Meanaspie wrote: » Just finished rereading Shantaram, in anticipation of the sequel finally being released in a few weeks. It's by far my favourite book I've ever read. It's been a few years since I last read it and I forgot about half the stuff that happens in it there's that much! Really makes me want to visit Mumbai every time I read it maybe one day... If you haven't read it, I highly recommend it!
floyd333 wrote: » I love Shantaram. It's probably my favourite book I hadn't heard about the sequel. It would be very hard to match the orignal
tigger123 wrote: » Just finished The Martian by Andy Weir. I'd highly recommend it.
jamesieliz wrote: » reading Memories of Ice by Steven Erikson. Third book of the Malazan Book of the Fallen series - so many characters already in this book , to add to all the ones in the first two books ! also , so many plotlines , gods , monsters , histories , races etc. etc. etc. 10 books in this series , so may take a break after this one , and try a change of pace ..however i said that to myself after book 2
Birneybau wrote: » I started reading it and thought it was one of the most badly written books I've ever read. Might go back to it. Flitting between the above, 'The Girl in the Spider's Web' (very early days) and recently finished 'Purity' by Jonathan Franzen which I was a bit disappointed in. Having a bit of bad luck with books at the moment.
Hugo Stiglitz wrote: » I received Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel, and Mindhunter: Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit by John Douglas & Mark Olshaker today. Not sure which to crack into first.
Shenshen wrote: » I read Franzen's first 2 book - they both took a bit getting into, I felt, but I did like Freedom. So Purity doesn't live up to expectation?
Menas wrote: » I have just finished reading Room by Emma donoghue. They are making it in to a movie....But the book had left me thoroughly depressed. Very sad tale.
Conall Cernach wrote: » I'm reading The Amber Spyglass, the third book of the His Dark Materials trilogy. I picked up the three books for €2 in a charity shop and approached them with some trepidation expecting for some reason that they'd be of a level with or only slightly better than the Harry Potter books. How wrong was I? They are really, really good.
gutenberg wrote: » I really enjoyed Station Eleven, it's a great book.
IvyTheTerrible wrote: » Am I the only person who hates Shantaram?
Merkin wrote: » I read I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes recently and it's now in my top ten books. A highly readable, thrilling and intelligent crime story relating to bioterrorism. Not my usual type of fiction but I was engrossed and can't recommend it enough.
Bulbous Salutation wrote: » The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon. It's a great book. Some of the language and story telling is like nothing I've read before. It captures an era, aura and mindset with a richness that you could never find in another art form. Really loving it. 10 bulbous salutations out of 10.
Birneybau wrote: » Oh, it's a fantastic book by a fantastic writer.
JohnMearsheimer wrote: » Michael Chabon is a great writer. I really enjoyed reading Wonder Boys.
Merkin wrote: » No, I thought it was terrible.Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky. I REALLY wanted to like it given that the manuscript was found decades posthumously (she died in Aushwitz) but it was just so dull. I enjoyed her observations of the French but there were far too many characters and lacked direction. I also found the translation a little grating. It's considered a masterpiece but obviously not for me.
Wichita Lineman wrote: » The Girl Who Walked Home Alone: Bette Davis - A Personal Biography. Charlotte Chandler. Author interviewed Bette Davis extensively in the last decade of her life, resulting in a biography in which the great actress speaks for herself.