Click here for Arsenal FC news and reports

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 13

Thread: BookWIMB. I've come a little late to Robert Harris but I must say I am enjoying

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    BookWIMB. I've come a little late to Robert Harris but I must say I am enjoying

    the Cicero Trilogy immensely ( half way through Lustrum ).

    Although there are no lovable rascals of Flashman's ilk, the GMF technique of weaving a ripping yarn around meticulously researched history is employed to great effect.

    What are you reading just now AWIMB and why should I read it too?

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by Herbert Augustus Chapman View Post
    the Cicero Trilogy immensely ( half way through Lustrum ).

    Although there are no lovable rascals of Flashman's ilk, the GMF technique of weaving a ripping yarn around meticulously researched history is employed to great effect.

    What are you reading just now AWIMB and why should I read it too?
    Fatherland is Harris' best work by some distance.

    I am curently just finishing the Bernie Gunther series by Philip Kerr. Our hero Bernie is a murder detective in Berlin in 1933, and we follow his career through the war, his service in the SS on the eastern front, his escape from a Russian POW camp and return to police service in Berlin, flight to Cuba, kidnap by the CIA, all bloody sorts happens to the poor bugger.

  3. #3
    I have until now eschewed Fatherland because I felt the premiss was too ridiculous but will certainly give it a shot after this trilogy because the man's the absolute gift of the tale. As I reach for the Kindle at bedtime I feel I am about to be transported to Rome circa 50 BC. I can see it, hear it, smell it and actually feel it.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Herbert Augustus Chapman View Post
    I have until now eschewed Fatherland because I felt the premiss was too ridiculous but will certainly give it a shot after this trilogy because the man's the absolute gift of the tale. As I reach for the Kindle at bedtime I feel I am about to be transported to Rome circa 50 BC. I can see it, hear it, smell it and actually feel it.
    Fatherland was also made into a rather good film with Rutger Hauer.

    He's a dreadful Islington leftie, of course. And brother-in-law to Nick Hornby of this parish.

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Herbert Augustus Chapman View Post
    the Cicero Trilogy immensely ( half way through Lustrum ).

    Although there are no lovable rascals of Flashman's ilk, the GMF technique of weaving a ripping yarn around meticulously researched history is employed to great effect.

    What are you reading just now AWIMB and why should I read it too?
    The Illustrated History of Football - David Squires

    I like to immerse myself in the beautiful game.

  6. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by SWv2 View Post
    The Illustrated History of Football - David Squires

    I like to immerse myself in the beautiful game.
    Lefty. Squires, not you.

    I call 'em as I see 'em.

  7. #7
    I've got tickets to watch the adapted Cicero trilogy at Stratford.

    I am currently reading The Kalevala, a book about Latvia and Marx's Capital.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Mo Britain less Europe View Post
    I've got tickets to watch the adapted Cicero trilogy at Stratford.

    I am currently reading The Kalevala, a book about Latvia and Marx's Capital.
    Good Lord! Is the whole trilogy presented in a single play? Sounds compelling. I'll await your appraisal and may have a little dip into that too.

    For my part I can't help picturing Cicero as the young Brain Blessed's Augustus from "I, Claudius". I have Craig Charles as Tiro dd:

  9. #9

    It s done in two plays

    Quote Originally Posted by Herbert Augustus Chapman View Post
    Good Lord! Is the whole trilogy presented in a single play? Sounds compelling. I'll await your appraisal and may have a little dip into that too.

    For my part I can't help picturing Cicero as the young Brain Blessed's Augustus from "I, Claudius". I have Craig Charles as Tiro dd:
    But you can, as I'll be doing, watch them both in one day on certain days.

  10. #10
    You lying bog dweller. You are on your seventh, and doomed to failure, attempt to read and actually comprehend Ulysees so you can hold your own conversationally in those Dublin bars frequented by the Irish intelligentsia*

    *oxymoron

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •