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Stephen
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6 Mar 2016 16:00 |
Tess - have you read the other DB books yet? His last one wasn't as good. It annoys me that they hardly ever follow the story properly in films of books. That's why I always like to read the book first.
I'll let you know how Dominus goes. I'm on page 50 and getting hooked in already.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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6 Mar 2016 15:49 |
Stephen, I"ve read Angels & Deamons by. Dan Brown. It was another of my purchases from the charity shop.
Had it in my "waiting to read" pile for uite a while. However. read it before watching the film on TV.
I thoroughly loved the book, a real page turner. Kept me wondering what else was going yo happen, and who was responsible for what.
However, as I knew that I would be watching the film. I kept wondering how they depicted certain things on film.
Only to find out that they didn't! I especially wanted to see the futuristic plane used at the beginning of the story, only to find out that they cut out that part of the story completely.
I much preferred the book and eil read it again. Would recommend it highly.
Will be on the the look out for Dominus by Tom Fox.
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Stephen
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6 Mar 2016 15:14 |
Sorry I've been quiet for awhile. Finally finished all eight of Stephen King's Dark Tower books last week. A bit of a disappointing ending but I don't think it could have ended any other way really.
I've just read The Martian by Andy Weir. A great page turner but quite technical. I've certainly learnt a lot about living on Mars and of human endurance and ingenuity. I want to see the film now I've read it.
Just started Dominus by Tom Fox. A religious conspiracy thriller a la Dan Brown.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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26 Feb 2016 23:45 |
Have just finished reading. The Memory Keeper's Daughter, by Kim Edwards.
Starting in the 1960s. it is the story o a new born baby girl with Down's Syndrome being given away at birth, without her mother's knowledge. The mother, Norah, is told by her husband that their baby girl was still born.
This secret has far reaching and long lasting effects on all the people concerned.
A moving story, highly recommended.
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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22 Feb 2016 09:43 |
I have read some Susan Lewis books. and really enjoy them. The latest one was. The Truth About You. Which was a greasers book, so will not comment till review date on the greasers thread.
DET, I had read a couple of Tempe Brennan books ages ago. Long before the Bones series appeared on our TV screens. I really liked them, took me a while to realise that this was the same person because I am hopeless at remembering names (author and the Temperance Brennan)
Have also recently read a couple of books for the teenage market, co written by Kathy Reich's and her son (whose name escapes me!). The star, I forget her name too, is a neice of Tempe, an interesting read.
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AnninGlos
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19 Feb 2016 15:31 |
I have just read A French Affair by Susan Lewis. Really enjoyed this one, she is such a good writer, great characters, good plot, beautiful descriptions, mainly set amongst vineyards with a brief visit to Paris. Very sensual and evocative.
When Natalie is killed in a freak accident while on holiday with her Grandmother, her mother Jessica feels there is something she is not being told. Jessica travels to France to stay in the same cottage owned by Luc the husband of her best friend Lilian. Charlie, Jessica's husband is so traumatised by the death of his beloved daughter that he refuses to discuss Jessica's suspicions about her mother.
well worth reading. I read the paperback but it is available on kindle.
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+++DetEcTive+++
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18 Feb 2016 19:38 |
At one time, until OH moaned about the groaning bookshelves, I had most of the Temperance Brennan books. This was long before the TV series. Revisting them, its difficult to disassociate the series from the books.
Your synopsis certainly rings a bell. :-)
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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18 Feb 2016 19:06 |
Have just finished reading "Monday Mourning". by Kathy Reich's. A novel written in the first person by Temperance Brennan, including an appearance Ryan. Tempe Brennan is " Bones". In the TV series of that name.
This Tempe is slightly different from the one in Bones, but is no less interesting. Whereas as Ryan is the love-interest in the book.
The story is set in Montreal, in winter, brrrrr.
If you like Bones, or CSI etc. you will probably like this.. I enjoyed it and will try to get another book Tempe Brennan book by Kathy Relics.
