Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
Currently on book 4 of the Rama quadrilogy, Rama Revealed.
Just finished the 6th Shardlake book called Lamentation, out of 7 in total.
I was visiting my beautiful home city of Norwich a couple of years ago, and we visited Ketts heights, where there are some chapel ruins, and apparently this is where Robert Kett and his followers made plan for the rebellion.
Whilst there I got chatting to a volunteer gardener, who put me onto this series.
The one I was interested in was the final one in the series, and is called Tombland, and is set in Norwich and I believe is about Kett's rebellion.
However there were 6 other books first, and they are all beefy tomes, I think all are over 600 pages, and some may breach 700.
View attachment 795562
I've enjoyed them all, much more than I thought I would do, as I don't tend to read historical based fiction.
They did make a TV series out of Dissolution, which I thought was rather good, but it seems it was not a big success and has not been recommissioned.
I'm not sure if Tombland was meant to be the final book in the series, but sadly C.J Sansom died last year I think it was so there will be no more penned by him at any rate.
The 'Sharpe' books are written by Bernard Cornwell and the TV films loosely based on them, he also went on to write 'The Last Kingdom' amongst many other books, some 'historical and some about the other love of his life ............sailing.Having watched ’Sharpes Company’ last night, & he was one of the actors in it
I was reminded of Terry Pratchett stating that he always envisaged a younger Pete Postlethwaite as Sam Vines
Now l’ve seen the above TV ‘film’ for the first time in years, l can imagine Sean Bean in that role
Just finished the 6th Shardlake book called Lamentation, out of 7 in total.
I was visiting my beautiful home city of Norwich a couple of years ago, and we visited Ketts heights, where there are some chapel ruins, and apparently this is where Robert Kett and his followers made plan for the rebellion.
Whilst there I got chatting to a volunteer gardener, who put me onto this series.
The one I was interested in was the final one in the series, and is called Tombland, and is set in Norwich and I believe is about Kett's rebellion.
However there were 6 other books first, and they are all beefy tomes, I think all are over 600 pages, and some may breach 700.
View attachment 795562
I've enjoyed them all, much more than I thought I would do, as I don't tend to read historical based fiction.
They did make a TV series out of Dissolution, which I thought was rather good, but it seems it was not a big success and has not been recommissioned.
I'm not sure if Tombland was meant to be the final book in the series, but sadly C.J Sansom died last year I think it was so there will be no more penned by him at any rate.
Having watched ’Sharpes Company’ last night, & he was one of the actors in it
I was reminded of Terry Pratchett stating that he always envisaged a younger Pete Postlethwaite as Sam Vines
Now l’ve seen the above TV ‘film’ for the first time in years, l can imagine Sean Bean in that role
The TV versions of Sharpe are probably the biggest example of adaptations being disappointing when you've read the books. I watched them back in the 90s before reading any of the books and enjoyed them but whenever I watch them now the battle scenes are just far too small. They need remaking with the sort of budget that Netflix etc. could bring. Reading the books is always quite amusing as you can see the ones written after Bean was given the role with the explanation of his new found Yorkshire background having originally been very much a Londoner.
I'm struggling to find stuff at the moment as I'm either up-to-date with my favourite authors or they have stopped writing. The series I've read my way through are:
Andy McNab's Nick Stone (and Tom Buckingham) books with no more apparently being made (and the last few not being great)
All the Reacher novels (that have gone downhill rapidly since Lee Child's brother started doing the writing)
Peter James's Roy Grace books (currently just started reading one of his others)
All the Michael Connelly stuff
All the Strike novels
All Richard Osman's stuff (Thursday Murder Club and the other one he did lately)
Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe and Starbuck books (I've tried some of the other stuff but couldn't get on with it).
I'm struggling to find replacements and I'm generally re-reading things so any suggestions are welcome. There's so much out there on Kindle or iBooks but with it being so easy these days to get stuff published I find myself wading through a load of terrible books with excellent ratings trying to find something new I get get into. Any suggestions based on the above welcome (I'm not a fan of sci-fi or fantasy stuff).
I'm struggling to find stuff at the moment as I'm either up-to-date with my favourite authors or they have stopped writing. The series I've read my way through are:
Andy McNab's Nick Stone (and Tom Buckingham) books with no more apparently being made (and the last few not being great)
All the Reacher novels (that have gone downhill rapidly since Lee Child's brother started doing the writing)
Peter James's Roy Grace books (currently just started reading one of his others)
All the Michael Connelly stuff
All the Strike novels
All Richard Osman's stuff (Thursday Murder Club and the other one he did lately)
Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe and Starbuck books (I've tried some of the other stuff but couldn't get on with it).
I'm struggling to find replacements and I'm generally re-reading things so any suggestions are welcome. There's so much out there on Kindle or iBooks but with it being so easy these days to get stuff published I find myself wading through a load of terrible books with excellent ratings trying to find something new I get get into. Any suggestions based on the above welcome (I'm not a fan of sci-fi or fantasy stuff).
Have you tried the Gabriel Wolfe series from Andy Maslen? A bit “reacher-like” but an English hero