What books are you into? - Printable Version +- Spooks Forum (http://www.spooksforum.co.uk) +-- Forum: Thames House (/forum-13.html) +--- Forum: Break Room (/forum-14.html) +--- Thread: What books are you into? (/thread-257.html) |
RE: What books are you into? - Beatriz - 04-12-2009 10:58 AM Yesterday's night, I finished The hobbit!!! I loved it, is great stuff, Bilbo is so wonderful!! hahaha Now, I'm looking forward to watch the films!!! Now, I'm going to start reading "Of mice and men" by John Steinbeck, has anyone read it? I have to, because of my Advance English Exam. RE: What books are you into? - JHyde - 04-12-2009 11:13 AM That's a great book. Steinbeck is probably a good choice, because so much of his language is simple, but the message is conveyed through nuance rather than words of four syllables. You should read Beckett too, Beatriz, for the same reason. I still try and read Beckett in French (which he wrote many of his works in originally) to keep mine up. To keep it on topic: I love reading Beckett, both fiction and plays, and I'm very excited that I'm seeing Happy Days in a month or two in Sydney. They're expensive to stage, so it doesn't happen very often. RE: What books are you into? - Bam86 - 04-12-2009 11:56 AM (04-12-2009 10:58 AM)Beatriz Wrote: Yesterday's night, I finished The hobbit!!! I loved it, is great stuff, Bilbo is so wonderful!! hahaha I love Tolkien's books. I read The Hobbit and all 3 LOTR's books before watching any of the films. But they are that good I could easily read them again and again. I did 'Of Mice & Men' for my English GCSE. That's going back a few years now. But it too is a good read. My favorite authors at the moment at Jeff Abbott and Jill Mansell. RE: What books are you into? - bertowud - 04-12-2009 12:17 PM Steinbeck is great. Of Mice and Men is a great book. Nearly cried on that one. RE: What books are you into? - JHyde - 04-12-2009 01:14 PM I also like Cannery Row. I just finished reading Harry's Diary. Buy it from Spooks Shop now!! Seriously, it is very good, even though there's the odd continuity error. RE: What books are you into? - Margaret - 05-12-2009 12:55 PM I've just finished Harry's Diary too: can highly recommend it. Definately get hold of a copy if you haven't already. I have just finished Stella Rimington's latest in the Liz Carlyle series: Liz Carlyle 1. At Risk (2004) 2. Secret Asset (2005) 3. Illegal Action (2007) 4. Dead Line (2008) 5. Present Danger (2009) All of these are worth a look. At the moment I am reading Complicit by Nicci French. RE: What books are you into? - almh - 05-12-2009 01:03 PM Wow, she's written a load! I've only read At Risk, but I'll definitely look at getting the other books. RE: What books are you into? - JHyde - 05-12-2009 05:01 PM Margaret, you and I should have combined our shipping! It was more than the book itself to get it out here I'm starting a thread for Harry's Diary so we can obsess about it at length. I'm also very excited about the new Robert Lowell poetry collection I bought today. I'm saving it for my lazy Sunday. RE: What books are you into? - Margaret - 06-12-2009 05:13 AM JHyde: Thank you, I'll remember that. I always try to cheer myself up re the shipping and postage costs by saying: "Well, it's cheaper than getting there myself." RE: What books are you into? - JHyde - 06-12-2009 09:19 AM That is true, and it makes me feel a little better - thanks! Re-reading my English translation of Ovid's Love Poems (including Ars Amatoria) by Melville that's really good. Finding good translations of classical poetry is very difficult but this one is stellar and it's an Oxford World's Classic so it's easy to get your hands on. |