GA Russell Posted December 1 Report Posted December 1 Issue #1. Surprisingly violent, with hangings and a stabbing. Quote
gvopedz Posted December 2 Report Posted December 2 The BBC talks to James Marriott about the post-literate age or the death of reading... https://www.bbc.com/audio/play/w3ct71cy Quote
jazzbo Posted December 2 Report Posted December 2 I have begun reading this timely-published book and find it excellent in many ways: accurate in its factual presentation (I know more than a bit about the subject matter) and entertaining as it educates and explains. s-l1600994×1500 90.5 KB Quote
ejp626 Posted December 14 Report Posted December 14 I just finished Austen's Persuasion. I'm just starting Dawn Powell's Angels on Toast. Almost the entire thing seems to be about businessmen cheating on their wives and trying to get away with it. Definitely not my favorite Powell... Quote
GA Russell Posted December 22 Report Posted December 22 The comic strips from March 3, 2014, to September 6, 2015. Quote
ejp626 Posted December 24 Report Posted December 24 Almost finished with Powell's Angels on Toast. It's curious this is set nearly as much in Chicago as New York. Definitely not as good as The Locusts Have No King, which I'll have to reread one of these days. I'm just starting Susanna Kaysen's Asa, As I Knew Him, which is good so far. Quote
jazzbo Posted Wednesday at 07:12 PM Report Posted Wednesday at 07:12 PM I started re-reading (for may be the second or third time) Raymond Chandler’s “The Lady in the Lake.” I just get into a particular enchanted zone reading Chandler. His writing has enthralled me since I was a young man. Picked up this edition at Half Price Books: Quote
Brad Posted Thursday at 03:54 PM Report Posted Thursday at 03:54 PM On 8/9/2025 at 11:20 AM, Brad said: and just starting Well, it’s been a long haul but I’m finally in the home stretch. It’s not a page turner and can’t be treated as such. Quote
GA Russell Posted Friday at 11:19 PM Report Posted Friday at 11:19 PM The first Continental Op novel. The movie Yojimbo (and therefore A Fistful of Dollars also) was sort of based on this. I enjoyed this, but I like the short stories better. Quote
cliffpeterson Posted Saturday at 12:56 AM Report Posted Saturday at 12:56 AM "The first Continental Op novel. The movie Yojimbo (and therefore A Fistful of Dollars also) was sort of based on this. I enjoyed this, but I like the short stories better." Agreed. Also, there was a Bruce Willis movie with Chris Walken that borrowed plot lines from Red Harvest or one of the movies you mention. Quote
Dub Modal Posted Saturday at 01:56 AM Report Posted Saturday at 01:56 AM On 12/25/2025 at 10:54 AM, Brad said: Well, it’s been a long haul but I’m finally in the home stretch. It’s not a page turner and can’t be treated as such. Engrossing book. One of my favorites. Quote
ejp626 Posted Saturday at 11:46 AM Report Posted Saturday at 11:46 AM Also working on a few Narayan novels, rereading The Financial Expert and then The Painter of Signs to follow. Quote
Brad Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago (edited) I took a break from Moby Dick to finish this wonderful book by Laurie Lee about his going to Spain right before the Spanish Civil War. During his two years away from home in Gloucestershire he travels by foot from the top of Spain all the way to the South and leaves just as the Civil War heats up. He survives on money he can earn from playing his violin and the kindness of the people he meets. In the book’s epilogue he decides he has made a mistake leaving and hikes over the Pyrenees to get back into Civil War Spain Edited 4 hours ago by Brad Quote
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