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What are we all reading? 18:56 - Apr 24 with 7781 viewsWarfieldHoop

We havn't had one of these threads for a while, so what is everyone currently reading or read?

I'm reading The Map by T.S Learner which was only published earlier this year. It's a mystery thriller with history in the style of Dan Brown (only not as good imo). Before that I read Hawk Quest which I reccomend to anyone who enjoys historical fiction. Next up will be Scott of the Antarctic by David Crane.
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]
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What are we all reading? on 10:59 - Apr 25 with 1472 viewsscot1963

What are we all reading? on 10:46 - Apr 25 by A40Bosh

What else was I supposed to give her?
"I dont want any clothes, not until I've shifted these last few pounds in the new year"
"I've got enough perfume so don't get me any".
"Just get me something small, I don't really want anything"
"It's been a tight year so just get me a pair of those cheap hairy slipper boots"


Now I wish I had not bothered buying her it as she is never off the bloody thing because she does not have to get off her ass to go and buy another one - she can simply log on to the store and download one as soon as she is finished.


if she loves it that's a success then - i am always arguing about kindle (if given the opportunity) cus i can't understand why any book lover would want one
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What are we all reading? on 11:11 - Apr 25 with 1464 viewsA40Bosh

What are we all reading? on 10:59 - Apr 25 by scot1963

if she loves it that's a success then - i am always arguing about kindle (if given the opportunity) cus i can't understand why any book lover would want one


I'll tell you one overriding advantage the kindle has over a sackful of paperbacks.
My Mrs is always losing her specs and the Kindle allows her to use the same size font you would normally see on a billboard!!!

I did nearly smack her over the head with it when she complained that it only told you what percentage of the current book you had got through as she struggled with the concept that if you change the font size the number of pages would dramatically increase, but as there are only about 14 f'in words on a single page it wont take any longer to read it, so just shut up and read the bloody thing and stop worrying how much you have read of it already and how much you have left.

Poll: With no leg room, knees killing me, do I just go now or stay for the 2nd half o?

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What are we all reading? on 11:19 - Apr 25 with 1454 viewsMetallica_Hoop

What are we all reading? on 10:49 - Apr 25 by ted_hendrix

95?

I've read all of his books and in some cases twice.


I've still got 8 of the Corgi paper paperbacks. Still so readable.

Eventually I'll upgrade to the re-issues. He looks good for someone that old, allegedly he's working on a last book, hope he hurries up!

Beer and Beef has made us what we are - The Prince Regent

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What are we all reading? on 11:26 - Apr 25 with 1447 viewsscot1963

What are we all reading? on 11:11 - Apr 25 by A40Bosh

I'll tell you one overriding advantage the kindle has over a sackful of paperbacks.
My Mrs is always losing her specs and the Kindle allows her to use the same size font you would normally see on a billboard!!!

I did nearly smack her over the head with it when she complained that it only told you what percentage of the current book you had got through as she struggled with the concept that if you change the font size the number of pages would dramatically increase, but as there are only about 14 f'in words on a single page it wont take any longer to read it, so just shut up and read the bloody thing and stop worrying how much you have read of it already and how much you have left.


good point - i can now only read the small font in books, without glasses, during the spring/summer in the natural light outside. i'm still not sold though and, on a negative, it obviously brings out violence in people
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What are we all reading? on 13:36 - Apr 25 with 1422 viewsWrightUp5hit___

Iain Banks latest offering "Stonemouth"

Sex and drugs and drug barons on the north east coast of Scotland.

Usual great dialogue and characterisation, strangely not as gripping as previous works.
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What are we all reading? on 13:39 - Apr 25 with 1418 viewselnombre

setting aside the Kindle debate...

Audiobooks - surely not! You can't listen to a book?! Where's the time to reflect? Go back a paragraph because you weren't concentrating? Check who a character is or flick back to something a chapter ago?

The best you can hope for from listening to a book is a grasp of some the words it contains, a vague idea of plot and the notion that Martin Jarvis has got quite a nice reading voice.

Jennifer Egan's 'Look at Me' - imagine if John Updike had a sense of humour. And could write.
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What are we all reading? on 14:07 - Apr 25 with 1405 viewsR_from_afar

What an erudite thread for a football fans' website! I feel like I am having an out of body experience.

Last one for me was a book about the world's greatest ever triangular tournament, "Persian Fire" by Tom Holland. Persia v Sparta v Athens, a bit like Man U (Persia - manpower, riches, arrogance) v Stoke (Sparta - ruthlessly drilled, very physical) v Arsenal (Athens - philosophy, brains, a bit wussy). Well, sort of.

I am fascinated by ancient history and was desperate to read this book when I saw it but it also scared me: could I really plough through a 400 page plus history book? For pleasure rather than for a test? Well, once I started it, I was hooked and it's a great read, very illuminating. At Thermopylae, the Persian emissiary (Richard Scudamore) tells the Spartan commander Leonidas (Danny Cullip): "Lay down your arms". Leonidas' answer shows why the word laconic is derived from the land the Spartans lived in: "Come and get them".

Awesome.

By the way, the (first) British retreat from Afghanistan was a sorry tale, only one man made it back!

RFA
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]

"Things had started becoming increasingly desperate at Loftus Road but QPR have been handed a massive lifeline and the place has absolutely erupted. it's carnage. It's bedlam. It's 1-1."

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What are we all reading? on 14:35 - Apr 25 with 1392 viewsTW_R

What are we all reading? on 11:26 - Apr 25 by scot1963

good point - i can now only read the small font in books, without glasses, during the spring/summer in the natural light outside. i'm still not sold though and, on a negative, it obviously brings out violence in people


"on a negative, it obviously brings out violence in people"

And you don't even own one!

The Kindle is great. Can always carry around a good collection of books, which I like as I travel a lot and, even if I do finish the last one, I can download one, which is much easier than trying to buy an English language book when you're in the middle of Italy.

It's also good for books that are massive like The Stand by Stephen King. Carrying that thing around was back-breaking!!
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What are we all reading? on 14:43 - Apr 25 with 1378 viewsMetallica_Hoop

Kindle would have been handy for my Steven Erikson hardback collection.
They look good on the shelves though, makes me look like a Professor of Anthropology.

BTW if you haven't read Erikson......boy.....makes Martin's world seem small.

Beer and Beef has made us what we are - The Prince Regent

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What are we all reading? on 14:44 - Apr 25 with 1377 viewsTheBlob

What are we all reading? on 14:35 - Apr 25 by TW_R

"on a negative, it obviously brings out violence in people"

And you don't even own one!

The Kindle is great. Can always carry around a good collection of books, which I like as I travel a lot and, even if I do finish the last one, I can download one, which is much easier than trying to buy an English language book when you're in the middle of Italy.

It's also good for books that are massive like The Stand by Stephen King. Carrying that thing around was back-breaking!!


In defence of KIndle however - sorry Scotty - it's really the words that are important rather than the delivery system,and actually become more meaningful.When you consider the ancient Babylonians used a tablet form you could argue that the whole process has come full circle in 5,000 years.And also the lynchpin of modern thought,the Encyclopaedia Britannica has gone entirely electronic gives credence to the evolution.At least we haven't arrived at a Fahrenheit 451 scenario as yet.

Poll: So how was the season for you?

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What are we all reading? on 14:48 - Apr 25 with 1370 viewssexton

The Third Reich at War, the final part of a brilliant and very readable trilogy on Nazi Germany by Richard J Evans (an expert witness at the David Irving trial).
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What are we all reading? on 14:57 - Apr 25 with 1359 viewsA40Bosh

What are we all reading? on 14:44 - Apr 25 by TheBlob

In defence of KIndle however - sorry Scotty - it's really the words that are important rather than the delivery system,and actually become more meaningful.When you consider the ancient Babylonians used a tablet form you could argue that the whole process has come full circle in 5,000 years.And also the lynchpin of modern thought,the Encyclopaedia Britannica has gone entirely electronic gives credence to the evolution.At least we haven't arrived at a Fahrenheit 451 scenario as yet.


