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AnninGlos
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5 Apr 2011 18:15 |
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Thank you Tess
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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5 Apr 2011 18:03 |
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The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
I had't heard of this author before.
I was intrigued by the whole story. Don't think it really matters if you think that the time travvelling is feasible or not. I really enjoyed the whole interesting story. Now I need to read it again, to properly take on board the different ages and times our two main people met in. A lovely love story very different from what I have read before. I would recommend this book to my friens, will read it again and will read more books by Audrey Niffengger.
T
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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5 Apr 2011 17:57 |
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Nineteen Minutes By Jodi Picoult
I had heard abiut this book before it was suggested for Greaders. It is my sisters favourite Jodi Picoult book. She had already told me that she found it rather upsetting. I was therefore not sure that I was in the right frame of mind to read it. However, I borrowed her copy and eventually, when I could steel myself, I read it.
Well, it did make me angry, sad and helpless. I was gripped by the different peoples stories, their hopes and dreams and their very day lives. Poor Peter though really tore at the heart strings. A lovely little boy, who deserved better from life, better treatment from his peers and the "responsible" adults around him.
The saddest part fpr me though, was that some of the surviving bullies did not learn from this dreadful experience. It left me feeling that the world would not change and bullies would always be bullies. A sad story, well told, but an uncomfortable read.
Tess
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Persephone
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5 Apr 2011 00:53 |
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That's funny Tess.....
It was so long ago I had forgotten it. I think we have had a couple since then...
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TessAkaBridgetTheFidget
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4 Apr 2011 18:12 |
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Sorry I didn't get back when I said I would. Will try to make some (brief) comments latter this evening.
Tess
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Helen in Kent
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9 Jan 2011 23:37 |
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Hi Persey, I've never heard of The Group of Penguins!! But I read Catcher in the Rye when I was at school although I can hardly remember it now. Must read it again! I haven't read the Big Sur, though, something else for my list!
Thanks for your comments Helen x
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Persephone
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8 Jan 2011 22:08 |
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Interesting Helen,
I read Kerouac's book when I was about 17 and I had trouble getting into it and had to perservere but did enjoy it. I also read "The Big Sur" around this time. Kerouac's one is in "The group of penguins" along with Catcher in the Rye - I think there is 10 in the collection. This was when I first joined the library much to my mother's horror - reading books that other people had handled was just not on.
Persey
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Berona
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8 Jan 2011 21:59 |
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Nineteen Minutes. By Jodi Picoult Although fiction, this book showed just how many people are affected when a person ‘snaps’ after years of bullying. It also shows that parents with the best of love and intentions, can make little mistakes which can contribute to the situation. So many people whose lives will never be the same again.
The Last Templar. By Raymond Khouri I did read this book right to the end although it is not to my taste in reading material. A lot of lives lost over an ancient artifact and the method of stealing it in the first place, were over the top for me.
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Pammy51
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8 Jan 2011 17:02 |
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I managed to get and read all three this time!
The Last Templar by Raymond Khoury
This was my favourite book of the three. The bit at the Metropolitan Museum would have made a great scene in a film! It explained the history of the Templars really well and it was interesting to read about the Cathars again after 'meeting' them in Winter Ghosts (at least I think it was that book).
Nineteen Minutes - by Jodi Picoult
Found this quite upsetting to read. When you followed the threads of abuse/misunderstandings etc. to the end result it really made you wonder about people around you. As Ann says, all the more thought provoking when you know things like that have really happened. I couldn't quite believe the school would have brushed off the awful things that were done to Peter, especially when he was very young though.
The Accidental Time traveller by Sharon Griffiths
I didn't get on very well with this book and I'm not quite sure why. I found it difficult to believe that Rosie would just have accepted being pitchforked into the 1950's house and found the ending rather predictable. I did, as others have said enjoy reading about life in the 50's (not that I remember much – having been a mere child at the time!!!!!!)
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AnninGlos
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8 Jan 2011 15:36 |
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Thank you, still a few to go.
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Helen in Kent
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8 Jan 2011 13:54 |
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A is For Alibi by Sue Grafton
I have read a few of this "alphabet" series and enjoyed this first one just as much. The heroine, Kinsey Milhone, is a likeable private sleuth who wears me out with all the work she does! An easy but enjoyable read.
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Helen in Kent
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8 Jan 2011 13:51 |
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On the Road by Jack Kerouac
Supposedly a semi-auobiographical book based on Kerouac's own experience as a young man. It took me ages to get into it then I couldn't put it down. It is a great tale of what the US was like in the 1950's for young, bright wannabe writers, travelling back and forth across in their country in search of experience and adventure. There were lots of descriptions of all the different countrysides, from mountains to coast, and I loved all of that. I couldn't quite work out how the travelling was paid for apart from petty theft - then realised the narrator was having some work published.
