I Read Therefore I Am discussion
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what are you reading at the moment?
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(last edited Aug 06, 2013 12:34AM)
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Aug 06, 2013 12:34AM
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Oooh I love that book - it's so gothic

I'm currently reading Dirt Music it's an Australian novel harsh and macho and yet quite poetic.
I'm also about half way through Where Angels Fear to Tread and 6 stories into Meet Me in the Moon Room a collection of really bizarre short stories. Oh and I hope to start Mason and Dixon soon
I'm also about half way through Where Angels Fear to Tread and 6 stories into Meet Me in the Moon Room a collection of really bizarre short stories. Oh and I hope to start Mason and Dixon soon

Has anyone read it? Shall I give up or will it improve? Are others in the series better?
Fraid my knowledge of detective novels ends in the 1950s!

Hilary wrote: "I'm reading "May we be forgiven" and not enjoying it one little bit to be honest. If I wasn't so convinced that it has to get better it might be one of the very few books I abandon."
That's by A M Homes isn't it? I keep looking at her books and seeing all the good reviews and something always puts me off.
I don't like abandoning books either- but think of all those really good books out there you could be reading instead :0)
That's by A M Homes isn't it? I keep looking at her books and seeing all the good reviews and something always puts me off.
I don't like abandoning books either- but think of all those really good books out there you could be reading instead :0)
Gemma wrote: "I've just started The Virgin Suicides."
I keep meaning to try that -must add it to my to read list - let me know how you get on with it.
I keep meaning to try that -must add it to my to read list - let me know how you get on with it.
I'm almost finished The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes which, it goes without saying, it absolutely awesome. I'm also reading Rebecca West's The Fountain Overflows which I'm finding a bit difficult to get into but I'm going to persevere for a bit longer to see if it picks up.
I liked the Fountain Overflows - but was not so keen on the sequels - which then put me off the Fountain - which is daft of me - must read it again sometime

@ Hilary - I hope she gets better soon then :0).
Are you on a Tablet (as it were)? When I'm on my iPad I can't get the excerpt from the comment I'm replying to - I can only get it when I'm on a computer and there's a little reply button at the bottom of each comment.
Are you on a Tablet (as it were)? When I'm on my iPad I can't get the excerpt from the comment I'm replying to - I can only get it when I'm on a computer and there's a little reply button at the bottom of each comment.

But, I have never not finished a book in my life, and I am not about to allow this one to become the first.

Ellie wrote: "As well as reading The Unconsoled, I'm also trying to finish off Manuscript Found in Accra by Paulo Coelho. It's a struggle, because it is barely going to scrape a single star. It's absolute tosh...."
You're made of sterner stuff than me Ellie - if a book really doesn't agree with me that's it! I have a nasty feeling that there's a Coelho book in the 1001 list - lets hope it's a better one :0)
You're made of sterner stuff than me Ellie - if a book really doesn't agree with me that's it! I have a nasty feeling that there's a Coelho book in the 1001 list - lets hope it's a better one :0)
Hilary wrote: "I haven't started any of this months reads yet so I'll have to get my skates on. I'm currently reading Nada the Lily by H Rider Haggard. This year I decided to read again the books I had loved in..."
I remember really enjoying Kings Solomon's Mines and She when I was younger - Nada the Lily sounds like it might be rather different from those two - less stiff upper lip and daring-do.
I remember really enjoying Kings Solomon's Mines and She when I was younger - Nada the Lily sounds like it might be rather different from those two - less stiff upper lip and daring-do.

Now getting on with The Unconsoled, Bitter Like Orange Peel and Nineteen Eighty-Four
3 is the optimum number of books to have on the go at the same time, I think. I frequently try to read more but some of them get left by the wayside!

- a group read
- a NetGalley read
- a library read
which is how I'll try to balance it from now on. "Library" in this instance will need to be either the local public library or my own pile of books.
Quite how I'm going to fit in the Cheltenham Festivals reads, I haven't worked out yet....

