Books you're reading (39 Viewers)

Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
61,503
No idea. First book of his I read. Might pick up Pompei, ancient times being my period of interest and he has shown he can write real well with the above book.
 

ĵџvє_вãвγ

Earth Intruder
Jul 5, 2006
6,698
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2412198 said:
House of Night Series : Marked, actually i dont like vampire things and never find them cool, but insistence of my cousin i started the novel with prejudice but liked it indeed, cos' the excitement never ended and tempo wasnt down till the end:tup:


also now i am reading the second novel of the serie Betrayed:oops:..***..
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2415698 said:
Betrayed, second one of the serie by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast, as excited as the first one:martini:

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ĵџvє_вãвγ;2418936 said:
Chosen,3rd one so far the most excited one also, finished it last night and started Untamed immediately:martini:

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ĵџvє_вãвγ;2424498 said:
Untamed,4rd one i read it breathless,too.. things are getting confused increasingly:shocked:

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Hunted,already finished it, God loved it:martini: i gotta start Tempted:excited:

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Jul 5, 2006
6,698
nope JBF!
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2412198 said:
House of Night Series : Marked, actually i dont like vampire things and never find them cool, but insistence of my cousin i started the novel with prejudice but liked it indeed, cos' the excitement never ended and tempo wasnt down till the end:tup:


also now i am reading the second novel of the serie Betrayed:oops:..***..
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2415698 said:
Betrayed, second one of the serie by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast, as excited as the first one:martini:

..***..
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2418936 said:
Chosen,3rd one so far the most excited one also, finished it last night and started Untamed immediately:martini:

..***..
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2424498 said:
Untamed,4rd one i read it breathless,too.. things are getting confused increasingly:shocked:

..***..
ĵџvє_вãвγ;2432647 said:
Hunted,already finished it, God loved it:martini: i gotta start Tempted:excited:

..***..
Tempted , six one of the serie, loved this one too, how can i wait till 27th april for the new episode Burned? :frown:

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OP
mikhail

mikhail

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2003
9,576
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,736
    Some time last year, I bought a copy of John Healy's The Grass Arena. It's the story of a man who became an alcoholic vagrant in London in the 60s and 70s before drying out and becoming a strong chess player. Unfortunately, I lost the book on an aeroplane just before I got to the redemptive part. I've picked up another copy and will finish it shortly. There's a good article on it here http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2008/aug/05/biography


    Currently, I'm reading George Orwell's Down and Out in Paris and London, describing a spell when he was often so short of money that he would have to go days without food. In Paris, he found menial work in restaurants, where 14-17 hour working days six or seven days a week kept him in (filthy, bug ridden) accommodation with just enough left over for basic food. A friend paid for his return to London, but after a promised job failed to materialise, Orwell found himself vagrant.


    It's fascinating to compare the two accounts of homelessness. Orwell's is tainted slightly by the fact that he was there by choice - he had family who would put him up if he wanted. He was determined to live like the poorest in society, however, and stuck with it. His account is one of essentially decent people trapped in poverty by poor health, bad luck and a society which looked down on them. An impoverished diet left many of them trapped in viscous cycles where they hadn't the strength or vitality to hold even menial jobs. Healy hadn't the same choice. He'd left home - and a physically abusive father - behind, and whatever chance he had was taken from him by his alcoholism, which robbed him of an army career and even of the strength and stamina to exploit his skill as a boxer. Falling in with a viscous crowd of thieves, murderers and con men, the picture he paints of vagrants is far less sympathetic than Orwell's. Did Orwell's left wing sympathies colour his perspective? Was Healy simply among the lowest of the low, or does he play this up for his own reasons? Maybe the very nature of vagrancy changed in the decades between their experiences. Whatever you conclude, these books are a fascinating insight into a world I wouldn't wish on anyone.
     
    Jul 5, 2006
    6,698
    Digital Fortress, it was a very good novel like the other Dan Brown works, i read all of his works except Deception Point, i think he gotta change his style, all of his characters are same, telling the story style is same, he should try different things but although everything he knows how to make curious the reader:tup:

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