UK Book Club discussion

50 Books in a Year > Sam's Big 50 (x 2...better make that x3)

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message 1: by Sam (last edited Jan 29, 2010 05:59AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 1. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy - 28/01/2010, 5*


message 2: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
Impressive start to the year. Good luck, it's on my 'Must read before I die' list!


message 3: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Thanks Liz, I set it aside as my 2010 Reading Challenge and it's going well so far. It's not as difficult to read as I thought it was going to be but the characters are difficult to keep track of. Luckily my copy came with a bookmark listing the main people and how they're related which has helped :-)


message 4: by Sam (last edited Jan 19, 2010 07:29AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 2. The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady by Edith Holden - finished 11/01/2010, 4*

Admittedly I'm still working on War and Peace, but it is quite long lol


message 5: by Sam (last edited Nov 26, 2010 02:01AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 3. CULT Fiction by Chancery Stone - finished 14/01/2010, 3*

And yes I'm still working on War and Peace lol


message 6: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Yea I did get it through that, didn't realise it's more of a accompany to the novels but it was still good, certaintly got me intrigued.


message 7: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments I've done it, I have finished War and Peace and with 5 stars it was well worth it :-) right now for all those other lovely books I've been ignoring of late...


message 8: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Ta very much, I was impressed it only took a month, was expecting it to take a bit longer :-)


message 9: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Ooh you finished!! If you rated it 5 stars I may have to think about finding my copy and giving it a read...


message 10: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Zoe wrote: "Ooh you finished!! If you rated it 5 stars I may have to think about finding my copy and giving it a read..."

I would certainly recommend it, I really enjoyed and was surprised by how much I enjoyed it. All the different people can get confusing though.


message 11: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Yeah, that's what I found when I started reading it ages ago


message 12: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 4. Dead Until Dark by Charlaine Harris - finished 31/01/2010, 4*


message 13: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
Sam wrote: "I've done it, I have finished War and Peace and with 5 stars it was well worth it :-) right now for all those other lovely books I've been ignoring of late..."

Woohooo! Crack open the champagne! Maybe I'll tackle it later in the year (I did Crime and Punishment last summer - perhaps not your typical beach read - and have been hoping to do at least one real biggie every year...)

On a lighter note, Dead Until Dark is on my want to read list too - The TV series, 'True Blood' is such escapist fun - I'll be interested to see how the books compare...


message 14: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Oh I did Liz (well the Guinness anyway lol), you should definitely give it a go it was much easier to read than Crime and Punishment :-)

That's why I read it, I watched the series without realising it was based on a book series. The books are definitely better (aren't they always lol)


message 15: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
It's funny, you expect 'the classics' to be dense & impenetrable, but it's not always the case... I enjoyed Vanity Fair far more than I expected and couldn't put it down.

I shall look forward to reading Dead Until Dark...
Dead Until Dark (Sookie Stackhouse, #1) by Charlaine Harris


message 16: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments I agree, think it's got a lot to do with that 'classics' label, straight away you start thinking it'll all be written in ye olde english or some such thing. It's a shame I think as I bet it puts a lot of people off even trying them.


message 17: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
I don't think it helps that most of the classics people are forced to read in schools are the ones that are most boring!


message 18: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
True, but certainly when I was at school (makes me sound sooo old), while I was totally able to read & understand the words & plot, I was still too young to actually 'get it'.

I've re-read some of the books I was given at school and it was like reading completely different books. But it would have been very easy to dismiss them forever...


message 19: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments That is true, I think it's the same with a lot of stuff you're made to do at school, because you have to do it you hate it but when you do it through your own choice you love it. I think we're probably just all a bunch of rebels lol!!!


message 20: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Haha, that's definitely us! Book Rebels :)

We had to read Wise Children for AS Level English and it was so confusingly written that it wasn't that fun to read, but after we'd analysed it it actually wasn't too bad a book. But I think it did put me off reading any of her other books.


message 21: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
Angela Carter is great - honestly! I have read Wise Children and it's just not one of her best (in my opinion at least....) Try The Bloody Chamber or The Magic Toyshop instead - both great - really atmospheric gothic tales.


The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter The Magic Toyshop by Angela Carter


message 22: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Ooooo I like the sound of those two Liz, think I may have to have a look at them. Thankfully I didn't do English AS but a few of my friends did and they had to read Wise Children and struggled with it. Like you Zoe they found it better once it was explained more but it did put me off her, might have to give her a go now though...


message 23: by Sam (last edited Feb 04, 2010 01:30AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Oh I almost forgot...

