branie2 wrote: » To Kill the President, a novel that is eerily similar to current events that are happening right now.
bobbyss wrote: Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantell. It's well written. It's a little on the slow side. So many people called Thomas it gets confusing. I would give it a good 7/10.
Ipso wrote: » Continuing my Bernard Cornwell splurge with Sharpe's Triumph. He can tell a great story and writes battle scenes very well.
Patser wrote: » Yep love Cornwell's books. Simple, gritty, researched. Can get a bit samey, especially Sharpe - somehow in the middle of huge campaign Sharpe ends up in a small scale, private vendetta, meets a gorgeous woman, shows up at key moment of historical battle. If you run out of Cornwell, Simon Scarrow us essentially the same thing, especially his Centurion series.
Deleted User wrote: » Somebody gave me a present of Pádraigín Ní Uallacháin's A Hidden Ulster: People, songs and traditions of Oriel (Four Courts Press, 2005). It explores the culture and traditions in Oriel (Louth, north Meath, south Down, south Armagh, east Monagan, east Cavan), where Irish was spoken natively well into the 20th century (the last fully native speaker of Monaghan Irish only died in the 1950s). What a mind opener. But then there the photographs, none of which are online yet so I photographed two of them. The first is of Brian Ó Baoighill, in Omeath in 1913, aged 96. That means he was born in 1817! He lived through O'Connell & Catholic Emancipation, An Gorta Mór 1845-51, Michael Davitt & the Land League, Parnell & Home Rule, the Fenians, the 1867 rebellion, the 1879 Famine, the shift of his community from being a majority Irish speaking community to a majority English speaking, the founding of Conradh and the GAA, the end of slavery in America, the foundation of Italy and Germany as nation states and so very much else. The power of a photograph to bring the past so close to us, something which a portrait painting can't capture. [IMG]http://oi64.tinypic.com/2q01ug5.jpg[/IM] And then there's this very old Gaelic tradition, which most of us would associate with south-west Munster:[/img][img]http://oi65.tinypic.com/xkzq12.jpg[/mg] Never have I been fascinated by the pictures of a book as much as this.[/img]
Fingers Mcginty wrote: » A little life. ...it's a bit of a snooze fest so far. 10 percent done. Can't understand all the good reviews. Hopefully it's only early days and gets better. I think I've still got the holiday blues after "the stand" which was a great read.
Malari wrote: » I'm flying through Assassin's Apprentice by Robin Hobb. Can't believe I've never read it before! At least I have a whole series to look forward to. But next up is All Hell Let Loose by Max Hastings. Borrowed that from my dad after watching Dunkirk.
Ms Doubtfire1 wrote: » I LOVE those books. you've got 9 to go lol...:-)
Malari wrote: » Ms Doubtfire1 wrote: » I LOVE those books. you've got 9 to go lol...:-) I'll have to ration them out :pac:
Fingers Mcginty wrote: » A little life. ...it's a bit of a snooze fest so far. 10 percent done. Can't understand all the good reviews. Hopefully it's only early days and gets better.