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Matthew Chartrand
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Joined: 17 June 2007
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Posted: 12 April 2017 at 5:17pm | IP Logged | 1 post reply



 The Android's Dream by John Scalzi.
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Thom Price
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L’Homme Diabolique

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Posted: 12 April 2017 at 6:48pm | IP Logged | 2 post reply

STEPHEN KING'S IT; geez, it's wordy.  Every time some tension or horror starts to build, King goes into a 500 word detour about some tertiary character.  I'm skimming a lot, which I seldom do.
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Didier Yvon Paul Fayolle
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Posted: 12 April 2017 at 7:54pm | IP Logged | 3 post reply

"Ghosts from our Past' by Erin Gilbert, Abby L. Yates
and Andrew Shaffer

Funny. I can hear Melissa Mc Carthy in my head when I
read her character's parts.
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Stéphane Garrelie
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Posted: 13 April 2017 at 2:40pm | IP Logged | 4 post reply

I see on the previous page a mention of Red Harvest by Dashiell Hammeth.
JB will maybe say if he liked it; for me i read it last year and loved it. 
This book was also a favorite of Raymond Chandler.
The continental op, a recurring character in both Red Harvest (Moisson rouge), The Dain Curse (Sang maudit) and many other Hammeth short stories, is at the center of this novel and one of the reasons i am fond of this book.
Also: my edition too (Quatro Gallimard, french translation) contains his five novels [Red Havest, The Dain Curse, The Maltese Falcon (all those three i loved), The Glass Key (I'm not a fan and didn't even finish it), The Thin Man (Didn't start it yet, cause you know.. i wanted to finish the Glass Key first and instead i did read many other books)]

NB: I already knew the continental op from some short Hammeth stories i read in the late 90s. Amongst which, one where he falls...or jumps or is trown away from the Golden Gate Bridge and has to swim back to the shore. I think he was thrown inconscious from the Golden Gate Bridge and awakened by the cold water.... that or he was simply thrown from a boat in the San Francisco bay and i probably read too much Spider-Woman. 

NB #2: After a google check it seems to be from "The Tenth Clew", a short story from 1924 (so no Golden Gate Bridge and too much Spider-Woman for me) where he is "dumped in the San Francisco Bay".



Edited by Stéphane Garrelie on 13 April 2017 at 3:30pm
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Brad Brickley
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Posted: 14 April 2017 at 5:03pm | IP Logged | 5 post reply

It took me a couple of chapters to get into Fleming's voice for the book, but after that I cruised right through CASINO ROYALE.
Overall I enjoyed it quite a bit and it has one of the great last lines of any book I've read. 
I was gonna read IT next, but I'm tempted to read LIVE AND LET DIE next.  I'll probably go with IT and Bond afterward again.

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Peter Martin
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Posted: 14 April 2017 at 5:47pm | IP Logged | 6 post reply

The Bond books are a brisk, fun read. From Russia With Love, for me, was the high point of the series. Fleming knew his stuff but also didn't try to reach too far. The ingredients of lean thriller and jet-setting travelogue mixed with the frisson of upper-class lavishness against a backdrop of post-war austerity made for an attractive brew
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Thom Price
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Posted: 25 April 2017 at 10:54am | IP Logged | 7 post reply

I'm hit or miss with Stephen King, but I found IT to be an interminable slog; just intermittently interesting enough not make me reluctant to abandon the book, but so bloated and verbose that reading it was, at times, downright tedious.

Moving onto Carrie Fisher's THE PRINCESS DIARIST.  I had planned to read it a while back, but put it on hold after her death.  The book is witty and warm, but still surprisingly hard to read after her loss. 
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Robert Cosgrove
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Posted: 26 April 2017 at 5:44pm | IP Logged | 8 post reply

Hey, it's been a great week for Bill O'Reilly.  Sure, he had a few little problems, but no doubt he's ecstatic that I finally read one of his books with Martin Dugard.  In fact, I read two.  I read a lot of history-oriented books, but have avoided O'Reilly, in part because I tend to dislike "written with" books by celebs, and in part because, although I know O'Reilly's bright enough, I find his Ted Baxter persona a little off-putting.  But having just finished a MacArthur bio, and needing a book on disc for my morning commute, I tried Killing Japan and to my surprise, quite enjoyed it.  So much so that I picked up Killing Patton, which also seems good, although I know little about Patton beyond the movie and what I've picked up generally.  I'm now reading a thick, exhaustive "real" bio of Patton, so we'll see if my opinion changes when I'm done with that.
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Matthew Chartrand
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Posted: 26 April 2017 at 6:12pm | IP Logged | 9 post reply


  SATURN RUN by John Sanford and Ctein. Really good sci-fi novel from author of the Prey books.
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James Best
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Posted: 29 April 2017 at 9:15pm | IP Logged | 10 post reply

Continuing with book #5 in the Penn Cage series and the second novel in the "Mississippi trilogy": 
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Michael Penn
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Posted: 30 April 2017 at 6:16am | IP Logged | 11 post reply

Robertson Davies' THE CORNISH TRILOGY.

I'm only 1/3 through it's 1,134 pages, but I'm loving it. I've been meaning to read this for decades! It's just been sitting on my bookshelf all that time. Long, but excellent.
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Thom Price
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Posted: 30 April 2017 at 6:57am | IP Logged | 12 post reply

Neil Gaiman's ANANSI BOYS, a quasi-sequel to AMERICAN GODS.
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