Your book of the ye...
 

[Closed] Your book of the year

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Best book you've read in 2016 - doesn't matter when it was published.
Any subject you like; Private Eye annual anyone? (yes please) or William Hague on Gladstone but the thought of that gives me a shudder......

A few from me to kick things off......
Love, Nina by Nina Stibbe
Stalin's General by Geoffrey Roberts
The Knowledge by Lewis Dartnell
The North Water by Ian McGuire
The Clothes They Stood Up In by Alan Bennett
Party Animals by David Aaronovitch

I like books as in words printed on paper; it's the tactile thing but I know the world has moved onto Kindles and similar now but I like being a luddite......

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:29 am
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Isaac Assimov, I Robot (the short stories) although this may have been end of 2015
Henning Mankell, Depths (he of Wallander fame)

Currently reading Phillip K Dick Running Man and have Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep lined up next.

I have also read Mr Chatterbox which is great to read out loud to a 4 year old and probably my favourite Mr Man book.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:48 am
 DezB
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Steven Sherrill 'Joy, Pa'
Cormack McCarthy 'Cities of the Plain'
and winner - Will Carruthers 'Playing the Bass With 3 Left Hands'

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:48 am
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Stealing Speed, by Mat Oxley - if you like bikes and 2 strokes, it's essential. Gobbled in a couple of days. 🙂

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:00 am
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Hennning Mankell - Depths; yes, read a couple of years ago and really enjoyed.
Jo Nesbo?
Mr Men - yep, works for me!
Stealin Speed is a new one so must check it out.
Playing the bass wth three left hands - love the title so off to check that out as well.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:24 am
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Dalton Trumbo - Johnny Got His Gun

Will most probably be on my top 3 list once the gloom it fixed in me has lifted. Absolutely horrifying book.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:34 am
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"The Train" by George Simenon, his masterpiece apparently. It's been out of print for 40-odd yrs. Great read and a real life, would you, wouldn't you...

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10068074-the-train

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 2:49 am
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Georgre Simenpn - Maigret?
In the original - french or belgian? Or do I need my translator??

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 4:57 am
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Ready player one - Ernest Cline

Currently reading the man in the high castle by Philip k dick.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 7:55 am
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The Book of Strange New Things by Michael Faber. One to enjoy reading and worth discussing with someone else once they've read it.

Also, a now not so dirty secret liking for the Secret Library series by Genevieve Cogman. Silly and easy but fun brain downtime.

Read and enjoyed American Gods and The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman so will be reading more of his next year (his children's books are good too!).

Was introduced to Neal Stephenson this year by way of Seveneves and Cryptonomicron so will be reading more of his in the future.

Along with a ton of Lee Child and Harlen Coben I've also read a heap of Michael Connelly, which are probably my favourites of the detective/murder/law themed easy reads. I share a kindle account with my MiL so I read a lot of this stuff as it's what she buys!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:11 am
 DrJ
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A Little Life - very long, crushingly depressing, really compelling!!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:47 am
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City of Mirrors by Justin Cronin
Igneous Rocks and Processes, Gill :mrgreen:

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:10 am
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The Last Act of Love - Cathy Rentzenbrink.

Utterly heart melting, but equally life affirming.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:17 am
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[img] [/img]
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel

Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

Both were read on a Kindle and then bought in paperback so I could lend them to friends, always a sign of a good book...

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:39 am
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"A Monster Calls" by Patrick Ness.

Not often a book brings me to tears. Just started "Ready Player One" so good to see so many positive recommendations.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:43 am
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Yup George Simenon of Maigret fame but The Train is a stand-alone novel. 'tis wrote in proper English like!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:49 am
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'Jerusalem' by Alan Moore. A psychobiography. Brilliant!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 10:55 am
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Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies.

Genius. Really.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 10:57 am
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The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley. I took it with me on a family holiday and they still take the mick out of me sitting on my designated Reading Rock on the edge of windermere, reading this by kindle for hours til I suddenly discovered it was dark 😆 TBH not that much really happens and the premise is pretty silly but I just moved into it and lived there for a bit, it is gorgeous.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:04 am
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Was introduced to Neal Stephenson this year by way of Seveneves and Cryptonomicron so will be reading more of his in the future.

If you managed to get through those, then you'll love his earlier stuff. The diamond age and snow crash are my favorites.

Best book of this year for me? 1Q84 by haruki murakami

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:33 am
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The "Flashman papers" best thing I have read in a long time laughed a lot which is always good.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:37 am
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I've just finished "Ready Player One" and was a bit underwhelmed by it.
Really enjoyed "Railsea" by China Miéville - I think it's supposed to be for YAs but I thought it was great!

I've read a few this year but can't think of many now...

