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One problem is that people like Hardy invented what we now think of as clichés :-)

One problem is that people like Hardy invented what..."
Tee hee!





I'm a big fan of (most of) Ann Cleeves books - just love that sense of place and the down to earth characters.

Also have read lots of lovely books... and a few disappointing ones. Elly Griffiths The Lantern Men was good, and I listened every day to her reading the first in the Brighton Murders on Facebook, which was a delight, as I hadn't really got into it when I started to read it myself. So, finished The Zig Zag Girl, and The Blood Card which was a little too far-fetched I thought. Am also reading Kassia St Clair's The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History after hearing her talk on Zoom. Fascinating! Who knew the Vikings' sails were made of wool?!

How bonkers that Vikings sails were made of wool, you wouldn't think it would work

Remember that wool varies, you get carpet wools as well as wools used for clothing.
Also if you don't wash it much before weaving it still contains the lanolin and therefore repels water

and the Old Norse sheep apparently had a high lanolin content in their wool. The weaving itself was complex, but to 'plug the gaps' the sail cloth was smeared with fat or fish oil then coated with hot beef tallow... yummy. Of course, they stank!




Just started Neither Here nor There: Travels in Europe by Bill Bryson (for some light relief).


All 1,204 pages, Stuart. Some of it was utterly tedious. But I did enjoy most of the story. And as a left-wing ranter myself, I really had my eyes opened as to why people might want to rant in the opposite direction.
I talk about this in my review, if you're interested!
/review/show...


Carmen Varricchio's Doll Junk: Collectible and Crazy Fashions from the '70s and '80s - /review/show/3842073524
Lucy Worsley's A Very British Murder - /review/show/3764508621

Oh there is a huge community of adults who collect dolls and their clothing etc Jim - you would be surprised!

Tanith Lee Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer - reviewed at /review/show/3396613902
Tanith Lee Companions on the Road (edition also includes The Winter Players) - reviewed - /review/show/3396615203
and Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes - reviewed - /review/show/3860718703.

Oh there is a huge community of adults who collect dolls and their clothing etc Jim - yo..."
I remember many many years ago somebody writing about it in the Readers Digest :-) Could be forty or more years ago now.
I met a chap who collected guide badges and pennants
In the corner of our yard we have a pile of bricks, each entirely individual, stored there by a friend who whilst he doesn't collect bricks, does pick up unusual ones on his travels and will sell them on to collectors :-)

Just started The Midnight Library by Matt Haig, which I'm loving.


James Herriott is good. When I read his stories I could recognise people in them. Not that I knew the real people but because so many of the types are similar :-)


Just started Glaswegian detective novel, Laidlaw by William McIlvanney.



Oh there is a huge community of adults who collect dolls and their clothing ...In the corner of our yard we have a pile of bricks, each entirely individual, stored there by a friend who whilst he doesn't collect bricks, does pick up unusual ones on his travels and will sell them on to collectors :-)"
Tee hee

The Spirit War - reviewed /review/show/3544760282
and
Spirit's End - reviewed
/review/show/3544760560

The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: or the Murder at Road Hill House and reviewed it
/review/show/3868978643



I finished The Thursday Murder Club, it was good but I won't be rushing out to buy the second. I started The Queen of the Night and I'm really enjoying it so far. I also read The Crucible and now I want to watch all the Salem Witch Trial programmes and see the film


and
first in the Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris, Dead Until Dark - review - /review/show/3896946433





I'm not sure that times have changed all that much though Desley... not when it comes to the perceptions of women anyway. I watched the documentary on the Yorkshire Ripper after reading it and it was scary how similarly the victims were treated.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Complaints (other topics)First Fate (other topics)
Klaus Barbie, Butcher of Lyons (other topics)
Blitzed: Drugs in Nazi Germany (other topics)
Feral Fate (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lucy Clarke (other topics)David Baldacci (other topics)
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Jeffrey Archer (other topics)
Jessica Payne (other topics)
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Please let us know what you've been reading/are just about to read. A place for recommendations without a proper review, as such.
NOT the place to push your own book - there are plenty of options to do that elsewhere