Storm of Steel is based on Jünger’s diary, which he worked – and frequently re-edited – into a piece of continuous prose. It combines the most astonishing literary gifts with absorption with war in every detail. It has German loyalties and a German sensibility, but not a trace of propaganda. It is particular, yet universal.
TheGoldenAges wrote: » Watched Gone Girl last week so I started reading the book there last night to see if the book could portray the reasoning behind the ending in better light than the film did.
eviltwin wrote: » The Redemer by Jo Nesbo. Best Harry Hole book so far.
micko45 wrote: » The Iron Clad Prophecy - Pat Kellehar. WW II Soldiers vanish from the Somme and end up somewhere alien. Pure pulp fiction and enjoyable so far.
glasso wrote: » An officer and and a spy - Robert Harris novel based on the Dreyfus affair. only a hundred pages in - pretty good so far.
Paddy Samurai wrote: » It is with a real sense of sorrow that I am coming to the end of this book.It seems strange when you consider that this is a book about the horror of battle in World War 1 from the POV of the Germans. Junger does not hold back on any of the details ,including not taking prisoners. Although wounded up to 14 times he kept coming back for more ,a real life "Terminator". He was also awarded the Iron Cross and Knights cross ,and you can see why even hitler tried to get him to join his propaganda machine ,but to no avail. I can understand why people label this the greatest war memoir they have read.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/10671755/The-greatest-war-memoir-I-have-ever-read.html
D-FENS wrote: » Finally reading Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets by the Wire creator David Simon, been meaning to for years and so far I'm not disappointed. Very easy read, a great insight into the real Baltimore Homicide Unit and I guess the workings of any inner city police dept. Would be really interesting as a standalone book but is also definitely helped by the amazing picture the Wire painted years afterwards, for any fans of that.
Collie D wrote: » If you like Homicide you should definitely check out The Corner. Same idea except this time the author hangs out on the other side of the law. I preferred The Corner - some very tragic characters, some with happy endings and others not so much. Read both back to back and The Corner was definitely my favourite of the two. And I've never watched a single episode of The Wire
Deleted User wrote: » I was going to start gravitys rainbow, but I picked up mason and dixon instead. Not bad, but heavy going.