Currently I have a deadline for
The Unconsoled
Death in Venice
Pickwick Papers
And our poetry group monthly selection which is I think Carol Ann Duffy
Also the selection for September for my book group which The Genesis Project
I'm nearly finished Nada the Lily and my non fiction which is an autobiography called Mr Nice is half read.
But what I really WANT to read next is The Naked Civil Servant which I found in a second hand book shop this week. It's very thin though so I might just slip it in somewhere!!
I've also got to organise my book shelves as I have spent about an hour trying to find a book I know I have somewhere, just not sure where.
Apologies for this very incoherent rambling post - back to reading OOPS no, looks like dog walking next before the rain starts.
@ Hilary - I suffer from book location problems too - all my bookcases are over flowing and have books piled on top and in front of them. I'm also not entirely sure what I've got on Kindle - but at least I can search on that!
I'm still in the early stages of The Unconsoled and also reading Sea of Poppies by Amitav Ghosh on my breaks at work (it's easier to fit in my handbag)
I really enjoyed Sea of Poppies - a really colourful, exciting adventure story and I learnt an awful lot about the opium trade as well!!

Ellie wrote: "@Lee NetGalley.com "NetGalley is a service to promote and publicize forthcoming titles to readers of influence. If you are a reviewer, blogger, journalist, librarian, bookseller, educator, or in th..."
Thanks for that, Ellie.Just had a peek at the site - it looks really good - don't think I could commit to reviewing new books regularly at the moment though - something to keep in mind for the future.
Thanks for that, Ellie.Just had a peek at the site - it looks really good - don't think I could commit to reviewing new books regularly at the moment though - something to keep in mind for the future.
Lee wrote: "I really enjoyed Sea of Poppies - a really colourful, exciting adventure story and I learnt an awful lot about the opium trade as well!!"
I'm enjoying it so far - the stuff about opium is quite interesting as I've been reading Sherlock Holmes and The Mystery of Edwin Drood lately and obviously opium dens feature in those stories so it's nice to see the other side of it, where the stuff actually comes from.
I'm enjoying it so far - the stuff about opium is quite interesting as I've been reading Sherlock Holmes and The Mystery of Edwin Drood lately and obviously opium dens feature in those stories so it's nice to see the other side of it, where the stuff actually comes from.

Laurel - I thought Sea of Poppies was a great book.
Oooh - I love the Eyre Affair.
I bet I'd probably get through more books,more quickly if I stuck to reading one at a time - I just don't think I can manage it though
I bet I'd probably get through more books,more quickly if I stuck to reading one at a time - I just don't think I can manage it though


It's The King of Torts (I'd left it in the garden when I posted earlier and couldn't remember the title!) I'm about half-way through now & finding it very readable - though I think I'm ready for a twist or new plot development about now.


That's one of my favourites, Ellie -really moving


I love WWI (that sounds really bad but you know what I mean!) - Birdsong is the best novel I've read about it - though I really like Strange Meeting by Penelope Lively too.


Hilary - thanks for the suggestion of other Grisham's. The first half of this one was good enough to make me want to give him a second try.

I've only read one Paolo Coelho book and that was The Alchemist and that was life changing book but I couldn't really explain why. It was one of those books that had me gripped days after I had finished it, I couldn't get it out of my head. However I have heard loads of people saying his other stuff isn't very good... I'm scared to try another of his just in case it ruins The Alchemist for me lol



Harold Fry is in my to-read pile too - I noticed the other day that she has another book out Perfect which sounds interesting ( I had no idea she was a local, Ellie)
Theres a Paul Coelho on the 1001 list - Veronika Decides to Die - hopefully it's an Alchemist and not an Aleph :0)
Theres a Paul Coelho on the 1001 list - Veronika Decides to Die - hopefully it's an Alchemist and not an Aleph :0)

@Joy: The Ocean at the End of the Lane is also on my to-read list (it's a long list!), sounds like it's a nice easy read so I may give that a go very soon.
I don't usually get on too well with Neil Gaiman - but I've heard so many good things about the Ocean at the End of the Lane that I think I'm going to have to give it a try.
I really like Gaiman - I'm just waiting for the paperback version cos am trying to keep the old spending down.
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