So, what did you actually read on holiday?
Discussion
Got back early this morning from seven nights in Tenerife and this holiday's reading was :-
First Hunger Games book (historical present a difficult way to write, wonderfully done)
Surface Detail - Iain M Banks; inimitable, brilliant.
Pigs Might Fly - Mark Blake, a very good book charting the history of Pink Floyd
Awful Auntie - David Walliams (not his best but still a fine children's book)
A Thousand Splendid Suns - a coruscating depiction of the events (and the treatment of women) in Afghanistan over a thirty year period seen through the eyes of two women, by Khaled Hosseini; fantastic writing, and a real eye-opener.
What did you read while away?
First Hunger Games book (historical present a difficult way to write, wonderfully done)
Surface Detail - Iain M Banks; inimitable, brilliant.
Pigs Might Fly - Mark Blake, a very good book charting the history of Pink Floyd
Awful Auntie - David Walliams (not his best but still a fine children's book)
A Thousand Splendid Suns - a coruscating depiction of the events (and the treatment of women) in Afghanistan over a thirty year period seen through the eyes of two women, by Khaled Hosseini; fantastic writing, and a real eye-opener.
What did you read while away?
Edited by TheChampers on Wednesday 29th July 19:27
neenaw said:
Do No Harm - Henry Marsh
It's the first book I've sat down and read in about a year through choice due to being busy studying and I'm glad I did. Possibly the best book I've ever read!
Agreed! Heard him on radio 2 either earlier this year or late last year...downloaded it when I got home and couldn't put it down. It's the first book I've sat down and read in about a year through choice due to being busy studying and I'm glad I did. Possibly the best book I've ever read!
I'm going tonight to pick up a copy of 'to kill a mockingbird'. I've never read it and I go on holiday on Sunday....looking forward to it.
ikarl said:
neenaw said:
Do No Harm - Henry Marsh
It's the first book I've sat down and read in about a year through choice due to being busy studying and I'm glad I did. Possibly the best book I've ever read!
Agreed! Heard him on radio 2 either earlier this year or late last year...downloaded it when I got home and couldn't put it down. It's the first book I've sat down and read in about a year through choice due to being busy studying and I'm glad I did. Possibly the best book I've ever read!
I'm going tonight to pick up a copy of 'to kill a mockingbird'. I've never read it and I go on holiday on Sunday....looking forward to it.
ikarl said:
Agreed! Heard him on radio 2 either earlier this year or late last year...downloaded it when I got home and couldn't put it down.
I'm going tonight to pick up a copy of 'to kill a mockingbird'. I've never read it and I go on holiday on Sunday....looking forward to it.
He was on Radio 4's Book Club a little while back then a couple of weeks ago he was interviewed on The Life Scientific on Radio 4. Well worth getting the podcast if you can, it was a very good interview.I'm going tonight to pick up a copy of 'to kill a mockingbird'. I've never read it and I go on holiday on Sunday....looking forward to it.
EVO, a bit of National Geographic and a couple of books I had on the go on my Kindle (I forget exactly which they were at the time now, to be honest, which is either not a recommendation or a sign I'm getting forgetful...)
In 'ye-olde-book' format, I'm currently reading "The Goldfinch" and in hardback form that might have required another luggage allowance!
Read a little more on holiday than I do at home, but I rarely just veg on holiday, so I don't get a lot more read...
M.
In 'ye-olde-book' format, I'm currently reading "The Goldfinch" and in hardback form that might have required another luggage allowance!
Read a little more on holiday than I do at home, but I rarely just veg on holiday, so I don't get a lot more read...
M.
A month ago now and I'm struggling to remember. I think I took a book with me but can't recall what it was, however, there were some books in the villa and I got through a few of those:
Freeman Wills Crofts - Antidote to Venom.
Victoria Hislop - The Island (read this a number of years ago and what made me travel the length of Crete to go and make the trip over to Spinalonga. Thought I'd re-read it now knowing the area.)
Kazuo Ishiguro - Never Let Me Go.
Khaled Hosseini - And The Mountains Echoed.
Freeman Wills Crofts - Antidote to Venom.
Victoria Hislop - The Island (read this a number of years ago and what made me travel the length of Crete to go and make the trip over to Spinalonga. Thought I'd re-read it now knowing the area.)
Kazuo Ishiguro - Never Let Me Go.
Khaled Hosseini - And The Mountains Echoed.
Just got back from a couple of weeks away.. Read and enjoyed the following:
RF Delderfield - To Serve Them All My Days (nostalgic and well-written, if a bit plodding.. one for by a winter fireside really)
John Buchan - Sick Heart River (the last of the Edward Leithen stories..well worth getting them on Kindle at a bargain price)
Roger Moore - Last Man Standing (a quick read, some amusing anecdotes)
Matthew Parker - Goldeneye - Where Bond Was Born - Ian Fleming's Jamaica (thoroughly recommended for Bond fans but read Pearson or Lycett's biographies of Fleming first)
William Boyd - Restless (a great book, pick of my holiday reads.. Boyd is rapidly becoming one of my favourite writers)
Robert Aickman - Dark Entries (atmospheric horror short stories in the MR James mould)
Donald Sturrock - Storyteller: The Life of Roald Dahl (again recommended for fans of Dahl but read his two true-ish autobiographies Boy and Going Solo first)
RF Delderfield - To Serve Them All My Days (nostalgic and well-written, if a bit plodding.. one for by a winter fireside really)
John Buchan - Sick Heart River (the last of the Edward Leithen stories..well worth getting them on Kindle at a bargain price)
Roger Moore - Last Man Standing (a quick read, some amusing anecdotes)
Matthew Parker - Goldeneye - Where Bond Was Born - Ian Fleming's Jamaica (thoroughly recommended for Bond fans but read Pearson or Lycett's biographies of Fleming first)
William Boyd - Restless (a great book, pick of my holiday reads.. Boyd is rapidly becoming one of my favourite writers)
Robert Aickman - Dark Entries (atmospheric horror short stories in the MR James mould)
Donald Sturrock - Storyteller: The Life of Roald Dahl (again recommended for fans of Dahl but read his two true-ish autobiographies Boy and Going Solo first)
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