It's nice to have as an Iain M Bank completest, but you might find the content a little disappointing, it's very much a coffee table book.Rockburner wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:01 amI've got that on my wishlist.... if my (equally Banksian) brother doesn't buy it for me I'm cutting him off....KungFooBob wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2023 6:06 pm Just seen this on Friendface.
As a massive Iain M Banks fan, I think I'm going to have to sign up.
I know there's a few fans on here...
https://www.orbit-books.co.uk/landing-p ... 3z6HT6by1A
Edit: Maybe not the limited edition at a guestimated £250!
Reading: The Book Thread
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Last edited by KungFooBob on Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:10 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Count Steer
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Just read 'On the road' again but my 'Oxfam books scout' has snagged all of the Mortal Engines (and the prequels). She says they're well written/plotted etc so it's a bingefest of YA fiction next for me.
(Then 'Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas' to get back in 'road trip' mode )
(Then 'Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas' to get back in 'road trip' mode )
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
John Drury Clark, Isaac Asimov - Ignition!_ An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants.
Recommended to me by a friend who's a rocket scientist. A lot of it goes straight past me but it's an interesting read, written in a dry style.
Before that was Written in Bone by Sue Black.
Recommended to me by a friend who's a rocket scientist. A lot of it goes straight past me but it's an interesting read, written in a dry style.
Before that was Written in Bone by Sue Black.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I've read some of them, they're not bad.Count Steer wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:09 am Just read 'On the road' again but my 'Oxfam books scout' has snagged all of the Mortal Engines (and the prequels). She says they're well written/plotted etc so it's a bingefest of YA fiction next for me.
(Then 'Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas' to get back in 'road trip' mode )
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I read pretty much everything the Bronte girls wrote when I was a kid - really really enjoyed them
When I visited my mum recently, she had a couple of the books on her shelf still - next time I go back (when I'm in a car!) I'm going to try and borrow them
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
He's always genuinely amused when he use the line 'It's not rocket science, and I should know.'
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Every time I see this thread pop up my brain thinks it's to do with a book about the place in Berkshire.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Do NOT read "the Cotswolds Wrecking Crew" it's utter shite, I felt the need to leave a scathing review on Amazon, thankfully it was in Kindle Unlimited so I didn't pay for the crap.
Honda Owner
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Bought my Dad that for Christmas a few years ago. I really must steal it.cheb wrote: ↑Mon Dec 04, 2023 10:15 am John Drury Clark, Isaac Asimov - Ignition!_ An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants.
Recommended to me by a friend who's a rocket scientist. A lot of it goes straight past me but it's an interesting read, written in a dry style.
Before that was Written in Bone by Sue Black.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
It would be a very short book.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Oh, I dunno.....
There's an awful amount of abuse that could be justifiably hurled that way.
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I can't read it any other way now either, so thanks
I'm the same with Manslaughter. What are all those blokes finding so amusing.
I'm the same with Manslaughter. What are all those blokes finding so amusing.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
It's not everyone's cuppa, and it was nominated for the 2022 Booker Prize but in this case, rightly so. It's a slim tome at 110 pages but it doesn't waste a word. A book of the year for The Times, Observer, New Statesman, FT etc etc and dedicated to the women and children who suffered in Ireland's mother and baby homes and Magdalen laundries....but don't let any of that put you off.
'Small Things Like These' by Claire Keegan is a little diamond.
'Small Things Like These' by Claire Keegan is a little diamond.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I'd say it's probably worth whatever it took to get there to be able to do that.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Currently reading, and loving, Garth Marenghi's TerrorTome. Got it for crimbo last year but only just got around to it. Helps that I like Matt Holness humour and watched Dark Place when it first came out years ago and also loved that. Actually been making me laugh out loud, it's ace. A perfect parody of 70s/80s horror.
Dare you crack open the TerrorTome? (Mind the spine)
When horror writer Nick Steen gets sucked into a cursed typewriter by the terrifying Type-Face, Dark Lord of the Prolix, the hellish visions inside his head are unleashed for real. Forced to fight his escaping imagination - now leaking out of his own brain - Nick must defend the town of Stalkford from his own fictional horrors, including avascular-necrosis-obsessed serial killer Nelson Strain and Nick's dreaded throppleganger, the Dark Third.
Can he and Roz, his frequently incorrect female editor, hunt down these incarnate denizens of Nick's rampaging imaginata before they destroy Stalkford, outer Stalkford and possibly slightly further?
From the twisted genius of horror master Garth Marenghi - Frighternerman, Darkscribe, Doomsage (plus Man-Shee) - come three dark tales from his long-lost multi-volume epic: TerrorTome.
Can a brain leak?
(Yes, it can)
Dare you crack open the TerrorTome? (Mind the spine)
When horror writer Nick Steen gets sucked into a cursed typewriter by the terrifying Type-Face, Dark Lord of the Prolix, the hellish visions inside his head are unleashed for real. Forced to fight his escaping imagination - now leaking out of his own brain - Nick must defend the town of Stalkford from his own fictional horrors, including avascular-necrosis-obsessed serial killer Nelson Strain and Nick's dreaded throppleganger, the Dark Third.
Can he and Roz, his frequently incorrect female editor, hunt down these incarnate denizens of Nick's rampaging imaginata before they destroy Stalkford, outer Stalkford and possibly slightly further?
From the twisted genius of horror master Garth Marenghi - Frighternerman, Darkscribe, Doomsage (plus Man-Shee) - come three dark tales from his long-lost multi-volume epic: TerrorTome.
Can a brain leak?
(Yes, it can)
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I think I've suffered a stroke just reading the precis, I shudder to think what the actual book would do to me.
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Started on 'The Every' by Dave Eggers. It's a follow up to 'The Circle' which was pretty much 'the future according to Google' and a pretty dystopian, not so very future it is too.
Now 'Circle' (ie a Google/Facebook/Twitter conglomerate) has absorbed 'an on-line retail and delivery company named after a jungle' and morphed into 'Every'.
In some ways it's funny but it's also chillingly believable.
Now 'Circle' (ie a Google/Facebook/Twitter conglomerate) has absorbed 'an on-line retail and delivery company named after a jungle' and morphed into 'Every'.
In some ways it's funny but it's also chillingly believable.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
Frederick Forsyth's 'The Shepherd', only because it's been made into a filum recently and was in the news, it has 'planes in it, plus it was only 99p.
Haven't started it yet.
Haven't started it yet.
All aboard the Peckham Pigeon! All aboard!
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Re: Reading: The Book Thread
I read that when I was about 12, I seem to remember it was the first proper "grown-up" book that my father gave me*. I still remember it vividly and don't mind admitting I got a bit emosh when watching the short film.
* He flew Vampires in Suez....
non quod, sed quomodo