Xofpod wrote: » Due to a mixture of the football and a couple of books I found it hard to get into, I read very little for the past month. Finally finished Box 9 by Jack O'Connell. Not really worth the effort to be honest. Similarly struggling with Frog Music by Emma Donoghue
Joe_ Public wrote: » Very rare I quit on a book, no matter how bad, but I gave up on Frog Music after 30 pages. Maybe Room is better, I might try that sometime, but I thought the writing in Frog Music was very ordinary.
Xofpod wrote: » Room is an outstanding read and on the strength of what I know she can do, I'm going to stick with the frogs. It's just one of those books that doesn't grab you.....
Callan57 wrote: » I loved both Room and Frog Music ... Cé la vi
Joe_ Public wrote: » Room is definitely on my list.....but such a big house and so many Rooms! Could be a while before I get to it. I'm still ploughing my way through A Little Life and finding it a grind. Conversely, I picked up The Green Road last week and read it in a day. It was okay but not earth shattering.
Callan57 wrote: » Agree with you completly on The Green Road & A Little Life
makeandcreate wrote: » Picked up in a charity shop and devoured in 2 days The Herbalist by Niamh Boyce, perhaps it is because I am not Irish by birth that I found it trite in parts but a great page turner with some wonderful characters and The Traveller by John Twelve Hawks - lauded as the new Da Vinci Code (one book I could never manage to read, I think the too much accolade put me off) - it reminded me of Kill Bill meets Shibumi with a spattering of the Bourne Identity - a great reason to leave the dishes in the sink and ignore the phone. Finished in a late night and up til dinner reading session. The Ending, well I guess there must be several follow ups by now but it wasn't a high point. And if you ever get the urge to read Mike Tysons autobiography - go do something less boring instead. Not even for die hard fans. Cannot believe I kept reading to the end, it became less a book and more a challenge to see it through.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » Barracuda by Christos Tsiolkas. It's about a young boy in Australia who is a swimmer and tipped to be a future Olympian. He messes up at his first big competition though and things unravel for him from there. It's alright but it jumps around an awful lot and changes perspective. Like the bits where he's still a kid are written in third person but the bits where it jumps to him as a man are in first person, and then they jump around to random points in time too. It's a bit hard to get it straight in your head how each bit relates to the rest of it but it's alright.
Gremlinertia wrote: » Currently halfway through The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingslover Very dense to read but an interesting view of pre and post independence Congo.
Birneybau wrote: » I thought it was pretty good, stick with it.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » It just got a bit weird in prison :eek:
Birneybau wrote: » Oh yeah, there's a weird thing with tissue...
makeandcreate wrote: » . And if you ever get the urge to read Mike Tysons autobiography - go do something less boring instead. Not even for die hard fans. Cannot believe I kept reading to the end, it became less a book and more a challenge to see it through.
Gonzovision wrote: » Finished 'The Romanovs' by Sebastien Sebag Montefiore, a great read, my first foray into Russian history. I picked up 'Stalin: The Court of the Court of the Red Tsar' by the same author, thoroughly enjoying it at the moment also.
Swiper the fox wrote: » I'm not exactly flying through 'all the light we cannot see', have heard great reports from here and elsewhere, if I'm not loving it after 100 pages am I in trouble?