Just to whet your appetite the blurb on the back cover starts. " Three skeletons are found in the basement of a pizza parlour. The building is old, with a colourful past, and Homicide Detective Luc Claudel dismisses the remains as historic.,..,.... But Forensic Anthropologist Tempe Brennan has her doubts.,.... "
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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18 Feb 2016 19:05 |
Have just finished reading "Monday Mourning". by Kathy Reich's. A novel written in the first person by Temperance Brennan, including an appearance Ryan. Tempe Brennan is " Bones". In the TV series of that name.
This Tempe is slightly different from the one in Bones, but is no less interesting. Whereas as Ryan is the love-interest in the book.
The story is set in Montreal, in winter, brrrrr.
If you like Bones, or CSI etc. you will probably like this.. I enjoyed it and will try to get another book Tempe Brennan book by Kathy Relics.
Just to whet your appetite the blurb on the back cover starts. " Three skeletons are found in the basement of a pizza parlour. The building is old, with a colourful past, and Homicide Detective Luc Claudel dismisses the remains as historic.,..,.... But Forensic Anthropologist Tempe Brennan has her doubts.,.... "
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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18 Feb 2016 18:49 |
Recently read "Journey's End". by Josephine Cox. I'm not very good at remembering names of authors and books. However, I think that I've read and enjoyed Josephine Cox books before (can't remember which one though).
I was disappointed by this story, especially the parts that spoke about what had happened before the story opens. Just didn't find it believable. Perhaps, being a researcher of family history, even when I am reading a work of fiction, if a families life is discussed, past and present, I tend to check out how old various people were during important events. To me this just did not hold together. Maybe I was thinking king too much about it as I read, instead of just going with the flow. Has anyone else read it? What did you think??
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'Emma'
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28 Jan 2016 11:46 |
Agree Vera this is a good thread.
To see everyone's choice of reading matter is interesting.
History is my passion but not everyone's favourite.
Happy reading.
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SuffolkVera
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27 Jan 2016 22:46 |
I'm glad you started this thread Mersey as, because of the mentions on here, I have read some books that I wouldn't normally have picked up and found some authors new to me.
I've just finished Philippa Gregory's The White Princess. I thought I had read all the "Cousin's War" books but I must have missed this one before. It's told by Elizabeth of York and is the story of her marriage to Henry Tudor, and her relationships with her various relatives including her mother, Elizabeth Woodville, her sisters, and Henry's mother, Margaret Beaufort. It is fiction but meticulously researched as you would expect from this author. She certainly gets over the turbulent times they were living through and the suspicious court life with everyone looking over their shoulder all the time. An enjoyable book if you like historical fiction.
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Mersey
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27 Jan 2016 18:04 |
Hi Ann, yes I totally agree Ann, I was waiting for it to be released and used some of my Christmas Amazon vouchers...well worth a read...... :-D
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AnninGlos
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27 Jan 2016 15:40 |
I have almost finished The Lake house. Love this book. I can't read it in bed though as our daughter in law bought it for me and it is a hard back..... A big one. Gripping story, great characters.
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Mersey
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27 Jan 2016 15:16 |
Hello loverlies......its is so lovely to catchup with the thread and see so many people posting and giving us a variation of all the different books that are enjoyed....
Pammy,AnnG,Emma,Von,Vera,Det,Tess, Stephen and anyone else not mentioned...a GREAT BIG THANKYOU <3 <3 :-D for keeping the thread flowing :-D
I have read quite a few books lately so here goes.........
**Ann** mentioned this book to me and I read it straight away.....I thoroughly enjoyed it so thanks Ann :-D <3
A Pocketful of Holes and Dreams - Jeff Pearce
Jeff Pearce was born in the slums of Liverpool in 1953, and from the moment he could walk he sold second hand clothes on a market stall with his mother. Leaving school at the age of fourteen, unable to read or write, he embarked on an amazing journey that would see him make and lose millions in the 'rag trade' before eventually winning the highest accolade the fashion business had to offer. He is retired and lives on a small farm in Cheshire with his wife Gina and two Argentinean polo ponies, Susie the dog and Daisy the cat. Jeff now spends most of his time committing his memoirs to paper.
The Lake House - Kate Morton
A missing child...
