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• #5652
Any suggestions for a good modern spy thriller book or series?
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• #5653
I really rated Damascus Station by David McCloskey. His second book Moscow X was pretty good too, though the 3rd, seventh floor, was poor.
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• #5654
If you haven't read the Slow Horses books, then they're a great start
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• #5655
A Spy Alone by Charles Beaumont
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• #5656
Good stuff, thanks. I actually have slow horses on the shelf which I'd forgotten about. I'll start there and check the others out on kindle
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• #5657
Does anyone have any recommendations for some travel/ expedition reads? Injury and the cold months have me looking outwards for that adventurous feeling
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• #5658
I'd always recommend One man and his bike by Mile Carter, and also the one where he's on his motorbike.
Both excellent.
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• #5659
A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush - Eric Newby
Terra Incognita - Sara Wheeler -
• #5660
+1 to Eric Newby - the last grain race and the Appalachian books are also fantastic.
Jupiter’s Travels by Ted Simon comes to mind too
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• #5661
Passage to Juneau - Jonathan Raban
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• #5662
I'm currently reading David Byrne's (yes, that David Byrne) Bicycle Diaries, it's pretty good.
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• #5663
I’ve just finished it, a couple of days back - and would also recommend
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• #5664
I just ordered the cheapest, tattiest secondhand copy of Bret Easton Ellis's White I could find .
Been meaning to read it for a while because I read most of Ellis's books BITD up to Glamorama. But also been putting it off because a) it's an opinion piece and I think it might put me off Ellis as a person because, let's face it, he's a bit weird; and b) I wonder how relevant it will be five years on from its writing and after a global pandemic. Might have been better to read this back in 2019.
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• #5665
My 11 year old (who’s a book monster) just finished Orbital.
“Hey dad I know why it got the booker prize!”
Oh yeah, why?
“It’s amazing to write over 100 pages and have nothing happen at all” -
• #5666
Maybe not quite what you're after but Of Walking In Ice by Werner Herzog is great. An autobiographical account of him being a mad bastard and walking across Germany in the middle of winter whilst completely unprepared to do so.
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• #5667
Do you still have these? I'd take the two Endymion ones if so. I have the other Stormlight Archive books if you wanted those
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• #5668
Sorry, they went to a charity shop the other day! I updated the classifieds thread I made but forgot to edit that post.
That's a really kind offer, I'll see how I get on with the first one!
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• #5669
ah no worries, I have the second Hyperion one to get through anyway.
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• #5670
Thanks all, got a couple of these recommendations coming now. I’ll throw one out myself of Shadow of the Silk Road by Colin Thubron, read it last year and quite enjoyed it. Maybe a touch slow for the start in China but felt it founds it legs after that.
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• #5671
I enjoyed the whole series but the first book is definitely the strongest and most unique.
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• #5672
Ellis…he's a bit weird
Strong contender for understatement of the year and it’s only jan 2nd
I've been reading Caledonian Road by Andrew O'Hagan. It's massive and sprawling so far but I quite like it. Even the dialogue between young drug dealers seems pretty well-researched and quite convincing.
I lived just off Caledonian Road for a couple of years and it's nice to see references to places I know so well, but also unexpectedly a scene that plays out near the old concrete barges at Rainham where I used to go running. I feel like mine and O'Hagan's paths might have crossed a few times.