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I know the feeling, bibliophile that I am.
Interesting selection of books there and I'd imagine that you know a bit about the world Andy McNab writes about too, @thelivingroyale.
Two Lisa Gardiner novels as advised to me since I do enjoy Tess Gerritsen books.
One Richard Stark "Parker" novel
And a batch of historybooks ranging from Egypt, Babylon, WOI, Venice, the British Isles, Willem van Oranje, Tutankhamen, Byzantium, Runcimans' Crusades, Jerusalem & Maureen O'Hara.
I recently finished Baldacci's new one, The Hit. It was fine.
But after reading I Am Pilgrim, I am now wanting a sequel to that impatiently.
I am re-reading it, too. The writing is just so very good.
Also re-reading Jac Weller's historical account (nonfiction) of Waterloo.
History books, especially hardcover, that tickle my fancy I always buy so I can read them later.
When SOLO & I Am Pilgrim come out in paperback, those too.
So as always when in Berlin I'll be taking TLD (you can't beat reading it at a bar or cafe near the Checkpoint Charlie museum followed by a midnight stroll along the reconstructed section of the death strip on Bernauer Street where you can indulge your 272 fantasies) and for Helsinki I guess I should give Icebreaker another crack as I recall the early chapters have quite a lot set in Helsinki.
In addition I have the kindle loaded up with:
'The God Delusion' - Dawkins (always fun)
'The Man Without A Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin' - Masha Gessen (alas written before he made a fool of Obama in the Washington Post and was voted most powerful man in the world by Forbes)
'Inverting The Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics' - Jonathon Wilson (supposed to be a pretty seminal work which I really should've read by now).
'Operation Eichmann' - Zvi Aharoni (probably keep this one in my bag till I leave Germany as they're a bit funny about anything to do with Nazis).
If Solo is down to a fiver or so at the airport then I might consider getting it. Emphasis on might though.
On the fiction pile, I have The Honorable Schoolboy, Smiley's People, Conversation in the Cathedral and The Lord of the Rings (I've read it in Spanish but I have always wanted to read it on the original language.)
I also have a very interesting book on cryptography which I'm saving for the holidays.
That book was depressingly bad.
Good set of them at the beginning, then degrading after that, though GoldenEye and COLD are both good.
Then you should continue on with the rest of his Star Wars novels. He's the only EU author with any sort of quality consistency.
Thanks for the tip!
Some people consider Allegiance to be disappointing, but I actually liked it. It had some good moments, despite the fact that Grand Admiral Thrawn wasn't in it. I still need to purchase and read Choices of One and Scoundrels.
What, you reading a John Gardner Bond novel, Ice. Did I read that right?! You really need to re-read his Never Send Flowers again before you write it off so damningly!
Easy old son. Just because I'm reading a bit of Gardner there's no need to think I'll be stopping to your own depraved base standards.
I've always said early Gardner is decent - although Icebreaker is the weakest of the first half dozen - before they drop off a cliff after WLOD.
So I guess that means NSF lies at the bottom of said cliff in a tangle of shattered bone. Where it belongs along with Cold and Seafire IMO.
I've got NLF (argubably Gardner's best) which I may take with me on my jaunt instead as the more I think about it the more I remember Icebreaker as being a ploddingly dull series of scenes of people sitting around talking in hotel rooms and tedious double and triple crosses. I'd only really be reading it for the stuff in Helsinki seeing as I'm there but I don't think Gardner does the travelogue stuff anywhere near as well as Ian.
To be fair, that's fairly accurate on IB (and TMFB). Even the villain von Gloda is very weak and doesn't do very much. Sort of the literary version of Karl Stromberg, in fact.
The War of 1812 (J. Mahon)
The Power of The Prophetic Blessing (J. Hagee)
SilverFin - Yong James Bond book #1 (C. Higson)
The Old Man and The Sea (E. Hemingway)
And lined up for 2014:
American Lion: Andrew Jackson (J. Meacham)
Lone Star Nation (H. Brands)
Abraham Lincoln and Civil War America (W. Gienapp)
Confederates In The Attic (T. Horwitz)
Treasure Island (R.L. Stevenson)
Colonel Sun (K. Amis)
Ball Four (J. Bouton)
The Spy Who Came In From The Cold (J. Le Carre)
The Vampire Affair (D. McDaniel)
The Fountainhead (A. Rand)
Not sure that's the wisest course of action old man!!! :-)) Good luck with NSF.
I think youre actually doing Stromberg a disservice Draggers - Von Gloda is an awful villain. Although I haven't read it for getting on for 20 years doesn't he only have about two scenes? And even then is really just a pantomime neo Nazi. I'd go as far to say David Dragonpol smashes him out of the park - which as you know is me going right out on a limb!
I think that Von Gloda only has about three scenes from memory. And I'll be happy to give continuation novel advice to @Creasy47 when the time comes.
Just buy any book, I mean any book, any cover, any print. Just buy! The day you read Fleming your life will transform.
I've read his first two and I own the third, I just get OCD with a pattern like that. It'll bug me. But, I think I have about four or five of the Bond films on blu-ray that aren't part of the 50th Anniversary, and their spines are different, and I deal with that, so maybe I'll dive in and get whatever I see. These black and white Fleming covers I see look so tacky and generic, though.
I've read 'The Husband' and 'Life Expectancy' and loved them both. I don't believe I have either of them anymore, but I may have to re-read them if I get around to them. I also have his two 'Frankenstein' novels.
He has some scifi too.