What's the best book you've ever read(ripper related or not)let's see if my favourite pops up on here.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
best book you've read
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostWhat's the best book you've ever read(ripper related or not)let's see if my favourite pops up on here.The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
-
Difficult choice, and definitely not Ripper-related...
There really are so many...but fiction-wise probably Lord of the Rings which, (after the Hobbit at age 7), I came late to, and first read at the age of 17 - I've read it at least twice a year ever since, and still find something new in it every now and again
Non-Fiction would be an ecuminical matter...
All the best
Dave
Comment
-
You do realize that for a lot of us, favorite books run in the hundreds right? Like I'm not even sure I could squeak by with a top 10.
All the best
Dave
Comment
-
Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostSpot on Errata. My spouse has, down the years, grown to hate my books, and as a result of successive weedings, I'm down to my last two or three thousand (cow)...nonetheless I continue to smuggle in the odd volume or six...She's older than I am and it's the least I can do in terms of keeping her mentally alert and active...
All the best
DaveThree things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
Comment
-
If I had to pick one.. it would be...
Harold Gimblett..Tormented genius of cricket
I read and bought the first edition many many years ago and have read it from cover to cover well over 100 times. Being a cricket lover, it attracted me. Seing the psychological aspect of the torment inside a man's mind, fascinated me.
Simply the best thing I have ever read.
PhilChelsea FC. TRUE BLUE. 💙
Justice for the 96 = achieved
Accountability? ....
Comment
-
No favourite as such, but a few I've read more than once:
Stalingrad; Of Mice and Men; I know Why The Caged Bird Sings; Six Weeks; A Berlin Family; Bird Song; The English.
For any World War One enthusiasts, six weeks was the life expectancy of an English junior officer during the war, and so the book is titled Six Weeks; and is a look at the ideals of the public schools and their pupils' role and experience during the war.
For anyone interested in the development of England, The English (Jeremy Paxman) is a look at a peculiar people who are for the most part unlike any other people on this planet in character and outlook. The sort of people born to compromise: the Scots and Germans had a reformation; we had a falling out with the Pope on practical grounds rather than ideas. A people who guard privacy like our lives depend upon it and are fiercely independent. For example, I'm in the US at the moment and their idea of customer service is coming to your table every 5 minutes to ask if everything is fine. As an Englishman, this is not customer service; it's being a nuisance and it's wanton disregard for my space. Surely the idea is to make sure you're on hand and I'll let you know when I need something? Only the English could have developed a sport such as cricket and only the English could have developed a religion where the ministers recommend that you go to church now and again and providing you keep your nose clean everything will pan out fine - light on dogma; heavy on choice. It's an interesting book and a thinly veiled celebration of our traditions and outlook on life, and Paxman undoubtedly is from the school of: "to be born an Englishman is to win the lottery of life". English people may be surprised by the influence of the Church of England on our character - a case well argued by Paxman.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View PostNo favourite as such, but a few I've read more than once:
Stalingrad; Of Mice and Men; I know Why The Caged Bird Sings; Six Weeks; A Berlin Family; Bird Song; The English.
For any World War One enthusiasts, six weeks was the life expectancy of an English junior officer during the war, and so the book is titled Six Weeks; and is a look at the ideals of the public schools and their pupils' role and experience during the war.
For anyone interested in the development of England, The English (Jeremy Paxman) is a look at a peculiar people who are for the most part unlike any other people on this planet in character and outlook. The sort of people born to compromise: the Scots and Germans had a reformation; we had a falling out with the Pope on practical grounds rather than ideas. A people who guard privacy like our lives depend upon it and are fiercely independent. For example, I'm in the US at the moment and their idea of customer service is coming to your table every 5 minutes to ask if everything is fine. As an Englishman, this is not customer service; it's being a nuisance and it's wanton disregard for my space. Surely the idea is to make sure you're on hand and I'll let you know when I need something? Only the English could have developed a sport such as cricket and only the English could have developed a religion where the ministers recommend that you go to church now and again and providing you keep your nose clean everything will pan out fine - light on dogma; heavy on choice. It's an interesting book and a thinly veiled celebration of our traditions and outlook on life, and Paxman undoubtedly is from the school of: "to be born an Englishman is to win the lottery of life". English people may be surprised by the influence of the Church of England on our character - a case well argued by Paxman.Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
Comment
-
Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostSpot on Errata. My spouse has, down the years, grown to hate my books, and as a result of successive weedings, I'm down to my last two or three thousand (cow)...nonetheless I continue to smuggle in the odd volume or six...She's older than I am and it's the least I can do in terms of keeping her mentally alert and active...
All the best
Dave
My favorite books are often bad books. Though not all. Any list would start with Shakespeare. The Hero and The Crown, The Red Tent, Illusions, Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, The Shannara series, The Doomsday Book, Good Omens, The Daughter of Time, A Wrinkle in Time, The Last of The Really Great Whangdoodles, Arsenic And Old Lace, Beowulf, Dante's Inferno, Paradise Lost, Mists of Avalon, The Actor's Nightmare, and that just fiction, and thats also just the books I can see from where I am sitting.The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
Comment
-
Top five fiction:
Complete Sherlock Holmes Canon
"A Tale of Two Cities"
"Madame Bovary"
"1984"
"The Secret Agent"
Top five history
"The Conquest of Mexico" (Prescott)
"Montcalm and Wolfe" (Parkman)
"The Proud Tower" (Tuchman)
"A Night to Remember (Lord)
The Complete Jack the Ripper (Rumbelow)
Biographies
"John Paul Jones" (Morison)
"Warwick the Kingmaker" (Kendall)
"Andew Jackson" (Remini)
"Jefferson" (Dumas Malone)
Essays
Collected (George Orwell/Eric Blair)
Comment
Comment