Books to come

  • Family Romance - John Lanchester
  • The Missing
  • The most important 25 books on science - a choice

Books we have read - quite a variety

  • 12 books that changed the world
  • 26a
  • A Fairly Honourable Defeat
  • A Little History of the World
  • A Perfectly Good Man
  • Air and Angels
  • Americanah
  • As you like it
  • Behind the Scenes at the Museum
  • Beloved
  • Brazzaville Beach
  • Brighton Rock - book and film
  • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof - book and film
  • Chavs - the demonisation of the working class
  • Cider with Rosie
  • Contemplating the Future
  • Desert Island choices
  • Disobedience
  • Dry White Season
  • Esprit d'Corps
  • Excellent Women
  • Fairy stories - Xmas readings
  • Flight Behaviour
  • Going Solo
  • Grapes of Wrath - book and film
  • Great Speeches of the 20th Century
  • Jamaica Inn with film
  • Left Hand of Darkness
  • Moon Tiger
  • Mrs Woolf and her servants
  • Mukiwa - a White boy in Africa
  • Nathaniel's Nutmeg
  • Never let me go
  • One day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich plus film
  • Our kind of traitor
  • Picnic at Hanging Rock - book and film
  • Raymond Chandler novels and The Big Sleep film
  • She landed by Moonlight
  • Shipwrecks
  • Slaughterhouse Five
  • Smut
  • Snowdrops
  • Stoner
  • The Bone People
  • The Diaries of Adam and Eve
  • The Finkler Question
  • The Good man Jesus and the Scoundrel Christ
  • The Guest Cat
  • The Handmaid's Tale
  • The Music Room
  • The Narrow Road to the Deep North
  • The Reader
  • The Sea Room
  • The Sense of an Ending
  • The Sisters Brothers
  • The man who never was - film
  • The unlikely pilgrimage of Harold Fry
  • Thousand Pieces of Gold plus film
  • Three cups of tea
  • Three men in a boat
  • Toast
  • Under Milkwood - Richard Burton recording
  • We need to talk about Kevin
  • When I lived in Modern Times
  • Wolf Hall
  • Women writers - see Xmas Menus

Saturday 26 December 2009

2010

Happy New Year Everyone
Here are our books for the next few months.
When I Lived in Modern Times by Linda Grant, Lawrence Durrell's Esprit d'Corps and Cat on a Hot Tim Roof - which we will also watch as a film and see what we think about the adaptation. So we are roaming from Israel to the Balkans to the USA - continuing our literary journey around the world, having been to the Spice Islands, 16th Century England, cyberspace and Brighton.

Friday 18 December 2009

2009

Chris started us off with Ursula Le Guin's science fiction The Left Hand of Darkness at her house where she also started the tradition of wine and cake.
What did we all think?

I would never have even known that le Guin wrote adult stories and indeed found it all rather weird.

Then we moved to Lynne's house after we had read 26A by Diane Evans an interesting book in that it felt like the author had written it either while studying creative writing or had just finished a course. It was too full of figures of speech which were rather laboured. It describes the gradual deterioration of one sister's state of mind. I certainly dont agree with the Independent's comment that it is -Very enjoyable...beautifully realized and wholly convincing...Evans writes with tremendous verve and dash' or that as others have desribed it as very witty? Sorry but suicide is NEVER witty.


Donna gave us Giles Milton's Nathaniel's Nutmeg which covered every thought and aspect of the trade in spices between the English. Dutch and the East Indies. These two great trading nations treated the islands as their own. There is much to discuss here. The author does seem to have felt that he couldn't leave anything out after what must have been years of painstaking research. Why Nathaniel's bravery was cnsidered to have changed the world is debatable though it obviously refers to acquisiton of Manhattan by the British but he is not mentioned until one is nearly finished reading the book.

At Marion's house we first watched Richard Attenbrough in Brighton Rock and then went on to evaluate the adaptation. We didn't find him all that convincing as Pinkie.

Our last book of 2009 was the Booker prize winning, Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantell. I did wonder if any of the judges actually read the whole book. Did it need to be so long? I have already packaged mine up as a gift for a friend. Rather like Nathaniel's Nutmeg one wonders why the book is titled Wolf Hall unless it is seen as a symbol of what was going on in England at the time and also perhaps to tempt you to buy her sequel.