Finish 52 Books - 2025
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2024 Thread

Is anyone going to challenge JBR's crown as Undisputed Beex Book Reading King?

1.) Prester John - John Buchan

Jolly old Boy's Own adventure, in which a doughty Scots lad foils a plot and saves the day. Bonus points for having a heroic dog named Colin and for extensive use of the word "Portugoose", meaning a single Portugeese. It's all old fashioned nonsense, and probably was even in 1910 when it as published but it is quite good at what it aims to be, and he's somehow very good at writing rock-climbing scenes.
I’ve only got about 10% of The Stand left (and it’s the newer edition with the additional chapters and extended wait) which I reckon I should be credited four or five books worth for.
Oh my, that thing is HUGE. Isn't it something like 1,200 pages?
1,325 for this extended/reinstated version.
1. A Voyage around the Queen by Craig Brown

The life of Liz as experienced by others.

It follows a similar path to his Beatles book, grouping anecdotes and stories in roughly chronological and thematic chapters. It just didn't have the pace of the earlier work, and some parts became a struggle to get through. For example, I get what he was trying to do in the chapters recounting his and others' dreams about the Queen, but a long chapter of such tales with little attempt to order them for even comic effort just became pretty tedious. Other parts work much better, including his lengthy descriptions of the corgi lineage, the rules on who should courtesy to whom, and It's a Royal Knockout.

His main argument throughout is that the Queen was ultimately unknowable, and people projected themselves onto her.
1. The Chronic(what?)cles of Amber - Roger Zelazny

An epic quest of siblings, godlike to us, who come from the 'real' centre of things, Amber, but can journey to our 'shadow' worlds to have a good time, recruit troops, as they see fit. It's long, made up of 5 short novels, and as the introduction says, a bit too much recapping in the later ones. But the interplay and plotting between the siblings is always good, and there's invention up the wazoo.
There's a second chronicle to follow a son, which I might get to eventually, but it would be too much of a good thing right now.
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1.) Prester John - John Buchan


2.) The Hammer of God - Arthur C Clarke

Apparently the inspiration for Deep Impact, story of a Big Asteroid that may, or may not, kill everyone. A Spaceship goes to stop it from doing that. Quite good, in a sort-of "here are some space things happening" way. No character development or anything fancy like that, and an odd sub-plot about religious fantatics.
Mimi wrote:
1,325 for this extended/reinstated version.


The Stand by Stephen King
Well, I finished this today. A few random thoughts:

I mean, it’s good. I almost gave up about a quarter of the way in because I kind of felt I had the measure of what was happening, and I did. You could have told the story well and richly in about 25% of the space, and I wouldn’t say that the character journeys were ground breaking, but the character studies were good.

Some of the race descriptors made me wince. They were supposed to, but they were so prevalent in the text that to modern readers in the U.K. you might be forgiven wondering if so many of the characters of the time would really have spoken like that, and then you realise that they probably would have, especially in parts of the U.S.

Stephen King shouldn’t write sex scenes.

It was paranormal light, but that’s a good thing, as it’s very much a human story.

People should not have used this book as a how-to manual during Covid.
I've read The Stand twice. First time when I was about 12 and voraciously reading every book I could get my hands on, so I read all my dad's books. That was the original abridged version and it still took me about 2 weeks to read through.

I read the unabridged version when I was commuting for 2 hours a day and it definitely kept me company during those long bus rides.

Great book. I love a long and detailed story. The climax is bobbins of course (Stephen King, innit?) but it works better on the page than it did in the 90s mini series for sure
I think I might have read it when I was about 12, too. Though I have no memory of the content, I have a memory of having and reading the book. I think I read a load of his books at that age, for much the same reason as you - hey we’re in the house. Also loads of Dennis Wheatley books, which for some reason my grandmother had a red leather bound collection of.

But the content of the stories themselves have disappeared with time, so it was fresh to me.
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1. The Chronic(what?)cles of Amber - Roger Zelazny


2. A Voyage Around the Queen - Craig Brown I have absolutely no interest in the Royal Family, but Craig Brown is great, and this was 99p on Kindle. And then Kern's review nudged it to the front of my mind. As Kern says, throughout he proves his point that people project onto the Queen, and he manages something similar in the book, in that if you like the queen, there's stuff for you, if you don't, likewise. If you're ambivalent? You can also find what you want. It's irreverent without being showily so, made me laugh a lot and tear up, too. Fabulous.
I love the 99p Kindle offers.

Whenever I see a book that looks interesting, I add it to my wish list then every so often sort by price to see which ones are currently discounted.
I also do this - and add a provenance-note to avoid wondering why the book's there. The simple joy of finding a wishlist book is now a bargain!
People pay for books?!
‘Be more Grim… Smash and grab your local Waterstones today!’
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1.) Prester John - John Buchan
2.) The Hammer of God - Arthur C Clarke



3.) Get Shorty - Elmore Leonard
A Miami loanshark ends up in Hollywood and does gangstery things AND movie producer things. Elmore Leonard's not quite Raymond Chandler, but he's not that far off, so I'm gonna read more of this chap too.
Grim... wrote:
People pay for books?!


The Librarian has entered the chat.
You'll be telling me people pay for movies next.
Squirt wrote:
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1.) Prester John - John Buchan
2.) The Hammer of God - Arthur C Clarke



3.) Get Shorty - Elmore Leonard
A Miami loanshark ends up in Hollywood and does gangstery things AND movie producer things. Elmore Leonard's not quite Raymond Chandler, but he's not that far off, so I'm gonna read more of this chap too.


