Make sure you pay special attention to the pictures. Often with comics I find I read the text and just glance at the pictures. But there's stuff in the images that they don't spell out in the dialogue.Originally Posted by Spiffy
Make sure you pay special attention to the pictures. Often with comics I find I read the text and just glance at the pictures. But there's stuff in the images that they don't spell out in the dialogue.Originally Posted by Spiffy
It's a fascinating book Smithy and covers a lot of ground, including the birth of the idea behind the Orient Express and the famous company behind it, the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits which was founded by Georges Nagelmackers.
It also has quite a detailed description of the trains "first trip" which left Paris on October the 4th 1883. Its real first trip was actually on October the 10th 1882, but this trip in 1883 was made a real PR coup by Nagelmackers having invited two of the periods most famous journalists; Edmond About and Henri Opper de Blowitz.
The books is full of great stuff and is really worth reading...though i'm pretty sure it has been out of print for a few years now![]()
“There is no such thing as bad weather, only inappropriate clothing.” - Sir Ranulph Fiennes
http://www.expeditionoz.com
Afraid I haven;t seen the "Hornblower" series Locktown, but to me Aubrey is more of an "English Rose" physically as well - I always picture someone in the Boris Johnson school of appearance. (Big, beefy, fair-haired rugby type)Originally Posted by LocktownDog
I couldn't help but feel they'd tried to pretty it up a bit. Tom Pullings' scar being (as Preserved Killick would say) by way of a case in point - in the books he's fairly comprehensively scarred, what has he got in the film, a little cosmetic stripe across the eyebrow.
What's your take on the Bolitho books?
I have heard this was pretty good.Originally Posted by Lancealot
"I have no words.
My voice is in my sword."
I am reading the Camolud Chronicles by Jack White. A good historical fiction series for Roman/Dark age nerds.
"I have no words.
My voice is in my sword."
I'm currently reading the Sewing Circle. Its about women from golden age hollywood who loved other women. It is quite interesting.
A Suitable Boy, by Vikram Seth. 300 pages in, just over 1/5 done. Unlike when I read War and Peace, I'm having no trouble keeping the dozens of characters straight. Not sure how the author manages that, but it's brilliant. Even better, there's not been a single uninteresting page so far. Magnificent. I'm in love.
www.christinefletcherbooks.com
I'm going crazy. I'm standing here solidly on my own two hands and going crazy.
The Man Who Flew the Memphis Belle: Memoir of a WWII Bomber Pilot by Robert Morgan. Started it last night and just love it.
Moonfleet by Falkner - I found it in a FREE box on someones front yard
The first half of the comic book is spectacular. I withhold comment on the second half.Originally Posted by Spiffy
I'd love to name a pet 'Rorschach,' but my childhood Great Dane was already named that. Now I have to name a pet THE COMEDIAN.
Hey, that's okay w/me; baby, I don't care.
It's Okay With Me: 1970's Movie Reviews
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