there is constant evidence here that you cannot spell - now you claim you can read - is that braille by any chance?
there are so many wonderful books around and treasured I wonder when we really have the time for that boring internet??
Still black beauty we keep falling asleep while reading it, either very tired or Grace has a very soothing way of reading.
I have just been given a ‘tree’ book from my daughter. She does this as she knows that I like James Patterson stories.
It’s the latest, Cross Justice.
I feel a traitor as it’s not a kindle read.
I am reading a non-fiction called Why People Believe Weird Things by Michael Shermer
Thank you, Silver Tabby, I will copy this list and take it with me when I go searching for her books, I’ve started doing this lately. Always helps to read in the correct order.
Today I sat and started, and not long finished, Mr Gandy’s Grand Tour, by Alan Tirchmarsh.
I have just started Iris Grace by Arabella Carter-Johnson about a young girl with Autism.
Read: The Shepherd’s Song - Betsy Duffey & Laurie Myers - read 3 times
The Award - Danielle Steele
Safe House by Chris Ewan.
Set in the Isle of Man…a good page turner… haven’t read this author before, has anyone else come across him?
I have just started reading a true story called:
‘My 50s’. Its about a young boy growing up in the 50s in East London in a Prefab with his Parents.
I´ve just started reading “Jeremy & Amy” by Jeremy Keeling. Basically it´s about how Jeremy Keeling adopted Amy, an abandoned baby Orang-Utan, how she pulled him from the wreckage of a car crash, and how he went on to start Monkey World in Dorset.
I´m only a little way through the book, but so far it´s very interesting.
Im reading this book now …The Ghost of Christmas Paws…its really good fun and very lighthearted festive fare reading
http://media.theworks.co.uk/images/9780749019068_Z.jpg
[I][B]It’s a week before Christmas and Hettie and Tilly set out on a very dangerous case for The No. 2 Feline Detective Agency. Lady Eloise Crabstock-Singe has summoned them to the Cornish coast to solve the mystery of Christmas Paws: a servant cat who haunts the family manor intent on killing off all of the Crabstocks.
Should they put their trust in Absalom and Lamorna Tweek? Will Saffron Bunn’s cooking get any better? And will Hettie and Tilly get home safely in time for Christmas dinner?[/B][/I]
Christmas books have come out reading A Cotswold Christmas by Kate Hewitt.
Just finished “Bright’s Passage” by Josh Ritter.
Lovely book.
It’s interesting because it gives an often neglected perspective of American soldiers in the first world war, going home to the poverty in the wilds of the Appalachian mountains.
“Bright’s Passage shines with a compressed lyricism that recalls Ray Bradbury in his prime…This is the work of a gifted novelist…” – Stephen King, The New York Times Book Review
Josh Ritter’s first novel is a wondrous, suspenseful, and uniquely affecting story of the journey taken by a father and his infant son.
Henry Bright is newly returned to West Virginia from the battlefields of the First World War. Grief struck by the death of his young wife and unsure of how to care for the infant son she left behind, Bright is soon confronted by the destruction of the only home he’s ever known. His only hope for safety is the angel who has followed him to Appalachia from the trenches of France and who now promises to protect him and his son.
Together, Bright and his newborn, along with a cantankerous goat and the angel guiding them, make their way through a landscape ravaged by forest fire toward an uncertain salvation, haunted by the abiding nightmare of his experiences in the war and shadowed by his dead wife’s father, the Colonel, and his two brutal sons.
At times harrowing, at times funny, and always possessed by the sheer gorgeousness and unique imagination that have made Josh Ritter’s songs beloved to so many, this is the debut of a virtuoso fiction writer. (less)
I’ve got 2 on the go at the moment. Can’t be bothered to go in the other room and get the titles right, but one is on the benefits of Meditation, and the other is a novel about a girl who lost her husband, and how horrible her mother-in-law was to her.
edited to add: Having read a little further into this book I find myself quite amazed to find Jeremy Keeling is from the family who kept a little zoo in Ashover village, not far from where I was brought up. I remember going to this little zoo, Pan’s Garden, it was called I think. It was appalling, the animals were kept in terrible conditions, it was extremely dirty and very smelly. I think, not 100% sure, it was closed down by the Council, although the book doesn’t mention that, Jeremy just says it closed.
I didn’t know the family, just the zoo, and that was a long time ago.
I have just finished Saints of the Shadow Bible by Ian Rankin. Quite a recent one but 49p in the charity shop, can’t go wrong! After a quick wipe with anti bacterial spray…
Being a huge fan of Monkey World, I too have read this.
The Widow by Fiona Barton.
Ooooooooooooooooooooo :shock::shock::shock: