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tGC Book Club 3 - Choices Poll

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  • 20-02-2010 7:57pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭


    So here are the choices for the next book in tGC book Club.

    A bit of blurb about each one here too. I'll leave the poll open til Tuesday.

    Remember, no spoilers if your going to discuss pros and cons etc.

    Cheers

    MM

    What should the next book be? 9 votes

    Last Night in Twisted River - John Irving
    0%
    Grumpy Old Rock Star: and Other Wondrous Stories by Rick wakeman
    11%
    trout 1 vote
    Lullaby by Chuck Pahlaniuk
    33%
    That_GuyOldGoatSnowie 3 votes
    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    44%
    Nervous WreckDr GalenOtis DriftwoodLD 50 4 votes
    Atonement by Ian McEwan
    11%
    Unknown 1 vote


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    Last Night in Twisted River - John Irving
    In 1954, in the cookhouse of a logging and sawmill settlement in northern New Hampshire, an anxious twelve-year-old boy mistakes the local constable's girlfriend for a bear. Both the twelve-year-old and his father become fugitives, forced to run from Coos County - to Boston, to southern Vermont, to Toronto - pursued by the implacable constable. Their lone protector is a fiercely libertarian logger, once a river driver, who befriends them.

    In a story spanning five decades, Last Night in Twisted River - John Irving's twelfth novel - depicts the recent half-century in the United States as 'a living replica of Coos County, where lethal hatreds were generally permitted to run their course'. From the novel's taut opening sentence - 'The young Canadian, who could not have been more than fifteen, had hesitated too long' - to its elegiac final chapter, Last Night in Twisted River is written with the historical authenticity and emotional authority of The Cider House Rules and A Prayer for Owen Meany. It is also as violent and disturbing a story as John Irving's breakthrough bestseller, The World According to Garp. What further distinguishes Last Night in Twisted River is the author's unmistakable voice - the inimitable voice of an accomplished storyteller. Near the end of this moving novel, John Irving writes: 'We don't always have a choice how we get to know one another. Sometimes, people fall into our lives cleanly - as if out of the sky, or as if there were a direct flight from Heaven to Earth - the same sudden way we lose people, who once seemed they would always be part of our lives'.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    Grumpy Old Rock Star: and Other Wondrous Stories by Rick wakeman
    Around about August 1948, Mr and Mrs Cyril Wakeman had an early night and some time later, at Perivale in Middlesex, Mrs Wakeman produced a bonny baby son. They named him Richard, but he quickly became known as Rick. Rick was a likeable little fellow who had a talent for the piano and for making trouble. Music became Rick's life - he joined a popular music group called Yes and became a legend. Much later he became a Grumpy Old Man who appears on Countdown, hosts a hugely popular radio show on Planet Rock and performs a one-man show telling stories about his rather extraordinary life.Which is where this book you are holding comes in. Mr Wakeman is simply one of the great storytellers of our age - let's face it, he has some fabulous material. It seemed a shame that some of the funniest yarns should not be more widely known. So he accepted some cash and here we are. Curl up by the fire with a Grumpy Old Rock Star and your nearest and dearest. We defy you not to want to read it aloud and laugh.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    Lullaby by Chuck Pahlaniuk
    Carl Streator is a reporter investigating Sudden Infant Death Syndrome for a soft-news feature. After responding to several calls with paramedics, he notices that all the dead children were read the same poem from the same library book the night before they died. It's a 'culling song' - an ancient African spell for euthanizing sick or old people. Researching it, he meets a woman who killed her own child with it accidentally. He himself accidentally killed his own wife and child with the same poem twenty years earlier. Together, the man and the woman must find and destroy all copies of this book, and try not to kill every rude sonofabitch that gets in their way. Lullaby is a comedy/drama/tragedy. In that order. It may also be Chuck Palahniuk's best book yet.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    It’s an ordinary Thursday lunchtime for Arthur Dent until his house gets demolished. The Earth follows shortly afterwards to make way for a new hyperspace bypass and his best friend has just announced that he’s an alien. At this moment, they’re hurtling through space with nothing but their towels and an innocuous-looking book inscribed with the big, friendly words: DON’T PANIC.

    The weekend has only just begun…

    Volume one in the trilogy of five


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    Atonement by Ian McEwan

    Atonement is Ian McEwan's ninth novel and his first since the Booker Prize-winning Amsterdam in 1998. But whereas Amsterdam was a slim, sleek piece, Atonement is a more sturdy, ambitious work, allowing McEwan more room to play, think and experiment.

    We meet 13-year-old Briony Tallis in the summer of 1935, as she attempts to stage a production of her new drama The Trials of Arabella to welcome home her elder, idolised brother Leon. But she soon discovers that her cousins, the glamorous Lola and the twin boys Jackson and Pierrot, aren't up to the task, and directorial ambitions are abandoned as more interesting preoccupations come onto the scene. The charlady's son Robbie Turner appears to be forcing Briony's sister Cecilia to strip in the Fountain and sends her obscene letters; Leon has brought home a dim chocolate magnate keen for a war to promote his new "Army Amo" bar; and upstairs Briony's migraine-stricken mother Emily keeps tabs on the house from her bed. Soon, secrets emerge that change the lives of everyone present...

    The interwar upper-middle-class setting of the book's long, masterfully sustained opening section might recall Virginia Woolf or Henry Green, but as we move forward--eventually to the turn of the 21st century--the novel's central concerns emerge, and McEwan's voice becomes clear, even personal. For at heart, Atonement is about the pleasures, pains and dangers of writing, and perhaps even more, about the challenge of controlling what readers make of your writing. McEwan shouldn't have any doubts about readers of Atonement: this is a thoughtful, provocative and at times moving book that will have readers applauding


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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,373 ✭✭✭Dr Galen


    The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    i'm going to close this poll tomorrow just to be sure everyone gets a chance to vote


  • Registered Users Posts: 51,342 ✭✭✭✭That_Guy


    Lullaby by Chuck Pahlaniuk
    Looks like Lullaby.


This discussion has been closed.
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