What you reading at the moment?

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arranandy

Legendary Member
Location
Scotland
I'm reading 'Nemesis - The Battle for Japan 1944-45' by Max Hastings. Really great read. Military history, particularly WW2, is quite an interest of mine.
 

BigonaBianchi

Yes I can, Yes I am, Yes I did...Repeat.
A Breifer history of time..steven hawkins
 
Re-reading Alistair Cooke's America and getting into Obama's The Audacity of Hope.

Arranandy - I have Hoyt's The Invasion Before Normandy (about the Slapton Sands rehearsal / disaster) in my 'coming up soon' reading pile.
 

Rhythm Thief

Legendary Member
Location
Ross on Wye
beanzontoast said:
Arranandy - I have Hoyt's The Invasion Before Normandy (about the Slapton Sands rehearsal / disaster) in my 'coming up soon' reading pile.

Leslie Thomas' "The Magic Army" is pretty good on that subject too. It's a novel rather than a historical study, but it's well researched and very readable.
 

longers

Legendary Member
papercorn2000 said:
Currently reading Moby Dick.


I've just finished "The cruel heart of the sea" by Nathaniel Philbrick. It's the story of the whaling expedition that inspired Herman.

A hell of a story.
 

Melvil

Guest
arranandy said:
I'm reading 'Nemesis - The Battle for Japan 1944-45' by Max Hastings. Really great read. Military history, particularly WW2, is quite an interest of mine.

Read that a month or so back. His description of MacArthur was particularly good. Also good was the exposition on the firebombing raids on Tokyo which were quite a lot worse than the following atomic bombs. A fascinating and sobering read.

At the mo I've just read Paul McCauley's 'The Quiet War' as I remember FM talking about it on a thread very much like this and re-reading some Dickens, too.
 

goo_mason

Champion barbed-wire hurdler
Location
Leith, Edinburgh
Potty, Fartwell & Knob (as recommended on the silly names thread).

Need cheering up and it has me almost wetting myself :biggrin:

I'll get back to serious stuff in a week or so.....
 

papercorn2000

Senior Member
Greedo said:
In what way?

I think he's pretty good. Not life changing reading by any stretch but thought he was a not bad story teller in the mode of Rankin, Grisham etc...

I can't really put my finger on it...
The story was fine. I think that it was the characters were a bit 2 dimensional. He didn't flesh them out like Rankin does...My next door neighbour (she's from Aberdeen) loved it.

Just read http://www.amazon.co.uk/Guns-Germs-...r_1_11?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1232440834&sr=8-11 on recommendation of NickM - of this parish.
 

papercorn2000

Senior Member
I've always meant to have a shot at Banks' SF stuff. Some of his "straight" novels were a bit mental so the sci-fi stuff has to be somewhat leftfield!
 
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