The forthcoming extension will result in the long overdue loft clearance in the coming months.

Then the tear will gently form in her eye as I bring down heavy black bin liner after heavy black biner and gently take out each volume of the Encyclopaedia Britannica set she brought home when she worked for EB International, softly flick through a few of the gold leaf edged pages noting the care and accuracy of each articule.

Then I will f++k everyone one of them out into the skip with a "I told you 10 years ago when you got made redundant that the kids would very read them!!"

Poll: With no leg room, knees killing me, do I just go now or stay for the 2nd half o?

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What are we all reading? on 15:02 - Apr 25 with 1354 viewsTheBlob

What are we all reading? on 14:57 - Apr 25 by A40Bosh

The forthcoming extension will result in the long overdue loft clearance in the coming months.

Then the tear will gently form in her eye as I bring down heavy black bin liner after heavy black biner and gently take out each volume of the Encyclopaedia Britannica set she brought home when she worked for EB International, softly flick through a few of the gold leaf edged pages noting the care and accuracy of each articule.

Then I will f++k everyone one of them out into the skip with a "I told you 10 years ago when you got made redundant that the kids would very read them!!"


NNNNNooooooooooo......not the skip.At the very least take them down to the charity shop.Have you got any first editions that may be worth putting on Ebay?Have a good look,there may be gold in them thar tomes.If you've got a first edition of Ringworld by Larry Niven in the yellow Gollancz hardback cover,I'll give you a fiver for it.

Poll: So how was the season for you?

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What are we all reading? on 15:21 - Apr 25 with 1345 views18StoneOfHoop

What are we all reading? on 14:48 - Apr 25 by sexton

The Third Reich at War, the final part of a brilliant and very readable trilogy on Nazi Germany by Richard J Evans (an expert witness at the David Irving trial).


Sexton,is that even better than Ian Kershaw's masterly double volume classic tomes 'Hitler: Nemesis (1998) and Hubris (2000) ' ?

Great thread.Top Kindle debate.
Don't read much fiction but anything 20thC historical to do with fascist and communist dictatorships I seize upon with alacrity.
Alan Bullock on Hitler and Stalin still stands the test of time and William H Shirer's (the Johnny Yank journo on the spot at the time)The Rise and Fall Of The Third Reich is indespensable too.For an overview of the 1930's Piers Brendon 'The Dark Valley' is tip-top.
Also strongly recommend Russia-wise Simon Sebag Montefiore's 'Stalin:the Court Of The Red Tsar' and Orlando Figes 'A People's Tragedy '
Anthony Beevor's 'Stalingrad' and 'Berlin' should be required reading on every school's history reading list. Anything by Paul Preston and the several books he has written on Franco will be good.
To understand the brutality man can inflict on man everyone should read at least one book by Primo Levi.


Later addendum:
_________________________________________________________________
A few years back I had the displeasure of having two coppers interviewing me at length in my gaff.They took no notice of the QPR memorabilia strewn over every nook and corner but on viewing my substantial 20+ strong Der Fuerher Hitler bookshelf section the clueless numpties started to draw heavy dark inferences - i.e. Is the big fella an David Irving/Nick Griffin/Andres Brevik type nutter?
Mind you if the same two nosey bizzies had ever got into Mettallica's drum I think they'd immediately nick him on seeing the black walls and door leading into the ginger hedgepig dungeon.
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]

'I'm 18 with a bullet.Got my finger on the trigger,I'm gonna pull it.." Love,Peace and Fook Chelski! More like 20StoneOfHoop now. Let's face it I'm not getting any thinner. Pass the cake and pies please.

