Charlie Croker, Formby! And that's a shirt for being slung in a hammock, 'neath a tropic sun and swaying palm fronds - short-sleeved; with white ducks; white Lobb Oxford buckskin shoes - and a proper, long, frozen rum; plus a nice cigar - and a dusky girl wearing - just a smile.
RR
Last edited by Reckless Reggie (2013-04-20 18:12:46)
A retrospective and biography of Frida Kahlo. Very engaging.
The Colour of Memory
By Geoff Dyer
Brixton in the late 80s. Seems ok writing, but I've no real knowledge of the local context to judge. Anyone have comments---- form by, kingy???
Listened to BBC football talk while reading to generate some ambience........
Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder.
Hey - Shooey - there is still a chance of your going home! You need to watch the skies, mate, for a silver, saucer-shaped object, winking at you in the gloaming. Just you make sure, mate, that you are all tooled-up with flasks of juice - it might be a long flight.
Marcel Proust .. in search of lost time.
Got to page three of volume one .. this thing is heavy going ... definitely an author who wants to describe every little detail ... in this heat we are experiencing in London this summer (25 to 30 degrees) its difficult to focus ... need to concentrate!
Last edited by Oldfruit1 (2013-07-17 17:01:27)
This wonderful work:
http://archive.org/stream/bookofcontemplat00unde#page/n0/mode/2up
Pausanias' "Description of Greece"...in the original Greek, of course!
Aye, too many references as the next J.K. Rowling for me to even contemplate reading a book by that author.
I do quite fancy her though, but somehow I imagine life with JK would be one long Laura Ashley shop.
J.K. Rowling should probably stick to writing children's books.
...and there's no shame in that. Being able to write a book, that keeps a child enthralled is no mean feat.
I've only read one of his and I can remember: Dixie City Jam. Set in New Orleans and centred around a PI called Dave Robicheaux.
Enjoyed at the time.
Another I enjoyed during my American low life faze was: White Butterfly by Walter Mosley. centred on another PI Ezekiel 'Easy' Rawlins.
This was made into a film, with Denzel Washington IIRC.
Another author I enjoy who deals with American lowlife types is Carl Hiassen.
The Americans have that Hard-boiled thing down tight. Maybe because they write with the potential for possible film rights in mind. Dunno.
Last edited by formby (2013-09-07 08:21:06)