5. Living Dead in Dallas by Charlaine Harris - finished 03/02/2010, 4*


message 24: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
I might consider reading another one of her books... I'll see what the library/cheap book store have :)


message 25: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 6. Club Dead by Charlaine Harris - finished 05/02/2010, 5*


message 26: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 7. Work, Sex And Rugby by Lewis Davies - finished 09/02/2010, 5*


message 27: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 8.Riddler's Gift, The: First Tale of the Lifesong by Greg Hamerton - finished 11/02/2010, 5*

Highly highly recommended reading!


message 28: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 9.The Devil's Larder by Jim Crace - finished 14/02/2010, 2*

10.The Last Templar by Raymond Khoury - finished 16/02/2010, 4*


message 29: by Lynne - The Book Squirrel (last edited Feb 17, 2010 09:22AM) (new)

Lynne - The Book Squirrel (squirrelsend) | 3626 comments Sam have you read Jim Crace's Plague story Pest House?
I loved it!


message 30: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments I'm not sure, the stories in Devil's Larder don't have titles they're only numbered. What's it about?


message 31: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 11. The Mermaids Singing by Val McDermid - finished 19/02/2010, 4*


message 32: by Sam (last edited Feb 23, 2010 03:05AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 12.The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber - finished 22/02/2010, 1*

13.The Judge's House by Bram Stoker - finished 22/02/2010, 5*


message 33: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 14.Education, Edukation, Edukashun by James Rainsford - finished 28/02/2010, 5*


message 34: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Glad to see you enjoyed it too! :)


message 35: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Zoe wrote: "Glad to see you enjoyed it too! :)"

Oh yes, my mum's going to read it next, she couldn't get over my laughing out loud when I was home in the week, I don't tend to do that much so she's intrigued :-)


message 36: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Hehe cool :) It was very funny! Do you think you'll read his next book when it's out?


message 37: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Yea I think I will, what about you?


message 38: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Yeah I hope to! The bit at the back of the other book seemed quite promising


message 39: by Sam (last edited Mar 03, 2010 05:30AM) (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments I didn't actually read that bit. I'm not a fan of having those tasters of other books in the back, I kinda get annoyed as I think I've more left to read than I actually have. And I hate getting into it then not being able to finish it straight away. Bit picky I know lol!


message 40: by Zoe, UK Book Club Creator (new)

Zoe (zobo77) | 517 comments Mod
Haha, I know how you mean! They annoy me too but I just can't help myself :P


message 42: by Em (new)

Em (emmap) | 2925 comments Sam wrote: "I didn't actually read that bit. I'm not a fan of having those tasters of other books in the back, I kinda get annoyed as I think I've more left to read than I actually have. And I hate getting i..."

Sam, I agree with this and it's hard to resist reading it when you've enjoyed the actual book, then you're left hanging... I do usually end up buying the next book though so despite my misgivings, the method does work on me!

Also, I generally don't read the lengthy introductions and notes etc that some books have at the start and end. Part of me thinks I should make the effort and I might learn something but then I decide there's no real need to and I'm compelled to just pick up another book instead.


message 43: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments Yea I usually end up buying the next one despite not having read the sample chapter, especially if I've enjoyed a book. I can see why they do it though lol.

I read the introductions as I often find it helps explain parts of the story better and makes it a bit more enjoyable but I'm not a huge fan of lengthy notes and additional information. I do occasionally read them but only if it seems like it'll add something to the book (or if I don't get distracted by my next read lol).


message 44: by Liz, Moderator (new)

Liz | 3898 comments Mod
I've stopped reading the preface, intros, notes etc of books completely. The last time was on Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, and they contained so many spoilers that the book was almost ruined before I'd started... Never again!


message 45: by Em (new)

Em (emmap) | 2925 comments Yeah, if you're going to read them at all you need to make sure it's after you've finshed the book. Even if it doesn't have spoilers they sometimes seem to be telling you what to make of the book before you've even begun.


message 46: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 16.Southcrop Forest by Lorne Rothman - finished 06/03/2010, 5*

17.Poems Selected by Derek Mahon by Dylan Thomas - finished 06/03/2010, 5*


message 47: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 18.The Masked Man by Paul Doherty - finished 09/03/2010, 5*


message 48: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 19.Outlaw by Angus Donald - finished 12/03/2010, 5*


message 49: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 20.The Wrong Kind of Snow by Rob Penn and Antony Woodward - finished 19/03/2010, 4*


message 50: by Sam (new)

Sam (ecowitch) | 595 comments 21.The Welsh Girl by Peter Ho Davies - finished 25/03/2010, 5*


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