Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Not long to go now...

I've enjoyed this challenge but am quite glad that it is nearly over so I can get back to knitting, watching too much TV and basically doing my usual time-wasting activities.

I do intend to keep up the good work and carry on reading though, just not at the speed I have been doing so.

Here are the books I have read in the final few weeks:

Week 9:

I read the third book in the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency Series, Morality for Beautiful Girls.

I loved this series; great summer reads.

I also received a copy of Ten Big Ones by Janet Evanovich, which was part of an International Book Ray so I read it quite quickly and sent it onto the next person.


Week 10:

The Kalahari Typing School for Men by Alexander McCall Smith; I particulalry liked the comment about men not needing perfect typewriters as they are only men.

Eleven on Top - Janet Evanovich; a very enjoyable romp. Can't wait to read the new one Twelve Sharp!

I've devoured this series over the last few months; great fun.

Week 12:

I read The Full Cupboard of Love and then realised that I have read the Alexander McCall Smith ones in the wrong order - oh well.

I read the latest in the series Blue Shoes and Happiness in record time as I wanted to pass it onto my mum when I was visiting on the way to Lisbon on 17 August.

It was a bit slow to get going I thought but maybe I'm a bit jaded about this series, having read them all in quick succession.

I'm sure my mum will enjoy it though.

Sugar Rush by Julie Burchill was excellent; not sure I'd recommend it to a young teenager though.

All the way through the book I had a disconcerting vision of her hunched over her word processer like a fat old witch getting all worked up by the lasbian teenage antics she describes.

Good book all the same and I much prefer her to her ex husband, Tony Parsons.

Week 13:

As I was on holiday in beautiful Lisbon I cheated a bit this week:

I read the Lisbon Lonely Planet Guide; very useful indeed.

I especially enjoyed reading the maps; didn't stop me getting delightfully lost though.

I also read Giving Up The Ghost by Hilary Mantel as I am lending it to a work colleague soon.

I didn't like the book at all; I enjoyed the childhood memoir part but then instead of finding out more about her relationship with ghosts, how she writes or what she got up to in Africa, the book became a litany of her illnesses instead.

Poor thing, she has had a terrible time at the hands of doctors but I'm not sure I wanted to know all about it.

She had a big falling out with her mother and stepfather early on in her adult life but they were obviously getting on better later on; how did this family reunion happen? I was frustrated not to know and why hasn't she tracked down her real father?

Perhaps she plans to write about her family and her time in Botswana in another book; I hope so anyway.

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