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:41 am
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Station 11 - Wanted to like this one but it didn't seem to do anything that hadn't already been done in The Stand or The Road, although I wasn't particularly blown away by either of those either. I must have an empathy gap for apocalyptic 'road' stories...

My Bloody Project - Have raced through this (not quite finished). It's very readable although I'm having trouble caring about any of the characters, although I think that's because it's been written from the point of view of a sociopath...

Not been a classic year for books for me, currently very little living up to 2015 (Burmese Days, Brave New World, And the Land Lay Still)

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:47 am
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Had a quiet year on the books, just read a few classics. Proust Vol II I guess was objectively the best - in a category by itself really, total immersion, finishing it was like waking from a dream. Definitely not one to do a few pages on each evening, you need the time to put a dent in it each sitting.

Also got round to The lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch which was great - consistently recommended as one of the best fantasy novels of recent times and worth its reputation. Unfortunately I fear it may be a one-off as I followed it up with his second (OK) and the third which is flat out poor.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 11:59 am
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stwhannah - Member

Was introduced to Neal Stephenson this year by way of Seveneves and Cryptonomicron so will be reading more of his in the future.

Have you ever read any Kim Stanley Robinson? Big inspiration for the first 2/3ds of Seveneves. And I mean big, my Mars trilogy paperbacks are about a foot thick 😆 Brilliant though.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:00 pm
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Absolutely bloody brilliant book! Especially if you're a music geek. It has regular interludes entitled GEEK ALERT where he details how they built, modified and bodged primitive synthesisers and drum machines. In the early days they spent as much time with soldering irons in their hands as instruments. Real pioneers!

Then theres the whole parallel backstory of the creative chaos of Factory Records and the money-pit that was the Hac

Finished it in on time

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:04 pm
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Gai Jin by James clavell. Cracking read. Thought Shogun was better but still a very good book. Onto Taipan now(which I should probably have read first.)

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:20 pm
 aP
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Modern Toss: ****ing Arseholes Anonymous
Daniel O'Malley: Rook & also Stiletto
Ben Aaranovich: the Hanging Tree
Bob Forrest-Webb: Chieftains
Urs Peter Fluckiger: How much house?
Owen Hatherley: The Ministry of Nostalgia & also Militant Modernism

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:30 pm
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Thatcher stole my trousers by Alexi Sayle. Had me chuckling quite a bit and took my back to teenage evenings watching The Young Ones

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:34 pm
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Tortilla Flat - Steinbeck, I can't believe I missed his writing following the Grapes of Wrath at school. Travels with Charley and Cannery Row are two great reads if Americana is your thing.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 12:50 pm
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Power of the Dog and Cartel by Don Winslow
Takeshi Kovacs Trilogy by Richard Morgan

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:08 pm
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Non Fiction - 'The Cyclist that went out in the cold' by Tim Moore & 'Extreme Rambling' by Mark Thomas

Modern Fiction - 'Nightingale' by Kristin Hannah & 'A thousand splendid suns' by Khaled Hosseimi

Classics - 'The Grapes of wrath' by John Steinbeck

Currently reading 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' by Gabriel García Márquez. Struggling a bit with this one though.

Worst read of 2016 - 'The Templar Legacy' by Steve Berry

Do any of you use Goodreads? How are you faring with the reading challenge? I set a target of 15 and have finished 20 so far this year...

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:25 pm
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An OU course has limited my reading this year but I'm loving The Water Margin - Outlaws of the Marsh by Shi Nai'an. So much that my next read is likely to be Monkey - Journey Into The West, another of the 4 Great Novels of Chinese Literature (and another classic with a dodgy and badly dubbed '70s TV series)

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 1:49 pm
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Fiction His Bloody Project by Graham Macrae Burnett

Non Fiction And the weak shall suffer what they must by Yanis Varoufakis

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 2:18 pm
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Monkey - Journey Into The West,

Available for free on Kindle and a great read

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 2:29 pm
 wl
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The Son - Philip Meyer (epic and fascinating)
May We Be Forgiven - AM Homes (brilliantly darkly comic)

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 3:45 pm
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Monkey - Journey Into The West,

Available for free on Kindle and a great read

Hmm - I had Romance of the Three Kingdoms as a kindle freebie and it was awful - poor translation and notes in the body of the text. Bought the Moss Roberts translations (only available as real books) - brilliant and engrossing read.
the Water Margin was a paid for Kindle and has some spelling howlers but is still handy as it's on my phone as well which was handy during a recent 3 hour sit about in hospital. Will check out he Monkey freebie - cheers

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 3:57 pm
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Grief is the thing with feathers for published this year.

Railhead for fave book I've read with my boys.

Seveneves for the one I've got around to reading.

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 4:49 pm
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The Hungry Caterpillar.
Awesome read, and can't wait for the sequel!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 7:45 pm
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Late to it but Winter is Coming by Garry Kasparov, bloody brilliant as a zip through the last 30 years of Russian/post Soviet political history and how much of a **** Putin is, sadly still essential reading

Dunno how anyone can read mrmen books I can't stand them personally

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:04 pm
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Command and Control by Eric Schlosser

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How the USA didn't blow us all up in the Cold War i'll never know. Some of the stuff in that book is properly scary!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:12 pm
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Fiction: The Golem and the Djinni by Helen Wecker.
None Fiction: Not sure I read any this year. If I did it doesn't sound like I'd recommend it!

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:29 pm
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Churchill by Roy Jenkins. Fascinating, timely and involving, all at once.

Doppler by Loe Erland. Proper curveball stuff that came out of the blue from a distant friend. I'm still not sure what it all means, maybe nothing.

Of Human Bondage, Somerset Maugham. Possibly one of my favourite books of the last 5 years. Effortless writing about everything and nothing

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 8:30 pm
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Seveneves

 
Posted : 22/12/2016 9:06 pm
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Hardback was 2015, paperback was this year.

Best non-fiction book I've ever read.

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Posted : 22/12/2016 9:14 pm
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Rendezvous with Rama - Arthur C Clark

The lies of Locke Lamora - Scott Lynch , probably the best I have read in a while

The Well of Ascension - Brandon Sanderson

The Power of the dog - Don Winslow

American Gods - Neil Gaiman

 
Posted : 23/12/2016 9:22 am
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Peter May, The Black House.
China Mieville, Kraken was a bizarre but absorbin recommendation from here, Flashman also recommended from here.
Just ordered The lies of Locke Lamora as seems to be liked on here

 
Posted : 23/12/2016 10:49 am
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Lipstick Traces by Greil Marcus. So good I've read it twice and will return to it again.
A tricky read and not everyone's cuppa political tea but highly recommended to the old punks and anarchos on here.

 
Posted : 23/12/2016 10:56 am
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Well following on from this thread I have just finished reading 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' by Scott Lynch and what a great read it was! Thanks for the recommendation it was excellent!

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 2:50 pm
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Adrian Tchaikovsky - Children of Time

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 2:58 pm
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Haynes Manual: Peugeot 308 petrol

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 3:29 pm
 DezB
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[i]Haynes Manual: Peugeot 308 petrol[/i]

Read it. Preferred his earlier work.

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 3:39 pm
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Haynes Manual: Peugeot 308 petrol

Read it. Preferred his earlier work.

I tend to agree. It's a little sluggish you're right, but It's full of twists to keep it interesting. Less sweary than the seminal 'Haynes Manual 2009 Citroen C1 Petrol though which if I'm honest, was a disappointment.

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 3:50 pm
 DezB
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'Assembly is the reverse of removal' - That's my favourite bit. (From Hillman Imp 1970)

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 3:58 pm
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This [img] [/img]
Or any of the series really as I re-reasd them all last year before this came out.

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 4:02 pm
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Although is was a damn good read too
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 4:06 pm
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'Assembly is the reverse of removal' - That's my favourite bit. (From Hillman Imp 1970)

I've not read that one sadly, but I like the sound of that. The chapter on brake light cluster removal on the 308 (esp the line about circlip pliers!!- those who read it as a 13 y/o will know what i mean ;)) still resonates with me as an adult. They were very different times mind you. Tried the Audible version recently of the old C1 Manual as a free download. Not the same, narrator was very distracting- particularly his Northern Irish accent which to this day i still don't fully understand the reason for. Its a French car ffs!

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 4:13 pm
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The Nazi Hunters by Damien Lewis. What a brilliant book telling a true story of how the SAS post WW2 went after the Nazis who executed a number of their captured comrades.

 
Posted : 20/01/2017 5:41 pm
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I give you....... http://www.theworks.co.uk/p/tv-books/millennium-falcon-manual---modified-yt-1300-corellian-freighter/9780857330963

Definitely the best yet from Haynes.

 
Posted : 21/01/2017 9:37 pm
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Eagerly awaited part 3 of a trilogy.
Simply brilliant.
Read it on holiday in Norfolk.

[url= https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/408/32447040565_a630a82629_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/408/32447040565_a630a82629_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/RreyHT ]City of Mirrors[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/takisawa2/ ]pten2106[/url], on Flickr

 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:17 pm
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@Takisawa

Yeah, very good. A worthy conclusion. I was relieved as part 2 wasn't so great.

 
Posted : 21/01/2017 11:19 pm