearly a wind up. Who's ever heard of Catherine of Aragon and Anne Boleyn writing books? Ha!

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                      • ChandlersFord
                        Member
                        • Dec 2021
                        • 188

                        Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
                        'Putting the Record Straight' by John Culshaw.

                        I bought this when it first came out in 1981 and re-read it every few years,, though it's a long time since I last picked it from the shelf.

                        Once finished, I'll be tackling 'Abyss: The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962' by Max Hastings.
                        A fascinating book, which I wish he’d lived to finish.

                        As always with Culshaw, though, I’m left intrigued by the elusive personality of the writer who had a genius for revealing nothing important about himself.

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                        • JasonPalmer
                          Full Member
                          • Dec 2022
                          • 826

                          Enjoying mondays telegraph, nice to have in depth articles instead of just relying on brief mainstream media.
                          Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...

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                          • Padraig
                            Full Member
                            • Feb 2013
                            • 4237

                            Charles Portis True Grit - yes the one they twice made into rather good Westerns. Meet Mattie Ross.

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                            • Joseph K
                              Banned
                              • Oct 2017
                              • 7765

                              I finished J.G. Ballard's The Drowned World last night. As usual it was wonderfully written, though I have to say, when the character Strangman is introduced I was beginning to have my doubts about the overall structure of the work but the final chapter, I felt, satisfactorily tied together the various threads in a nice & quite moving way. Ballard is an author I feel quite close to, what with his surrealism and willingness to contemplate the loss of what many people take for granted. I recently bought both the first volume of his collected short stories and Concrete Island, but rather now I am going to read Graeber & Wengrow's The Dawn of Everything, which I am looking forward to.

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                              • JasonPalmer
                                Full Member
                                • Dec 2022
                                • 826

                                I have started a book to teach myself drawing, found myself sketching a mug and a bowl of fruit today.



                                Have noticed I already looking at things differently.
                                Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...

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