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The Goodreads Reading Challenge > Mirko's 50 for 2010

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message 1: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 20 comments (I'll never make it. Never.)

Stephen Fry, The Liar, finished 02/08/2010


message 2: by grebrim (last edited Feb 22, 2010 10:49PM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Amsterdam by Ian McEwan , Amsterdam by Ian McEwan, finished 01/30/2010


message 3: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 482 comments Mod
Was the Liar any good? I like Stephen Fry but have never read any of his books.


message 4: by grebrim (last edited Feb 08, 2010 05:48AM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments If you like Stephen Fry, you'll like this book, it's funny, witty, and sometimes a tad melancholic. The story takes a suprising turn after a while...


message 5: by grebrim (last edited Feb 11, 2010 11:45AM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments No. 3
Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad, finished February 11th


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Have you read The Stars Tennis Balls by Stephen Fry? I really enjoyed it. It was not at all what I expected from Fry. That and Making History (a time-travel scifi) are my favs.


message 7: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 20 comments No, this was my first book of Stephen Fry. As I liked it a lot, I'll definitely read them sooner or later, thanks for the recommendation.


message 8: by grebrim (last edited Feb 16, 2010 05:07AM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Jo, you probably know (EDIT)Coppola(end of EDIT) adapted the novella into a movie called 'Apocalypse Now', transferring the plot to Vietnam in 1969.

I honestly have to tell you that I liked the movie better. Still, while the beginning is slow, the book does get more and more interesting, and once the plot finally arrives at where the protagonist meets Kurtz, there are some passages so beautifully written I read them several times (only Proust, Shakespeare and Th. Mann make me do that, normally!) Four stars, just.


message 9: by grebrim (last edited Feb 15, 2010 02:07PM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Let me know what you thought of it after you've read it.

#4, Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen, finished 2/14/10


message 10: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 20 comments #5, The Visitor by Maeve Brennan Maeve Brennan, The Visitor, finished 2/15/10


message 11: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 4131 comments Mod
grebrim wrote: "Jo, you probably know Scorsese adapted the novella into a movie called 'Apocalypse Now', transferring the plot to Vietnam in 1969.

I honestly have to tell you that I liked the movie better. Still,..."


Heart of Darkness - good stuff, but very different from the film, best to think of them as completely different animals...
(BTW it was Francis Ford Coppola who directed 'Apocalypse Now' - I'm a bit of an anorak, I know)


message 12: by grebrim (last edited Feb 16, 2010 05:07AM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Sorry, of course you're right, I'm always confounding the two.


message 13: by grebrim (last edited Feb 22, 2010 01:05PM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments #6 The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
finished 02/22/2010 The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde


message 14: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 482 comments Mod
What did you think of The Picture of Dorian Gray? I read it recently


message 15: by grebrim (last edited Feb 24, 2010 10:35PM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments I loved it, like you obviously did too, Zoe. Classic books do not become easier to read normally, as customs and environments change and allusions are no longer understood, but in Dorian Gray, I found so many things that you can still relate to that I couln't stop reading it.


Lynne - The Book Squirrel (squirrelsend) | 3122 comments I thought Dorian Gray was great too, I have read so many different classics since I got my first Sony Reader which came with 100 classics and I have added many others from manybooks.net and they are spread over 2 Sony Readers now


message 17: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Hi Lynne,
I'm thinking about purchasing an an eReader as well. Have you had any problem adapting to the electronic paper? Would you say your eyes tire faster when you reading on it?


Lynne - The Book Squirrel (squirrelsend) | 3122 comments Hi Grebrim

I actually adapted quite well and because I got the light cover for each of them too I can read anywhere too. By changing the font size I also find my eyes don't get as tired as reading a book. I also find it easier to read one handed which is a bonus if like me you enjoy a good read in a cafe, enjoying a large latte!


message 19: by grebrim (last edited Feb 23, 2010 02:49AM) (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Excellent point Lynne, although I confess I might rather use that free hand to hold a cigar or a glass of whine...thank you!


message 20: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 20 comments Neige by Maxence Fermine
#7 Neige by Maxence Fermine, finished February 25th, 2010


Lynne - The Book Squirrel (squirrelsend) | 3122 comments grebrim wrote: "Excellent point Lynne, although I confess I might rather use that free hand to hold a cigar or a glass of whine...thank you!"

Think the glass of Rose wine for me too!


message 22: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 482 comments Mod
Lynne wrote: "Think the glass of Rose wine for me too!"

I'll second that :)


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