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PatinCyprus
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2 Jan 2020 16:43 |
Happy New Year :-D :-D <3 <3
Not started too well for some readers.
M C Beaton has died RIP
loved Agatha
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SuffolkVera
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5 Jan 2020 18:34 |
I saw that she had died Pat. I liked her Agatha Raisin and Hamish McBeth books. Sometimes you want a slightly lighter read and I am not into romances so these fitted the bill.
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AnninGlos
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11 Jan 2020 17:43 |
Yes I like the Agatha Raison books If you like her you might also like other similar light read books by Rebecca Tope There are a lot some set in the Cotswolds, Some in the Lake district and some in Devon.
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SuffolkVera
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11 Jan 2020 18:33 |
I've added Rebecca Tope to my "to be read" list Ann. Trouble is, the list is getting longer and longer.
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Dermot
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20 Jan 2020 17:47 |
'Oxford A-Z of English Usage' published by Oxford University Press (2013) & edited by Jeremy Butterfield.
195 pages of wonderful stuff. An absolute gem!
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SuffolkVera
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24 Jan 2020 14:37 |
That sounds like a good dip in and out book Dermot. At Christmas OH was given a book of 2041 facts from QI, the TV programme. It’s sitting on a desk upstairs and every time I go by I open it at random and read another fact that generally makes me smile.
I’ve been reading some detective novels recently. Nothing too taxing. I read Wild Fire by Ann Cleves and this is apparently going to be the last of her Shetland novels, but it was a fairly open sort of ending so I am wondering if she is going to move her detective Jimmy Perez to another location. I’ve also read a couple of Susan Hill’s Simon Serrailler novels.
I’ve now downloaded via the Libby app a book by Linda Castillo, which was suggested by Det.. i’m looking forward to reading that one as we usually seem to like the same books.
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AnninGlos
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25 Jan 2020 14:23 |
I am reading a paperback at the moment picked up in the works £1 sale. By Sheila Newberry it is called The Forget-me-not Girl. Quite a light read but nostalgic as well starts in 1936 then flashes back to 1836, quite a lot of general historic information covering all sorts of things like farming communities, the RN and ship life, Life as a cook in a big house etc, sort of a fictional biographic. She is a talented writer I see she has written a lot of books but this is the first of hers I have read, I will look out for more as it is good holiday reading.
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AnninGlos
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31 Jan 2020 12:12 |
I have finished Forget-me-not girl and really enjoyed it. Reading the suthors note at the end confirmed my suspicions that it was based on truth. apparently the main character Emma (the Forget-me not girl) was her Great Grandmother and she researched her life and wrote the book mostly fact, part fiction on her. It is very informing while being a light read. And, as it only cost me a£1 really good value.
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Mersey
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16 Feb 2020 15:05 |
Hi lovely readers hope everyone is ok and enjoying themselves...
I am reading a book at the moment which would not originally be my type of read but decided to out stretch my reading length... So decided to give it a go....
31 Bond Street by Ellen Horan
Who killed Dr. Harvey Burdell?
Though there are no witnesses and no clues, fingers point to Emma Cunningham, the refined, pale-skinned widow who managed Burdell's house and his servants. Rumored to be a black-hearted gold digger with designs on the doctor's name and fortune, Emma is immediately put under house arrest during a murder investigation. A swift conviction is sure to catapult flamboyant district attorney Abraham Oakey Hall into the mayor's seat. But one formidable obstacle stands in his way: the defense attorney Henry Clinton. Committed to justice and the law, Clinton will aid the vulnerable widow in her desperate fight to save herself from the gallows.
Set in 1857 New York, this gripping mystery is also a richly detailed excavation of a lost age. Horan vividly re-creates a tumultuous era characterized by a sensationalist press, aggressive new wealth, a booming real-estate market, corruption, racial conflict, economic inequality between men and women, and the erosion of the old codes of behavior. A tale of murder, sex, greed, and politics, this spellbinding narrative transports readers to a time that eerily echoes
Happy Reading :-D
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Mersey
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1 Mar 2020 10:52 |
Hi happy readers :-D <3
Well I have given up on the last book after chaper 2 !! afraid it was not for me!
Maybe a great read to some but not one for me!!
Will be starting a new one shortly, so keep you posted :-)
Happy Reading <3
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'Emma'
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7 Mar 2020 18:16 |
Last of the trilogy The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel following Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies Is on Amazon £12:49 for kindle version. Bit rich for me so will wait till it comes down in price. :-)
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AnninGlos
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8 Mar 2020 16:45 |
Just finished Lee Child's Last Tense which was a good Jack Reacher read.
am now reading A spark of Light by Jodi Piccoult
A lone gunman takes the women and doctors at a controversial abortions clinic hostage Tense negotiations for their release unfolds, hour by hour back in time through the day that brought the hostages and their captor to this moment. Because matters of life and death look very different when you or the ones you love are staring down the barrel of a gun.
Poerful,, thought provoking and deeply involving.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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31 Mar 2020 00:00 |
Still reading (very slowly) just don't get round to coming on here to give the book a mention.
At the moment I am reading Rubicon by Steven Saylor. Not sure that I have ever read books by this author before. This one features "Gordianus the Finder" and as it mentions his previous investigations, it seems that it isn't the first book about him. The blurb on th back cover says A Story of Murder and duplicity during the Roman Civil war .Featuring Gordianus the Finder.
