Two more for the springboard reading list. Jeff suggested Ishmael Beah’s A Long Way Gone, Memoir of a Boy soldier. There’s an interesting controversy about this. The newspaper The Australian claims that the events described in the book happen two years later than Beah says they did. This would mean he was fifteen, not thirteen. [...]
Archive for the ‘books’ Category
More Congo reading
Posted in Congo, Fiction, Springboard Reading, books, literature, non-fiction, reading, war on January 24, 2008 | 3 Comments »
Live and Learn
Posted in Congo, News, Springboard Reading, books, reading, war on January 23, 2008 | 2 Comments »
When I started the Springboard Reading project, I didn’t really expect it to bear fruit so quickly. About 3 weeks into 2008, I know exponentially more about the Democratic Republic of the Congo. That isn’t hard – in honesty, I didn’t know a lot about it before that anyway. Anyway, today I read this:
A [...]
Springboard Reading II: The River Congo
Posted in Springboard Reading, books, history, reading on January 15, 2008 | 4 Comments »
So we’re off on the 2008 Reading Challenge. I’m off the springboard and it’s juddering in the air behind me as I plunge into the pool for the first length. Following on from The Mission Song dealing with the bloody truth behind geopolitics as it influences the Congo, today I picked up Blood River: A [...]
Springboard Reading, or Chain Letters.
Posted in Fiction, Springboard Reading, blogging, books, literature, reading on January 14, 2008 | 10 Comments »
While I was reading last night (The Mission Song, John le Carre) I daydreamed my way into a reading project for the year. Springboard reading.
In essence, it goes like this. Once I have read a book, I pick up one of the things touched on in it and follow it up with the next book [...]
“Happy New Year!” she expectorated.
Posted in books, literature, reading on January 3, 2008 | 1 Comment »
Tomorrow will be the fourth day of January, and I’m beginning to wonder when people will stop saying “Happy new year” to me. Still, mustn’t grumble. I’m trying to no longer take a perverse delight in being grumpy, but it ain’t easy!
And as for this New Year’s Resolution business – as good as it is [...]
Furst things First
Posted in Fiction, books, life, literature, reading, work, tagged Alan Furst, espionage, historical fiction, Night Soldiers on October 18, 2007 | 3 Comments »
I’m still reading Night Soldiers, and loving it. It’s becoming one of those books that make you hope your bus will be a bit late so you finish the chapter. In some ways it is dull, but I’m still hooked on it. I’ll rephrase that: I don’t find it dull at all, but if someone [...]
Quote for the Day
Posted in books, life, quotes, war on October 16, 2007 | Leave a Comment »
Civil war is not unlike a fight between lovers: each side knows precisely how to infuriate the other.
– Night Soldiers, Alan Furst.
Alan Furst and the Likely Lads
Posted in Fiction, France, books, literature, proverbs, writing on October 16, 2007 | 1 Comment »
There used to be a sit-com made in England called The Likely Lads, about two guys who had a bit of difficulty leaving their past behind them and growing up. In one classic episode, they have a bet with someone. They have to get through a whole day without hearing the result of the England [...]
Book list
Posted in art, books, literature on October 15, 2007 | 2 Comments »
I’m ashamed to say I sneakily stole this from someone else’s blog because I found it interesting.
Bold what you have read, italicize books you’ve started but couldn’t finish, and strike through books you hated. Add an asterisk* to those you’ve read more than once. Underline those on your TBR list. [Aside: I'm not sure who [...]
Current Read
Posted in books, literature, tagged anc, apartheid, black consciousness, donald woods, south africa, steve biko on October 3, 2007 | Leave a Comment »
I’ve just started Donald Woods’ biography Biko, from which the film Cry Freedom was made. It is an interesting read so far, although I’ve just begun. It isn’t so much memoir or biography, at least at this stage. It starts with a potted history of South Africa since European settlement and runs through the [...]