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What are we all reading? on 15:27 - Apr 25 with 1336 viewsA40Bosh

What are we all reading? on 15:02 - Apr 25 by TheBlob

NNNNNooooooooooo......not the skip.At the very least take them down to the charity shop.Have you got any first editions that may be worth putting on Ebay?Have a good look,there may be gold in them thar tomes.If you've got a first edition of Ringworld by Larry Niven in the yellow Gollancz hardback cover,I'll give you a fiver for it.


Nah, I wont f++k them out really - I hope they have survived up in the loft for 10 years though. Many of the off shoot works like the world books got damaged out in the garage. Once the extension gets built (hopefully) then the box bedroom can become the "family library" where the EB set can then be displayed in all their glory - gathering dust for another 10 years with the 3 lazy students downstairs too lazy to search through them for reference info and instead rely on the rubbish written on the net to steal all their essay material.

Poll: With no leg room, knees killing me, do I just go now or stay for the 2nd half o?

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What are we all reading? on 15:47 - Apr 25 with 1328 viewssexton

What are we all reading? on 15:21 - Apr 25 by 18StoneOfHoop

Sexton,is that even better than Ian Kershaw's masterly double volume classic tomes 'Hitler: Nemesis (1998) and Hubris (2000) ' ?

Great thread.Top Kindle debate.
Don't read much fiction but anything 20thC historical to do with fascist and communist dictatorships I seize upon with alacrity.
Alan Bullock on Hitler and Stalin still stands the test of time and William H Shirer's (the Johnny Yank journo on the spot at the time)The Rise and Fall Of The Third Reich is indespensable too.For an overview of the 1930's Piers Brendon 'The Dark Valley' is tip-top.
Also strongly recommend Russia-wise Simon Sebag Montefiore's 'Stalin:the Court Of The Red Tsar' and Orlando Figes 'A People's Tragedy '
Anthony Beevor's 'Stalingrad' and 'Berlin' should be required reading on every school's history reading list. Anything by Paul Preston and the several books he has written on Franco will be good.
To understand the brutality man can inflict on man everyone should read at least one book by Primo Levi.


Later addendum:
_________________________________________________________________
A few years back I had the displeasure of having two coppers interviewing me at length in my gaff.They took no notice of the QPR memorabilia strewn over every nook and corner but on viewing my substantial 20+ strong Der Fuerher Hitler bookshelf section the clueless numpties started to draw heavy dark inferences - i.e. Is the big fella an David Irving/Nick Griffin/Andres Brevik type nutter?
Mind you if the same two nosey bizzies had ever got into Mettallica's drum I think they'd immediately nick him on seeing the black walls and door leading into the ginger hedgepig dungeon.
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]


Haven't read either of the Kershaw books 18Stone so I can't say.

Agree with you about Anthony Beevor and Orlando Figes - a superb read, though Orlando was a naughty boy on Amazon.

Would also recommend Robert Service's biographies of Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin.
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What are we all reading? on 15:53 - Apr 25 with 1326 viewsMetallica_Hoop

What are we all reading? on 15:47 - Apr 25 by sexton

Haven't read either of the Kershaw books 18Stone so I can't say.

Agree with you about Anthony Beevor and Orlando Figes - a superb read, though Orlando was a naughty boy on Amazon.

Would also recommend Robert Service's biographies of Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin.


Kershaw is very good. I must re-read him.

Heaven and Hell: The War Diary of a German Paratrooper by Martin Poppel is an interesting Auto-Biography.

As is this little oddity: Panzer Gunner: A Canadian in the German 7th Panzer Division 1944-45 by Bruno Freisen.


Beer and Beef has made us what we are - The Prince Regent

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What are we all reading? on 15:56 - Apr 25 with 1323 viewsLewes_r




On my Ipad
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]

Poll: Who do we want down with us and Burnley?

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What are we all reading? on 16:23 - Apr 25 with 1299 viewsTheBlob

What are we all reading? on 15:27 - Apr 25 by A40Bosh

Nah, I wont f++k them out really - I hope they have survived up in the loft for 10 years though. Many of the off shoot works like the world books got damaged out in the garage. Once the extension gets built (hopefully) then the box bedroom can become the "family library" where the EB set can then be displayed in all their glory - gathering dust for another 10 years with the 3 lazy students downstairs too lazy to search through them for reference info and instead rely on the rubbish written on the net to steal all their essay material.