June 1933, and the Edevane family's country house, Loeanneth, is polished and gleaming, ready for the much-anticipated Midsummer Eve party. Alice Edevane, sixteen years old and a budding writer, is especially excited. Not only has she worked out the perfect twist for her novel, she's also fallen helplessly in love with someone she shouldn't. But by the time midnight strikes and fireworks light up the night skies, the Edevane family will have suffered a loss so great that they leave Loeanneth forever.
Early One Morning - Virginia Bailey
A grey dawn in 1943: on a street in Rome, two young women, complete strangers to each other, lock eyes for a single moment.
One of the women, Chiara Ravello, is about to flee the occupied city for the safety of her grandparents' house in the hills. The other has been herded on to a truck with her husband and their young children, and will shortly be driven off into the darkness.
In that endless-seeming moment, before she has time to think about what she is doing, Chiara makes a decision that changes her life for ever. Loudly claiming the woman's son as her own nephew, she demands his immediate return; only as the trucks depart does she begin to realize what she has done. She is twenty-seven, single, with a sister who needs her constant care, a hazardous journey ahead of her, and now a child in her charge - a child with no papers who refuses to speak and gives every indication that he will bolt at the first opportunity.
Three decades later, Chiara lives alone in Rome, a self-contained, self-possessed woman working as a translator and to all appearances quite content with a life which revolves around work, friends, music and the theatre. But always in the background is the shadow of Daniele, the boy from the truck, whose absence haunts her every moment. Gradually we learn of the havoc wrought on Chiara, her family and her friends by the boy she rescued, and how he eventually broke her heart. And when she receives a phone call from a teenage girl named Maria, claiming to be Daniele's daughter, Chiara knows that it is time for her to face up to the past.
This epic novel is an unforgettably powerful, suspenseful, heartbreaking and inspiring tale of love, loss and war's reverberations down the years.
The Winter Children - Lulu Taylor
Olivia and Dan Felbeck are blissfully happy when their longed-for twins arrive after years of IVF. At the same time, they make the move to Renniston Hall, a huge, Elizabethan house that belongs to absent friends. Living rent-free in a small part of the unmodernised house, once a boarding school, they can begin to enjoy the family life they've always wanted. But there is a secret at the heart of their family, one that Olivia does not yet know. And the house, too, holds its darkness deep within it .
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Pammy51
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18 Jan 2016 18:11 |
Just finished reading 'The Orange Lilies' by Nathan Dylan Goodwin on the Kindle. He has written a series about a forensic genealogist, although this novella can be read as a stand alone. His books feature Morton Farrier, who was adopted and is trying to find his birth family, and this is woven into a main story where he has adventures after being hired to investigate someone's background. This novella concerns his research into his grandfather's WW1 death. It describes using Ancestry's WW1 diaries where you can read reports actually written on the day your ancestor died, so I have been inspired to try to find more about my relatives (between my and OH's extended trees we have 11 deaths) which has been very interesting.
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AnninGlos
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18 Jan 2016 11:45 |
I am reading on the Kindle, The Other Son by Nick Alexander. I knew nothing about this book but it was either very cheap, or free (can't remember) on Kindle. I am enjoying it, he is a very good writer. Basically about the characters of two sons and their parents. More about how the characters of the parents and their attutudes to the sons have affected the sons. I can't say more about it because to elaborate would give the story away. :-) :-)
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'Emma'
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12 Jan 2016 19:32 |
Just Downloaded The White Queen of Middleham by Lesley Nickell price £3.83 on kindle.
The story is about Richard III wife Anne Neville and her unhappy life till she married Richard.
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Von
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12 Jan 2016 15:44 |
Yesterday I downloaded the Gourlay Girls by Margaret Thomson Davis.
A very easy read.. It is set in Glasgow and as I lived in Glasgow for a while in the 1970's I could relate to the areas described.
It's book two of a trilogy so I will probably read book three.
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Von
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10 Jan 2016 22:19 |
Only discovered yesterday that I can download ebooks for free from my local library.
You can have them for three weeks and then they are deleted.
Not a huge choice but I guess it's early days yet for our library.:-D
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