I listened to the first audiobook on a roadtrip a few years back and can comfirm it was fun. Never got around to the others.
I've had the second audio book on audible for a while, and a long drive next week. Ya'll have convinced me of what I should listen to.Sorry for the double post, but this has to be said.
The Red Rising series is one of those rare series where each new book surpasses the one before it. Some of the action scenes in the sequel books.......lord have mercy........this is some of the best action I've ever read.
Read the rest of them......now!
TIL that I am a slow reader.
Started this today and I'm about 180 pages in so far....
TIL that I am a slow reader.
I'm gonna add this to my shortlist. Already have it on my reader. Thanks
Started this today and I'm about 180 pages in so far. Really enjoying it. Just love how Wodehouse plays with language in it. Its plot revolves around golf-loving American composer George Bevan who falls in love with a mysterious young lady who takes refuge in his taxicab one day. When he later tracks her down to a romantic rural manor, mistaken identity leads to all manner of brouhaha.
still. maybe it's because most of my reading is at work where i still need to be somewhat conscious of my surroundings, but 180 pages would take me 7-8 hours easilyI just had a lazy Sunday and read for about four hours straight. I probably could have read it in one sitting if I started it a little earlier. I didn’t start it till about 2pm and stopped just after 6pm. Will read the last 100 or so pages tomorrow morning. May start a new book tomorrow night, but may wait a day or two too.
Finished it this morning. gonna be reading silver surfer parable/ "the kitchen book-The cook Book" double thing by Nicolas Freeling next.I've been reading john hersey’s hiroshima at work, had to drop it for a few days because it is horribly well written. now at the last part, I'm looking forward to finishing it tomorrow.
Is he worth reading ? where should I start at if so? yes spoonfeed me the answer please.PG Wodehouse's
Finished it this morning. gonna be reading silver surfer parable/ "the kitchen book-The cook Book" double thing by Nicolas Freeling next.
Is there any tip to read faster or is it a muscle to be trained type thing?
Is he worth reading? where should I start at if so? yes spoonfeed me the answer, please.
just ordered Something fresh from amazon, the premise amused me.
just ordered Something fresh from amazon, the premise amused me.
I'm currently reading 12 Rules For Life by Jordan Peterson. I know he has a bit of a reputation and people like to scoff, but honestly, I'll take all the help I can get.
Invader Summer and A Wind Named Amnesia by Hideyuki Kikuchi (they're novels, not manga).
Watership Down by Richard Adams
Re-read Nightshift and Everything's Eventual by Stephen King.
Go back in and buy it, mate. It's better than the movie or the song by the band America from the late 70's.I was in my local bookstore the other day and saw a new hardback edition of Watership Down and I was really tempted to buy it, the song Bright Eyes starting playing in my head and I felt uneasy.
Go back in and buy it, mate. It's better than the movie or the song by the band America from the late 70's.
If you want the best of pre-mainstream Stephen King read Nightshift...some of those short stories are gold.
"Jerusalem's Lot" Previously unpublished
"Graveyard Shift" October 1970 issue of Cavalier
"Night Surf" Spring 1969 issue of Ubris
"I Am the Doorway" March 1971 issue of Cavalier
"The Mangler" December 1972 issue of Cavalier
"The Boogeyman" March 1973 issue of Cavalier
"Gray Matter" October 1973 issue of Cavalier
"Battleground" September 1972 issue of Cavalier
"Trucks" June 1973 issue of Cavalier
"Sometimes They Come Back" March 1974 issue of Cavalier
"Strawberry Spring" Fall 1968 issue of Ubris
"The Ledge" July 1976 issue of Penthouse
"The Lawnmower Man" May 1975 issue of Cavalier
"Quitters, Inc." Previously unpublished
"I Know What You Need" September 1976 issue of Cosmopolitan
"Children of the Corn" March 1977 issue of Penthouse
"The Last Rung on the Ladder" Previously unpublished
"The Man Who Loved Flowers" August 1977 issue of Gallery
"One for the Road" March/April 1977 issue of Maine
"The Woman in the Room" Previously unpublished
Strawberry Spring is probably the only boring one in the whole book. Gray Matter and I Am the Doorway should have been made into movies.
America was originally going to do some songs for Watership Down but they were passed to someone else. However, Warner Bros. Deutschland were the ones to approach them about making a few songs for the Last Unicorn. They pulled it off fairly well.Art Garfunkel sang the song Bright Eyes, America did the soundtrack for The Last Unicorn, and I'm a huge Stephen King fan and have been collecting his books since the mid-90s. I actually bought a load of his books in hardback in a car boot sale in South Wales, they were all like £2 or £3 each.
It's as hard as you make it to be my friend.It's hard to find time for reading nowadays.
There aren't enough hours in a day for everything. I want to do exercise, study, read, watch tv/play games, have to do chores and cook meals. I'm trying really hard to avoid having to use an agenda and allot time for things, it doesn't feel natural.It's as hard as you make it to be my friend.
we all have similar things going on man. You're the one who has to chose where your time goes, I too wish there was more hours to a day.There aren't enough hours in a day for everything. I want to do exercise, study, read, watch tv/play games, have to do chores and cook meals. I'm trying really hard to avoid having to use an agenda and allot time for things, it doesn't feel natural.
I haven't touched my ps4 since I finished Ghost of Tsushima.
It's as hard as you make it to be my friend.
To kill a Mockingbird is the only one on there I've read and is the one that prompted me to start reading again 2-3 years ago.I’m trying to decide what to read next, I’ve narrowed it down to these six titles. Any thoughts or suggestions?