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Sunday, December 2, 2007

Winter Reading for the Purple Book Club



Winter Reading for the Purple Book Club



Here is the list of suggested books.


Please make your 1st and 2nd choice in the comment box. I’ll collate the votes and put the most popular book choice on the Book Forum. Then we can all get reading!


A Hatful of Sky Terry Pratchet


Wacky magic and witchcraft. Fast moving and really good fun. You’ll either love it or hate it! Chosen by our beloved WW. (I have to put it on the list or she’ll poke me with her pointy stick! You have been warned.)



Armies of the Night Norman Mailer (non fiction novel)


Does history teach us anything? Mailer’s first hand account of the events surrounding the anti Vietnam War rally on the Pentagon in the Autumn of 1967. A good read to honour his memory.



Blind Assassin Margaret Attwood


A novel within a novel, a sister’s mysterious ‘accidental’ death , a science fiction story, a sailboat with a husband’s dead body - disparate elements woven together in a collage of ideas…. Have I given anything away?



Dress Your family in Corduroy and Denim Davis Sedaris


A collection of, off kilter, short stories about the author’s life growing up in the Southern States of the USA. Funny, poignant and sad.



Labyrinth Kate Moss


3 secrets, 2 women, 1 grail, complicated plot, intriguing story set in Carcassonne. (I bet Sally has read this one.)



Mad Bad and Dangerous to know Ranulph Fiennes (autobiography)


About an obsessive, rebellious and completely mad explorer. You’ve got to be mad if you attempt to walk solo to the North Pole.



Number 9 Dream David Mitchell


Eliji Miyake arrives in a Japanese city to track down the father he has never met. He is broke, 18 years old and mapless. Oh yes, and John Lennon somehow fits into the story.



Spilling the Beans Clarissa Dickson Wright (autobiography)


The surviving “Fat Lady” tells all about her remarkable and rather racy life. I didn’t realise she was the youngest woman ever to be called to the bar and what she did behind the Speaker’s Chair…Well!



The House on Beartown Road Elizabeth Cohen


There are lots of details about this book on Cait’s blog. Look there as she does a better job than me!



The People’s Act of Love James Meek


1919 Siberia. A revolutionary finds himself cut off in a very strange community. A community where it is very unwise to go on a journey with the locals if you are naïve. Oh! and there is also a love story in it somewhere.


(I declare an interest in this one as he is to be the guest of my other book group in January)



The Thirteenth Tale Dianne Setterfield


Angelfield House stands abandoned and forgotten. It was once the home of the March Family, but Angelfield House conceals a chilling secret - a riveting, multilayered mystery that twists and turns.



War Horse Michael Morpurgo


Spoken from the point of view of a horse. At the outbreak of WW1, Joey, young Albert’s beloved horse is sold to the cavalry and shipped to France. The horse has many adventures, serving on both sides until it finds itself on its own in no man’s land. Albert can’t forget his horse and, though not old enough to enlist, sets off to find Joey and bring him home. A very exciting and moving tale. ( How I sobbed when I read Black Beauty!)


(Picture - Composition by Piet Mondrian - oil, painted 1917)