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What Book or Kindle Book are you reading ??

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Pammy51

Pammy51 Report 25 Jan 2015 15:58

Just finished reading Longbourn by Jo Baker. It's set around the events of Pride and Prejudice but concerns the lives of those belowstairs. I found it very entertaining as well a giving new insights into P and P.

Mersey

Mersey Report 24 Jan 2015 14:39

~~~~s to Ann, I think it was me that was a bit slow at the time of reading :-0 :-D <3

~~~~~s to all readers :-D :-D <3

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 21 Jan 2015 17:09

~~~~~ Mersey. I wouldn't say it was slow, more that she puts a lot of the historical detail in that takes time to digest. Or..... maybe it is my age and I like slow :-D :-D I am actually glad I am reading this one in paperback form as I think I might get a bit confused if it was on kindle as I do like to re-read the historical references. :-)

Mersey

Mersey Report 21 Jan 2015 16:33

~~~~s Hi Ann, I have read that one.....very enjoyable but for me abit slow :-S mind you dont think I was in the right frame of mind when I read it LOL.......

This is what I am starting to read and talked about Emma

The Headmasters Wife - Thomas Christopher Greene

Review
A truly remarkable novel, I read the second half of The Headmaster's Wife with my mouth open, my jaw having dropped at the end of the first half. Thomas Christopher Greene knows how to hook a reader and land him --Richard Russo, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of EMPIRE FALLS An accomplished and artful storyteller, Greene has surprises in store as he unspools a plot that becomes as poignant as it is unpredictable --Wally Lamb, New York Times bestselling author of THE HOUR I FIRST BELIEVED I devoured this book. Both psychologically complex and wickedly fast paced --Julianna Baggott, bestselling author of PURE
Product Description

Arthur Winthrop is a middle-aged headmaster at an elite prep school in Vermont. When he is arrested for an act that is incredibly out of character, the strait-laced, married headmaster confesses to a much more serious crime.

Arthur reveals that he has had a passionate affair with a scholarship student called Betsy Pappas. But Betsy is a fickle and precocious teenager. When she switches her attentions to a classmate, Arthur's passion for Betsy turns, by degrees, into something far darker. Now Arthur must tell the truth about what happened to Betsy. But can Arthur's version of events be trusted - or is the reality much more complex and unnerving?

The Headmaster's Wife is a dark, sinuous and compelling novel about marriage and obsessive love.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 21 Jan 2015 15:15

I am really enjoying Sophia's Secrets, besides being a book told on two levels, an author who when she starts to write and chooses one of her Scottish ancestors as her heroine finds she is writing without thinking because she is being led by characters from the past. Set on the East Coast of Scotland it also covers a lot of Scottish history concerning the Jacobites and the Union (or not) with England.

It is well written and enjoyable and covers a part of history I was not too sure about. So educational too. I am about halfway through it.

