SarahBM wrote: » Lets just say the BBC take a bit of an artistic license. they are a bit different. but very much enjoyed both. will have to read it again, its been a while.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » Oh? Maybe I should watch it first then? If I read the book and love it and then they do something I hate on TV I'll be maaaaad! :mad:
SarahBM wrote: » I watched the tv show first. I love it though. BBC do great drama adaptations.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » That's the one. Someone actually recommended the BBC thing to me and I thought I'd read the book too. Don't know which one to do first though? Read the book then watch the series or other way around?
Slattsy wrote: » Went for The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov.
Slattsy wrote: » This is one weird/****ed up book - but sweet baby Allah its class so far
salacious crumb wrote: » It's actually one of the few books I had to stop reading. There were so many Russian names, I couldn't keep track of who was who :pac:
Belle E. Flops wrote: » Just about to start Animal Farm by George Orwell.
TICKLE_ME_ELMO wrote: » I'm reading North and South (Gaskell) and it's okay so far. Mr. Thornton just confessed his love to Margaret but it's almost like it's come out of nowhere. I was as surprised by it as Margaret was. She's done nothing but annoy him up until now and yet he loves her?
SarahBM wrote: » Ya, I vaguely remember that, its been so long since I read it.
[-0-] wrote: » Currently reading Moby Dick, and loving it. It's.... just fantastic. Better than I had hoped actually. I'm about half way through at this point.
Tombo2001 wrote: » I've been reading My Fathers Tears, a book of short stories by John Updike. Very interesting. What I particularly like is as follows.......it was Updikes last book, written maybe five years ago when he was around 78 or so. He died three years ago. It reminds me in ways of Memoir by John McGahern, where he delves back into his childhood in particular and his formative years. While the short stories are fictional, they read in someways as a memoir to me. And it is very interesting to read stories set in the 1930s or 1940s, written in the age of google and ipads and so on, by someone who grew up then and has seen everything that has happened since. It was a reminder that technology and possessions are an irrelevance when you are looking back over your life. Separate point - I have been getting more into short stories - I love a good short story; but outside of Irish writers and collections, there is very little to choose from in our libraries or book shops.
Aenaes wrote: » Finished Dr. Bloodmoney by Philip K. Dick. The 2nd novel of his I have read and both now feel a bit "meh". Sci-fi generally isn't one of particular likings so that doesn't help but even his style of writing was poor, in my opinion.
Aenaes wrote: » It was Martian Time-Slip, I found myself wanting to get through it just as quickly as possible.
maynoothlizard wrote: » Staring at Lakes by Michael Harding Don't think I can finish this one.