Aussie Readers discussion
Book Related Banter
>
Books and strange coincidences!
I have just remembered there were Virginia's in both books too though the second was very minor.


I have just moved to that very same spot, smack bang on top of it.



One Dark Soul, chapter one (definitely not the prologue with the slobbering dog - although that's just on the other side of the bay).

Yes, I agree!
Oh I did enjoy One Dark Soul! Third in your series. I think I can visualise the area on top of the cliff :)


Now I'm reading Find Your Light which is non-fiction (spiritual) written by a woman who worked as a medical intuitive - ie using her 'gifts' to sense illness in patients.
When fantasy and reality collide!
Anna Faversham wrote: "Thank you, Brenda. Chalk cliffs, bright white when the full moon shines on them, though I didn't know that until I moved on top of them. Grass is still there. No artists, as in ODS, but plenty of p..."
They certainly do. It sounds fabulous - a great place to live :)
They certainly do. It sounds fabulous - a great place to live :)



I remember having tea as a small child with my mother at a Lyons Corner House somewhere in London many years ago. I remember sitting near a potted palm and a piano was being played. Thanks for the memory, Marianne.

I just finished Crossings this morning! And so strange - another character in a book I was reading at the same time ((view spoiler) ) ALSO had their eyes gouged out! Eww!!

Now reading So You Had to Build a Time Machine where a character called Brick is a baker of muffins


Is that an example of the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon, or "frequency illusion", I wonder? I get that a lot, both when reading and in "real life".

I had to google that lol but WOW that's fascinating! Many years ago I encountered the word 'august' as an adjective for the first time (which I consequently had to look up) and now I notice every single time I encounter it and think, 'why did it take me so long to encounter this word when it's everywhere now?'

“I’ve always loved reading and stuff. Books, poems. So maybe a writer. I always thought that would be the thing. To write books. Make up stories.”
I try to couch it with an ambivalent shrug, like it’s a fleeting thought, like it’s not the single thing I’ve had my heart set on since I could first read.
To my surprise, Jasper nods his approval.
”Yeah. I reckon that’s you for sure, Charlie.”
“You think?”
“No doubt. Reckon you’d be great. Move to some big city with a typewriter. Meetin people, tellin their stories. Maybe you could write my story one day. Then we’ll make a film out of it, for certains. Imagine that.”
Does this mean Craig Silvey has some sort of predictive power? How could he possibly know Jasper's story would end up as a movie??

Haha my guess would be less 'predictive power' and more wishful thinking lol

Today, while reading A Nearly Normal Family, there's reference to a trivial pursuit question asking which director had been married to Sharon Tate, one of the Manson family's victims.

That sure is weird Kylie. But I don't know how you do it. If I do (rarely) read more than one at a time, they have to be completely different genres - or I WILL mix them up!! lol


Wow! That sounds like a neat skill to have!

It is a strange but handy skill to have, especially if the person opposite you doesn't realise you can read what is in front of them faster than they can. Maybe it is a left hander thing, using the other side of my brain or something.

I'm also currently reading Just Like You and have just come across a mention of a Dutch church in London.

also The Never Game, young woman with red bicycle



That's a random one, isn't it!

That's bizarre! Now I am craving licorice ☺

They also both reflected on how, after sex, the male's DNA remains inside the female - possibly forever.
Both icky things that I really didn't need to read twice lol

Lol. I quite liked The Breeding Season and the way is shared those odd perspectives that bio scientists can have. A little of it did go a long way though, I might skip Devotion.
We know there have been a lot of books with titles of 'wife', 'daughter', and so on. I've just noticed in my list of books to read in the next few months, I have a lot of "last" titles
The Last Truehart
Breathe Your Last
The Last Reunion
The Last Green Valley
The Last Thing to Burn
Another 'thing' perhaps....
The Last Truehart
Breathe Your Last
The Last Reunion
The Last Green Valley
The Last Thing to Burn
Another 'thing' perhaps....

[book:The L..."
Long as it’s not the last book, Brenda.

A component found in licorice root can cause your potassium level to plummet when eaten in high levels and can cause palpitations, high blood pressure and heart failure. Older people should be specially careful with sticking to just a few pieces.
My DH and I love Darrell Lea's dark chocolate coated licorice and have to ration ourselves to make a bag last a week.
Books mentioned in this topic
Air (other topics)Fairest (other topics)
The Island of Small Misfortunes (other topics)
The World After Alice (other topics)
The Queens of Crime (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Rosanne Limoncelli (other topics)Marie Benedict (other topics)
Gillian McAllister (other topics)
John Green (other topics)
Anthony Doerr (other topics)
More...
I read and finished Finding Eadie yesterday and in part it was about book publishers in both the US and UK. The main character's best friend was Penny.
I finished this morning Her Last Words (directly following the above) which was about book publishers in AU and the main character's best friend was Penny...
Eerie!