J
jhakka
Guest
Across the Face of the World by Russel Kirkpatrick.
i've just finished reading 'memoirs of a geisha' [also due to the fact i wanted 2 finish it b4 the movie]SharkBait said:right in the middle of 'memoirs of a geisha'...wanted to finish it b4 the movie...its slow in the beginning but picks up gradually...and i cant say its completely mind-blowing, but i also find myself wantin to pick it up whenever im not doin anything majorly important....
just wonderin if anyone's read 'million little pieces'??? i heard its really really good...just wonderin wots if abt, and whether its worth it to buy...
gonna start 'davinci code' afta 'memoirs...' coz i havnt read da vinci code yet. i know, SHOCKING. lol
thanks for that but i think i will decide for myself what is rubbish and what is a good read. its taken me this long to read it because i didnt want to read it with all the hype going on about it.Diddimz said:Put down the Di Vinci Code, biggest piece of rubbish you will read
Agreed. A substandard piece of trashy popular-fiction. I've no idea how it has managed to garner such a large following.Diddimz said:Put down the Di Vinci Code, biggest piece of rubbish you will read
I found Narnia magical when I was young, but I haven't read them for ages so, I've forgotten the plot - but you do have to realise that CS Lewis was writing, how many decades ago? When the world wasn't as commercialised - and JK Rowling has special editors to ensure her work is catchy and attractive to certain age groups, i.e. all of them?nwatts said:I'm reading a few at the moment -
- Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson, very good. Funny, and informative. It's a great beginners guide to linguistics and the English language, aided by the usual anecdotal flair of Bryson. Great Christmas present.
- Prince Caspian by C.S. Lewis, as part four of the Narnia series. Thusfar I'm not a fan of this series at all, i find it lacking imagination, lacking in proper description and in control over language - in comparing children's literature, I rate Potter higher than Narnia. However, this is so far the best of the lot, and I hope they pick up.
- The First Casualty by Ben Elton is the last of the bundle I'm reading at the moment. He's a great author, and this is something of a turn in style, as it's not the funny and frenetic novel I know from Elton. It is, however, very good and mature in its writing - a crime novel set in WWI, which is used as a fairly philosophical portrait for questions on morality and such. Can't wait to finish this one.
I do realise Lewis wrote in a very different time, as I do when reading a lot of older work, but it doesn't save it from ultimate mediocrity. From a series of books that people boast as "imaginative masterpieces" I expected to much more.cherryblossom said:I found Narnia magical when I was young, but I haven't read them for ages so, I've forgotten the plot - but you do have to realise that CS Lewis was writing, how many decades ago? When the world wasn't as commercialised - and JK Rowling has special editors to ensure her work is catchy and attractive to certain age groups, i.e. all of them?
Oh, Middlesex is great. Probably one of my favourite books of all time! Eugenides is such a great writer. See The Virgin Suicides - it's a lot shorter, and very good.cherryblossom said:I was reading Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides but it's so long.
!! CaR`JiE !! said:I just finished reading "The Da Vinci Code" by Dan Brown.
Gonna watch the movie of it out next May 19th 2006