4 Jun
10:27am, 4 Jun 2024
68,285 posts
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LindsD
I saw the trailer. Might have a look. LittleD seemed interested
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4 Jun
9:07pm, 4 Jun 2024
22,521 posts
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Columba
Dio, that place looks very happy indeed.
Picked up Bourneville from the library yesterday. I have one final chapter of Our Mututal Friend to go, then shall start it (Bourneville)
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5 Jun
8:07pm, 5 Jun 2024
14,773 posts
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Little Nemo
Haven't been to the library yet to pick up this month's book. In the meantime I've started Three-Body Problem. The first couple of pages are odd as every sentence seems to have Red Guard in it at least twice! It's readable apart from this and I think this will be the first Chinese novel that I've read which is exciting
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5 Jun
8:08pm, 5 Jun 2024
68,321 posts
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LindsD
I haven't managed to pick it up either. Or review ID
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5 Jun
8:25pm, 5 Jun 2024
14,774 posts
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Little Nemo
At least you finished the right ID
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5 Jun
8:26pm, 5 Jun 2024
86,361 posts
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Diogenes
Getting on well with Bournville, but absolutely loving Brideshead Revisited, it’s masterful.
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5 Jun
10:59pm, 5 Jun 2024
68,325 posts
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LindsD
LittleN
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7 Jun
10:13pm, 7 Jun 2024
21,626 posts
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Chrisull
Finished a little amuse-bouche, Wylding Hall by Elisabeth Hand, a fictional band memoir meets folk horror. It will be very familiar in form to those who have read "This is Memorial Device" or "Utopia Avenue" where different members/hangers on feed into a disconnected but cohesive narrative. Most interesting is the folk horror aspect, the singer has disappeared but, who, why, how? Hand is an old hand (sic) at this. It would be really easy to overplay it, but it's balanced beautifully, the folklore of wrens (which is really interesting although not fully expounded on here) and folk music, intertwined. Rob Young's masterful "Electric Eden" is credited at the end as being an inspiration and for those who like their folk, there's very few mis-steps. The characters are drawn well, although one or two band members too many make it confusing at times as a couple of the voices blend into each other, but you do feel they exist as their own individuals. It mines a peculiarly British seam of countryside, old houses, barrows and bucolia (despite being a American author) and folds like a house of cards at just the right point leaving you going ah.
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8 Jun
12:09pm, 8 Jun 2024
68,373 posts
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LindsD
Picked up Bournville. Also need to review ID
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8 Jun
12:54pm, 8 Jun 2024
86,385 posts
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Diogenes
Despite evidence to the contrary, I’m really enjoying Bournville
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