Caesar and his troops have crossed the Rubicin and are marching on Rome. Pompey, his rival, is preparing to flee south with his loyal troops, leaving the city unguarded and ungoverned. Before Pompey leaves Rome, however, his cousin and protege is found dead, garrotted in Gorianus;s garden Enraged, Pompey demands that Gordianus discovers and names the killer.
There are a few extra twists to the story so far.
Historical and a murder mystery.. interesting on both counts.
(Got it from the library - paperback printed in 2000)
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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31 Mar 2020 00:03 |
Libraried are closed at the moment. A good chance to start to read a few more of the books on the "waiting" shelves.
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SuffolkVera
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19 Apr 2020 20:25 |
I borrowed The Lost Tudor Princess by Alison Weir from Libby, the library app. I haven’t finished it and can’t renew it as someone else is waiting, so I have put a Hold on it and it will come back to me at some point so I can finish it. I normally read quickly but find Alison Weir’s work so packed with names and dates and so dense that I can only read small amounts at a time, or I start to go brain dead.
This book is the story of Lady Margaret Douglas who was the niece of Henry VIII and at one point was his heir. She seems to have had a turbulent life, going in and out of favour at court. She was a very strong and determined woman and involved in various political intrigues between Scotland and England, being a member of the Royal Family in both countries. It was her grandson James who came to reign in both lands as James VI of Scotland and James I of England.
I’m also on the fourth book of a four book series by Sharon K Penman, an American writer. They are historical novels based around the 12th century struggle for the throne. Eleanor of Aquitaine is regent in England while her son King Richard the Lionheart is being held prisoner by the Holy Roman Emperor. Her other son Prince John wants the throne for himself. Without giving the story away Justin de Quincy becomes a sort of agent for Eleanor, a “Queen’s Man”. The books do follow on from each other so are best read in order. They are pure novels but based on solid historical facts. I’ve really enjoyed them. The only niggle has been the very occasional modern Americanism that’s crept in. Did they really say that someone is comfortable in his own skin in medieval England?
The four books are The Queen’s Man, Cruel As The Grave, Dragon’s Lair and Prince of Darkness.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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27 Apr 2020 18:14 |
Vera - have read some Alison Weir books and enjoyed them. Can't remember the titles, but may still have one or two on my book shelves.
Meanwhile I have started reading books from the stacks waiting to be read.
Managed two so far.
Miss Purdy's Class by Annie Murray. Set in Birmingham around 1936, it is a story of poverty. Mentions all sorts of things that actually happened - including the execution of "Nurse" Wadding---- at Winson Green Prison.
An interesting and informative read but very sad - how things have changed. I am familiar with many of the places in the book so of particular interest to me.
Second book is very different.
Wednesday's Child by Peter Robinson ( one of the Inspector Banks Series)
A scary story about the abduction of a seven year old girl from her home. Printed in the mid-1990's and set possibly a little before then, it was creepy, worrying and upsetting. Not sure if I would have wanted to see it as a i.v film before going to bed. Was useful to (try) to remember that this was fiction. Upsetting to remember that children are abducted. A little strange that a "modern" crime novel has no mention of mobile phones. DNA and computers both play a (small) part.
Have just started - The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy. It won The Booker Prize.
Likely to take a couple of weeks 9or so) for me to finish)
Have put first two books in my Charity Shop box - Will see how many I can add before Charity shops open again.
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Lesley48
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3 May 2020 06:03 |
I've just finished reading The Missing Sister by Dinah Jeffries. Very good. :-)
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AnninGlos
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3 May 2020 16:24 |
I seem to remember reading that Lesley I like Dinah Jefferies.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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5 May 2020 23:14 |
Was Missing Sister a GReaders book Ann?
If so I really enjoyed it. Thanks for reminding me about the author. Dinah Jefferies, Lesley. I had forgotton all about her will have to refresh my memory banks in time for the reopening of the local libraries.
By the way, i recently recorded an old t.v.series of DCI Banks and watched "Wednesdays Child" at the weekend. It bears no resemblence to the book, except that 1) it is set in Yorkshire 2) the policeman in charge is DCI Banks. 3) the abductors posed as Social workers 4) the names of the abductors. The t.v. story was far less scary or menacing. A more up-to-date story. The book has hints of The Moors Murders.
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AnninGlos
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3 Jun 2020 14:47 |
I have just finished a book by an author I have not read before Elly Griffiths The Stone Circle.It is a real page turner, I did note after reading it that it continued after her book calle Crossing places which I had not read but it stood alone no problem.
DCI Nelson has been receiving threatening letters telling him to 'go to the stone circle and rescue the innocent who is buried there'. He is shaken, not only because children are very much on his mind, with Michelle's baby due to be born, but because although the letters are anonymous, they are somehow familiar. They read like the letters that first drew him into the case of The Crossing Places, and to Ruth. But the author of those letters is dead. Or are they?
Meanwhile Ruth is working on a dig in the Saltmarsh - another henge, known by the archaeologists as the stone circle - trying not to think about the baby. Then bones are found on the site, and identified as those of Margaret Lacey, a twelve-year-old girl who disappeared thirty years ago.
As the Margaret Lacey case progresses, more and more aspects of it begin to hark back to that first case of The Crossing Places, and to Scarlett Henderson, the girl Nelson couldn't save. The past is reaching out for Ruth and Nelson, and its grip is deadly.
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