Highly recommend the TV series Justified, which is based on some of his stories. Set in a quasi-contemporary Kentucky, which a gun-slinging US Marshall in the shape of Timothy The Olyphantman.

Walton Goggins is a brilliant nemesis, and it brims with most excellent dialogue and one-liners (until S4, where I feel quality has dipped significantly, though many seem to rate S4).
Grim... wrote:
I would.


:D

So, how do you read your books – on a Kindle? I know you used to be able to upload .PDF books to Kindles some years ago, can you still?
1. Starship Thrive - Ginger Booth

Thrive has 6 months until their launch window opens – and closes.

The prizes Denali offers are jewels beyond price. An actual starship awaits on the sea bottom. The greatest nanite scientist of the system can finally tell Sass how she came to be immortal.

Be careful what you ask for.

In the finale of the Denali arc, our heroes visit the ocean floor, battle an aggressive ecosystem, and come to terms with a strange new world.

And just maybe, they’ll win a starship. Fuel not included. Additional taxes and grueling acts of heroism may apply.

Book 4 in the Thrive Space Colony Adventures. Suggested for fans of Firefly or Nathan Lowell’s Solar Clipper books.
Mimi wrote:
So, how do you read your books – on a Kindle? I know you used to be able to upload .PDF books to Kindles some years ago, can you still?

Yep, although I tend to use .epub files.

I can even email them to an email address that Amazon provides for me and it automatically sends them to my Kindle.
I must have a false memory of it, but I was certain that I had remembered Amazon pulling that service years ago to force you to use their book downloads. I must be thinking of something else.
I think it's used for people who like to upload academic stuff to Kindles.

Your honour
GazChap wrote:
Mimi wrote:
So, how do you read your books – on a Kindle? I know you used to be able to upload .PDF books to Kindles some years ago, can you still?

Yep, although I tend to use .epub files.

I can even email them to an email address that Amazon provides for me and it automatically sends them to my Kindle.

I have a server running that automatically finds and adds new books by authors I like, and exposes them via a very simple webpage so I can browse to it in my Kindle browser and just download them directly. BOSH

Don't fucking tell me I can't have stuff for free, Amazon you biotch
Pretty nifty (and shifty)
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1. The Chronic(what?)cles of Amber - Roger Zelazny
2. A Voyage Around the Queen - Craig Brown


The Englightenment of the Greengage Tree - Shokoofeh Azah. Magical realism story set around the Iranian revolution. Liked the latter, less keen on some of the former. At times it was a little too much 'and here's another proverb', though some of it was very beautiful.

Sex Power Money - Sara Pascoe. If you've seen her act, you're well aware she's interested in these subjects. She captures her voice really well (which I suppose should be obvious, but it doesn't always transfer between spoken and written), and it's very funny in places. Struggles a bit with a conclusion, but the meat is in the main.

The Tailor of Panama - John le Carre. A tailor is recruited to be a spy. Quickly spots that it's in his interests to recruit others, particularly if all payment comes to him, and all stories come from him. Suits his handler, too. All very satirical. Reads like a dreamscape of overheated 'ex-pats' in the tropics, swanning around combining fantasy with hedonism.

In at the Kill - Gerald Seymour. He recently broke his habit of making one-offs to do a series with a near-retired, should be retired, old clerk with a genius for pulling strings and enveloping others in a plot, Jonas Merrick. That makes them slightly less edge of the seat, as you Seymour's gift is for complicated stories that leave you wondering until the very end if it'll be an ending you can live with, but here you can be fairly sure Merrick will survive. Though even then he is put into some very hairy situations for a non-active agent. Seymour has a very particular style - dialogue is always clipped and the same - but if you can bear it there is ratcheting tension.

Because I don'tknow what you mean and what you don't - Josie Long. Another comedian who has captured her own voice, though as this is fiction it's less literal than Pascoe' book. This was highly recommended and I wasn't sure how I'd get on with it, but she can't half write. Definitely on the themes you probably know she covers - social justice and the lack of it - but getting under the skin of the protagonists in each short insight into fictional lives.
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1.) Prester John - John Buchan
2.) The Hammer of God - Arthur C Clarke
3.) Get Shorty - Elmore Leonard


4.) Maigret on Holiday - Georges Simenon
Maigret gets bored on holiday at the seaside while his wife is sick and gets sucked into a local murder. Short but smart detective novel, with no outrageous twist or crazy reveal, just a clever detective solving mysteries by being clever. I might give the TV show a go as well.
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1. A Voyage around the Queen by Craig Brown

2. The Eagle's Conquest by Simon Scarrow
The Romans invade Kent.

As flawed as the first book but yet I continue reading them.
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1.) Prester John - John Buchan
2.) The Hammer of God - Arthur C Clarke
3.) Get Shorty - Elmore Leonard
4.) Maigret on Holiday - Georges Simenon


5.) Rivers of London - Ben Aaronovitch
Kinda like if Harry Potter had failed his OWLs and had joined the Fuzz instead. I think I've seen these mentioned on the board before - I'm not going to say it's the best book ever but I enjoyed it enough to want to read the next one at some point. Also, it made me sing the title to the tune of "Werewolves of London". so that's a plus point.
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