I'm on an Agatha Christie kick. They're like potato chips;you can't stop reading them. BTW, Guinness Book of World Records has her sales pegged at 2 BILLION copies.....![]()
Stripped of the cunning artifices of the tailor, and standing forth in the garb of Eden - what a sorry set of round-shouldered, spindle-shanked, crane-necked varlets would civilized men appear. ~ Herman Melville
After putting it down for a while, just finished An Assembly Such As This, the first of the Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman trilogy. Well done and enjoyable. Just started The Winter Queen, by Boris Akunin, the author who is a living legend in Russia. It's an easy, interesting read, and includes some great vignettes concerning late-19th century Moscow life.
1. John 3:16, 17
2. Dress to please yourself, but do take others into some consideration.
-Lee
Both of those two are my favorite of his work, by the High Window and after its not as good. I really like complicated nature of plot and all the craczy characters from Farewell, My Lovely. In particular the sequence where he goes to Amthor and then ends up in the dodgy hospital. Just brillant I thought.
"As a kid, I used to abide by the judgment of Brooks Brothers in New York. I think I'm away from that now."
-Fred Astaire
Yes I liked the Dick Powell version. I should re-watch the Robert Mitchum one I've not seen it for a long time.
"As a kid, I used to abide by the judgment of Brooks Brothers in New York. I think I'm away from that now."
-Fred Astaire
I'm reading Robert Goolrick's Heading Out to Wonderful. It's set in the postwar years in small town Virginia, and a somewhat mysterious young man, Charlie, has chosen to settle in a small town in Virginia, and neither the townspeople nor the reader knows why (at least not 102 pages in, in any case). There's a hint or two that trouble might be brewing, but until it does, I'm enjoy the small-town atmosphere, the author's way with prose and his interesting characters.
One such character, Claudie, is an eccentric woman who lives on the edge of town and is something of a miracle worker when it comes to dressmaking; there's also a striking young women (I imagine her being played by Scarlett Johansson) who was raised deep in the hills and was virtually sold to the richest man in town by her impoverished father. This character, Sylvan, longs to live the life she sees depicted in the movies. To that end, she has lost her hillbilly dialect by listening for hours on end to the radio ("The Loves of Helen Trent" is a particularly strong influence on her).
I suspect Sylvan may prove to be Charlie's downfall (or he hers), but that's only conjecture.
Anyway, there's lots of period detail and the author has a literary (but not overbearingly so) style that is pleasing. I recommend it as at least a library title, and it might even be worth purchasing to some here.
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Last edited by skyvue; 07-03-2012 at 05:39 PM.
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A C. Auguste Dupin trilogy by Poe. The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Mystery of Marie Roget and The Purloined Letter.
A good primer on ratiocination.