chases0102 wrote: » Can anyone recommend something that is similar to Liz Nugent's style of fiction? Last couple of fiction books I read - Woman in the Window, and Anatomy of a Scandal - were terrible.
appledrop wrote: » So I'm now half way through Milkman. I hate it. In her book she has a character name Somebody Mc Somebody. I've renamed this book Loopy Mc Loopy. How the hell did this winner Manbooker prize? I have read plenty of longlisted ones + liked a good few of them. I will finish it though!
Carry wrote: » Tana French: The Witch Elm Jo Spain: Dirty Little Secrets
heldel00 wrote: » Really didn't enjoy Dirty Little Secrets. Thought I'd love it but was disappointed. I'm re-reading The Slap.
Carry wrote: » I love all of Jo Spain's novels, though Dirty Little Secrets was a little bit outside of her usual themes, but different tastes and such. It was a bit in the style of Liz Nugent, though. You might try The Confession by Jo Spain. I had to look up The Slap. Sounds interesting but reminded me of the truly iconic Japanese film Rashomon - the same incident told by different people and how the personal viewpoint changes the incident as such. Might order it at the library.
Lisha wrote: » The Slap is a fantastic book. I wasn’t as mad about the sanitized American version. But it was still a good watch. But the book, I’ve no words to properly describe how much it gripped me.
heldel00 wrote: » I must be becoming very reserved in my old age but on my second reading of The Slap i find it very "rough" and racist. Good story but I've read better (written).
ballyargus wrote: » Halfway through the Brothers Karamazov. It's excellent. Would recommend to anyone.
Carry wrote: Classic Russian literature isn't always easy to read (gloomy and over-complex) - I still have Tolstoy's War and Peace gathering dust on the bookshelves. One day, though...
Carry wrote: » It was one of the few books of Dostoevsky, actually the only one, that kept me reading on and enjoying it. Classic Russian literature isn't always easy to read (gloomy and over-complex) - I still have Tolstoy's War and Peace gathering dust on the bookshelves. One day, though... His Anna Karenina on the other hand is brilliant and surprisingly modern in a universal way. It's been a long time that I've read it but the first sentence stuck with me and intrigued me ever since with it's truth: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” I think I'm going to read it again.
Deleted User wrote: » I'm currently reading The Pillars Of The Earth by Ken Follet. About a third of the way into it and loving it, a very engrossing book.
mustang shelly wrote: » I finally got around to reading The Stolen Village by Des Ekin and I must say that I thoroughly enjoyed it. I found it hard to put down.
Ipso wrote: » mustang shelly wrote: » I finally got around to reading The Stolen Village by Des Ekin and I must say that I thoroughly enjoyed it. I found it hard to put down. He has a great one about the Siege of Kinsale called The Last Armada, definitely worth checking out.