Not really a happy story but very interesting if you want something different to get your teeth into.
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Helen in Kent
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8 Jan 2011 13:41 |
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Nineteen Minutes by Jodie Picoult
Wow! What a good story - I've just lent it to my daughter. A very sad story about Peter - even his mum didn't help him stand up to bullies when he was little, and that was the bit I found hardest to understand. As Ann said, there are so many places you could lay the blame, if you chose to do so, for his terrible actions. Those of you who haven't read the book yet I do recommend it.
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AnninGlos
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8 Jan 2011 12:06 |
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Thank you for your replies. Goodness Perse you did a lot of reading this time. Well done.
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Michelle
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8 Jan 2011 10:34 |
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The Last Templar
When I started reading this I kept thinking this story seemed awful familar yet I knew I had not read the book before, a couple of chapters in I realised it was because I had seen the mini series Persephone has mentioned. The book was an okay read, I do think this kind of story has been overdone in recent years (I personally found The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown and dull and unoriginal book), I liked the parts about the 14th century knights somewhat better than the modern bits.
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Michelle
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8 Jan 2011 10:27 |
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Nineteen Minutes
I found this an interesting and asorbing book, you coudn't help but feel (pity? not sure if that is what it was) for Peter and the things that happened to him throughout his life that had lead to the school shooting and there is the question of whether or not if the people in his life had treated him differently and helped him if things would have turned out differently.
Just as an aside I only learnt recently that one of the local country schools here in this part of NZ had a shooting incident back in I think the 1930ish era. From what I can recall it was a disgruntled former employee of the school.
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Persephone
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8 Jan 2011 02:12 |
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The Past and other lies by Maggie Joel:
They certainly did have some hidden secrets – the three generations were all a strange lot and the majority of them did come up with some stories. But on the whole the story was excellent- its portrayal of England in 1926 was quite vivid as were the next two generations. There was a bit of toing and froing in that you started with the most recent generation and then back to the first generation, which left you waiting to find out what had happened with the most recent. So it was fairly compelling to get the whole story and lots of mystery that gradually came to the fore. The last bit left me wondering what had happened when the bus did crash into the bridge – I know what I thought happened. Maybe we were meant to think along the same lines.
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Persephone
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8 Jan 2011 02:11 |
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The Last Templar.
In one review of it I read: “With "Templar" in the title, this debut novel will inevitably draw comparisons to Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code.” So far so good I have not read anything by Dan Brown. It went on to say: “For those fatigued by the recent spate of Mary Magdalene/Holy Grail books, this novel will come as a welcome relief.”
On the whole I did not mind it – not something I would normally read – I do have the book in search Holy Blood and Holy Grail my Michael Baigent and co – So I could look at their photos in support of the book. I think on the whole he wrote a very good book mixing fiction with fact (we seem to read a lot of these). People have to read it with the realization in mind that fantasy is not fact. I am sure that a lot of people of certain denominations would be incensed by such a book. Someone on a message board said about it being made into a mini series etc and that would the NBC be so ready to slam Islamic beliefs as they do with the Christian faiths? To be fair I think the book slams all religions not just Christianity. But it is a novel!!
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Persephone
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8 Jan 2011 02:11 |
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Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Piccoult.
Oh Boy!! This lady writes about dysfunctional so well. Ultimately where did the responsibility lie for the killings? So many factors and what ifs. What makes a person resort to this – it is too real considering that such events do happen.
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Persephone
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8 Jan 2011 02:10 |
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The Accidental Time Traveller by Sharon Griffiths
Well what can I say? Great stuff!!! Easy to read and for some reason I kept thinking of my Milly Molly Mandie books. I enjoyed the British Version of Life on Mars returning to the seventies. I also loved Goodnight Sweetheart with Nicholas Lyndhurst harking back to the Second World War – I don’t think they played all six series here though. So what was there not to like about this book. I well remembered my mother’s string bag to put the messages in – then she graduated to ones made out of plastic tubing (such cleverness then). Life was somewhat different here to what it was like in Britain but there are lot of similarities and similar thinking especially. I think the author did a great job of binding the two eras together with the illness etc and the realities of the past all being there in the old newspaper records. And my husband liked that awful chicory essence coffee and my 20 year older than me cousin used to buy one that came in a tin mixed with condensed milk. NZ along with Australia make the best coffees in the world. That is the one thing that Helen Clark misses with living in New York.
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