Mersey

Mersey Report 21 Jan 2015 15:10

~~~~~s to Emma, im just going to take a look and I may follow suit and download too :-D <3

'Emma'

'Emma' Report 21 Jan 2015 14:30

Just purchased Anne's Song by Anne Nolan £2.62
for my kindle.

'Emma'

'Emma' Report 16 Jan 2015 12:51

Have finished the King's Sister by A OBrian.

Elizabeth of Lancaster...1363-1426

At the age of seventeen she was married to an 8year old but, that marriage
was annulled six years later when she was seduced and fell pregnant by
John Holland of Exeter whose half brother was RichardII.
John was executed in 1400 for conspiring during the Epiphany Rising.
That same year she married Sir John Cornwall.

A good read and if you are into history a must for you.
The highs and lows of this woman's life is worth your time :-)

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 16 Jan 2015 09:55

I have just started Sophia's Secret by Susanna Kearsley. (I loved the Rose garden and Season of storms by her) This one looks as though it will be a good read. Set in Scotland with plenty of links to the past and flash backs.

Mersey

Mersey Report 15 Jan 2015 23:10

Hi to all our lovely readers <3 <3

I have read The Winter Guest - Pam Jenoff kindle £2.39

I really enjoyed it as I have all her others...well worth a read

Love will tear them apart…

Helena and Ruth Nowak are like chalk and cheese: one staunchly outspoken and independent, the other gentle and caring. Caught up in the struggle of Nazi occupied Poland, the sisters have bound together and created an enviable bond that can’t be broken. Or so they thought…

When Helena discovers a Jewish Allied paratrooper, wounded but alive, she risks the safety of herself and her family to hide him. As her feelings for the solider grow deeper, she finds her loyalties torn.

Outraged at this impulsive choice that endangers them all, mild-mannered Ruth finds herself becoming increasingly jealous of Helena.

As tensions are sparked, a singular act of betrayal unleashes a chain of events that will endanger them all and reverberate for decades to come.

From hardship and heartbreak, this gut-wrenching tale puts to the test the ties of sisterhood in the shadow of WW2.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 13 Jan 2015 17:44

I have just read Love and Loss by Alexandra Sage, the sequel to Love and Lemoncello. A good book for curling up with in the warm, not very heavy, a romance with the background of Sorrento.

'Emma'

'Emma' Report 13 Jan 2015 17:25

Just downloaded The King's Curse by Philippa Gregory
onto my kindle priced £4.74.

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 11 Jan 2015 17:16

I've finished The Book of Gold Leaves at last. It took me a while to get through it and I've put my review on the Genes thread.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 10 Jan 2015 14:58

Not read that one Pammy but I think I may have got it on my bookshelf.
Just read Rosebush the Greaders book and have added a message to the last vote thread.

Pammy51

Pammy51 Report 10 Jan 2015 13:59

Just finished reading 'Paris' by Edward Rutherfurd in 'real' book form. A bit of a block buster (as are all of his books) but very interesting. It tells the story of six families, their descendants and their links to Paris from the 1200s to the 1960s. Not quite so linear as his other books, weaving bits of the story from different eras together.

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 4 Jan 2015 12:55

nudging this thread up for Bridget.

SuffolkVera

SuffolkVera Report 1 Jan 2015 12:30

Thank you Mersey and a Happy New Year to you too.

After Mau mentioned Diary of a Nobody on here I remembered hearing quite a lot of it on the radio (I think it was done on Woman's Hour), but I had never read it so I have had a go at that. Dated but quite amusing.

I've also read Jodi Taylor's A Trail Through Time, which is one of the Chronicles of St Mary's series. As I think I've said before these are fantasy books involving time travel. There is usually plenty of action but this one didn't seem quite so frantic as the earlier ones and there was more development of the characters of the two main people, Max and Leon. These books are best read in the right order as each follows on from the one before. I really enjoy them.

I am now part way through The Book of Gold Leaves and will put a review on the relevant Genes thread when I've finished it.

Good reading in 2015 everyone. :-D

Mersey

Mersey Report 31 Dec 2014 22:49

To all Kindle Tarts & Bookworms <3 <3 Happy New Year <3 <3

Happy reading and long may it continue :-D <3

May your coming year be filled
with magic and dreams and good madness
I hope you read some fine books and kiss
someone who thinks your wonderful
Sing and live as only you can, and somewhere
in the next year you surprise yourself with
happiness

<3

+++DetEcTive+++

+++DetEcTive+++ Report 29 Dec 2014 16:37

Sounds interesting Emma.

Over Christmas I read Elizabeth is Missing, the latest from the GR book club. It was a good story and as suspected, also sad. My review is on the dedicated thread. No spoilers!

I've given up with one of the kindle freebies - Resident Fear (Fog on the Tyne) by Hylton Smith. The UK had withdrawn from the EU , the police force is more concerned with the political macinations of the New Order than solving the murder of a philanthropic(sp?) biogeneticist owner of a large company.
In an effort to explain the background, the author turns the narrative into lectures. It might 'read' better on the printed page rather than a tablet screen.

Thank goodness I didn't pay for it!

'Emma'

'Emma' Report 29 Dec 2014 16:03

At the moment I am reading The King's Sister by Anne O'Brian
on my Kindle.
It tells the story of Elizabeth of Lancaster, daughter of John of Gaunt.