They're also very good decorative pieces encyclopaedias(encyclopaediae?).
By the very nature of them they're already out of date by the time they're published.
But on the upside,they can be used for clobbering burglars,propping up wonky tables and to stand on at the newsagents to get at the top shelf porn collection if you happen to be a short arse.

Poll: So how was the season for you?

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What are we all reading? on 17:06 - Apr 25 with 1273 viewsJuzzie

What are we all reading? on 15:56 - Apr 25 by Lewes_r




On my Ipad
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]


I bet that's a blast?




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What are we all reading? on 17:10 - Apr 25 with 1265 viewsJamie

Recently read Band of Brothers by Stephen Ambrose (the book the series is based on), and Beyond Band of Brothers by Richard Winters.

Now reading Citizen Soldiers by Stephen Ambrose
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What are we all reading? on 17:12 - Apr 25 with 1265 viewsrobith

What are we all reading? on 15:21 - Apr 25 by 18StoneOfHoop

Sexton,is that even better than Ian Kershaw's masterly double volume classic tomes 'Hitler: Nemesis (1998) and Hubris (2000) ' ?

Great thread.Top Kindle debate.
Don't read much fiction but anything 20thC historical to do with fascist and communist dictatorships I seize upon with alacrity.
Alan Bullock on Hitler and Stalin still stands the test of time and William H Shirer's (the Johnny Yank journo on the spot at the time)The Rise and Fall Of The Third Reich is indespensable too.For an overview of the 1930's Piers Brendon 'The Dark Valley' is tip-top.
Also strongly recommend Russia-wise Simon Sebag Montefiore's 'Stalin:the Court Of The Red Tsar' and Orlando Figes 'A People's Tragedy '
Anthony Beevor's 'Stalingrad' and 'Berlin' should be required reading on every school's history reading list. Anything by Paul Preston and the several books he has written on Franco will be good.
To understand the brutality man can inflict on man everyone should read at least one book by Primo Levi.


Later addendum:
_________________________________________________________________
A few years back I had the displeasure of having two coppers interviewing me at length in my gaff.They took no notice of the QPR memorabilia strewn over every nook and corner but on viewing my substantial 20+ strong Der Fuerher Hitler bookshelf section the clueless numpties started to draw heavy dark inferences - i.e. Is the big fella an David Irving/Nick Griffin/Andres Brevik type nutter?
Mind you if the same two nosey bizzies had ever got into Mettallica's drum I think they'd immediately nick him on seeing the black walls and door leading into the ginger hedgepig dungeon.
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]


Paul Preston taught me at uni. A top bloke and his books on the Spanish Civil War are incredible
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What are we all reading? on 17:14 - Apr 25 with 1263 viewsscot1963

lot of wrongness on here - the delivery system is all intertwined with the love of reading the written word - a kindle can't smell like an old book or a new book, it isn't tactile, there is no joy in owning the words on a kindle - i want to be buried with my books
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]
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What are we all reading? on 17:16 - Apr 25 with 1261 viewsTheBlob

What are we all reading? on 17:14 - Apr 25 by scot1963

lot of wrongness on here - the delivery system is all intertwined with the love of reading the written word - a kindle can't smell like an old book or a new book, it isn't tactile, there is no joy in owning the words on a kindle - i want to be buried with my books
[Post edited 1 Jan 1970 1:00]


Shouldn't you take them back to the library?You owe a fortune in fines now Scotty

Poll: So how was the season for you?

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What are we all reading? on 17:17 - Apr 25 with 1257 viewsLewes_r

What are we all reading? on 17:06 - Apr 25 by Juzzie

I bet that's a blast?






blinding

Poll: Who do we want down with us and Burnley?

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