I picked up The Tenant... and had a flick through. I'll definitely read it at some pointPerhaps after Virginia Woolf you would enjoy a bit of a breather! I do like her but it's dense stuff.
This is teasery of the highest order, WE DEMAND THE TITLEInstead I have plumped for a modern sci-fi classic, no one has read it on this list this year, but otherwise it seems to be one at least one person reads each challenge. I find it hard to believe I haven't read it already.
you read it last year!This is teasery of the highest order, WE DEMAND THE TITLE
136. Yume Kitasei, The Stardust Grail. Student goes on quest to find a lost intergalactic treasure, makes friends on the way and meets up with characters from their backstory. Entertaining and would probably read another book by them, but the "unreliable source of knowledge" character did start to bug me by the end.135. John le Carre, The Tailor of Panama. Spooks trying to prepare for the US leaving Panama in the dying years of the 20th century. Compelling reading as ever (basically read it in one go) but the characters are fascinating but unpleasant at some level. Has another one of those "just stops" endings that I am always puzzled by in his books.
(I've also read a few more Grimes books but I'll pop those in in a block)
never heard of him.I reckon it’s parbly Riddley Walker then and sorry for the lack of plomercy in my previous post
I know - I've let myself downYou are slacking on your target there Marty. Not like you.
I don't think I'm going to meet mine. On 39 of 50.
Definitely a plot hole and not a clue?I have just given up on a crime novel.I had been reading it fairly rapidly, and it was quite enjoyable.
I could accept the premise that there were some people who were
who had limited telepathic powers, including the detective who comes to London fromPortugal to investigate some murders at the Portuguese Embassy.
I could accept that some people had telekinetic powers.
However, on page 139 of this book there is a huge plot hole that I could not accept. I read on for about another 50 pages, then gave up.
A woman who was seeking asylum in the Embassy is missing. Her ex-partner, who is not telepathic, flies to London from the USA, and approaches the Portuguese detective one morning outside the block of flats in which she is living while in London. She has information for the detective, and they go to a cafe, where she tells the detective what she knows.
1. How would the ex-partner know that the Portuguese detective had been working with the British police?
2 How would she have known where the detective was living?
She says that she is a journalist, and that she knows of the detective from a previous notorious case that was covered widely in the press. This does not explain how she knew what she knew.
In a plausible story, she would have been arrested and interrogated. There must be a leak in the Met, and she must have been working with the leaker. But not in the story.
Plot is said to be the most important thing for crime novels. If the plot fails, then there are no other aspects to redeem it.
The book is called “Broken Oaths”, and its author is Patricia Marques. It is a shame that the plot failed like this.
It is definitely a plot hole.Definitely a plot hole and not a clue?
belboid ohhhhh thaaaat one. A ruddy corker that is1/30 - Lexie Conyngham - Tomb for an Eagle
2/30 - Michael Eaton - B*llocks -A Word on Trial
3/30 - Paul Simpson - Revolutionary Spirit
4/30 - Joe Thomas - Red Menace
5/30 - Daniel Clowes - Monica
6/30 - Will Sergeant - Echoes
7/30 - Wu Ming - 54
8/30 - Kathleen Hanna - Rebel Girl, my life as a feminist punk
9/30 - Aldous Huxley - The Devils of Loudon
10/30 - Volodomyr Ishchenko - Towards the Abyss: Ukraine from Maidan to War
11/30 - Dan Kavanagh - Duffy
12/30 - Samantha Schweblin - Little Eyes
13/30 - Tabitha Stanmore - Cunning Folk: Life in the Age of Practical Magic
14/30 - Nathalie Olah - Bad Taste
15/30 - Luke Haines - Freaks Out! Weirdos, Misfits & Deviants - The Rise and Fall of Righteous Rock 'n' Roll
16/30 - Willy Vlautin - The Horse
17/30 - Silvia Moreno-Garcia - Silver Nitrate
18/30 - Geoff Nicholson - The Surburbanist
19/30 - Jacqueline Pearce - From Byfleet to the Bush
20/30 - Sharon Bennett Connolly - Women of the Anarchy
21/30 - Mark E Smith & Graham Duff - The Otherwise
22/30 - Benjamin Myers - Rare Singles
23/30 - Marilyn Robinson - Gilead
24/30 - Nikolai Gogol - Dead Souls
25/30 - Aldous Huxley - Grey Eminence
26/30 - Werner Herzog - Every Man for Himself and God Against All
27/30 - Hunter S Thompson - Ancient Gonzo Wisdom, interviews with HST
28/30 - Jeffrey Lewis - Leonard Cohen
29/30 - Virginia Woolf - The Years
30/30 - Ursula K Le Guin - The Dispossessed
Well, that was rather good. On a bleak moon occupied by idealistic anarchists and long isolated from the rest of the universe, an individual decides they want to talk with the other worlds and share.....stuff. Will he destroy his own world by doing so, or kickstart the destruction of capitalism down below?
136. Yume Kitasei, The Stardust Grail. Student goes on quest to find a lost intergalactic treasure, makes friends on the way and meets up with characters from their backstory. Entertaining and would probably read another book by them, but the "unreliable source of knowledge" character did start to bug me by the end.
137. Django Wexler, How to become the Dark Lord and Die Trying. Funny, footnotes, lead character is very bi/panspecies, massive trigger warnings for suicide. I enjoyed it a lot over a tough weekend. Earth person thrown into fantasy world as hero-to-be, gives up on the several-hundredth-attempt and goes Dark. Nicely done, I will be reading the sequel.
138. Charlie Jane Anders, Victories Greater Than Death (reread). Earth girl is actually intergalactic princess. Aliens rescue her from sure death, and she goes on to gather a team and travel the galaxy fighting an old and a recent evil, where the recent evil is her ex from a previous life... Great fun, vol 1 of 3