Obviously this depends upon circumstances, time on your hands, tiresome visiting relatives etc. We'll see the younger daughter on Christmas Eve, the elder (with four year old in tow) the day after Boxing Day.
If you can focus: Read Forester's 'Hornblower' novels one after the other.
If you need something to dip in and out of: Kingsley Amis's 'Memoirs'. I've been reading and re-reading with unfailing pleasure for years.
A single novel: Amis again: 'The Old Devils'. Priceless (unless, of course, you happen to be a Welsh Nationalist).
Again, to dip in and out of (Boxing Day afternoon): 'The World Of Jeeves'. Don't miss the prize-giving at Market Snodsbury grammar school.
Or you could re-read Marx, Reich, Freud, Fanon, Samuel Beckett, Hegel... The choice is entirely your own...
Dickens and Wilkie Collins are also very fine, if you can find time. Try 'Edwin Drood' or 'The Moonstone'.
I am desperately trying to finish The Axemans jazz by mid December but I spend too much time here.
I like a classic Christmas crime novel over the festive season. There are a couple of publishers now who reissue classic crime books.They’re all pretty light weight but enjoyable nonetheless
+1 for anything written by Wodehouse.
Thank you Jeeves is possibly the funniest book ever written.
Alvey, I was once a rabid collector of classic crime, including some rare first editions. Science fiction, too. 'Edwin Drood' is virtually a crime novel. Have you come across the great 'Rabbi' books by Harry Kemelman? I can picture David being played by a youthful Dustin Hoffman.
Movies at Christmas for us will include the Basil Rathbone/Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes series.
People often don't get Wodehouse, just as they don't get Evelyn Waugh (early novels). But the man was a genius as regards humour in the way that, say, Galton and Simpson were with Hancock and 'Steptoe And Son'. You have to read between the lines a bit - if you can stop laughing.
Time for me to revisit Charles Dickens and in particular 'Great Expectations'. I've been reading up on the Thames Estuary, interested mainly from the Essex side, but Charles Dickens captured the atmosphere along the Kent side marshlands.
One of my favourite English authors along with George Orwell. I can't face re-reading 1984 or Animal farm during these uncertain times.
^ One of the greatest - perhaps the greatest - opening chapters in English literature, when Pip first meets the convict.
I'm with you on '1984', Robbie.
AFS no I haven’t read the Rabbi books. I think they’re out of print. Have you read Laurence Block’s Bernie Rhodenbarr books. You need to read them in order to fully appreciate the character. A cat burglar who own a book shop.
I’m a massive fan of those b/W Sherlock Holmes films too. Always a stirring monologue at the end.
No; I must get round to reading Block. He's been on my mental 'list' for some time. I bought the 'Rabbi' books secondhand. Well worth it.
This is whyI love this place.
I walked in wearing penny loafers and left with books under my arm.
Where else on the web does this happen?
Believe it or not, the hardest part of being away from England was the lack of a steady supply of reading matter. Although I'm happy to read the paper online, Kindle or similar just doesn't appeal. I have boxes and boxes of books back home that I can't wait to go through.
As I mentioned in another thread, much as I love Orwell, 1984 doesn't actually appeal to me much. But I really want to reread Aspidistra and Burmese Days. Coming Up for Air and A Clergyman's Daughter are also wonderful.
Most of my fiction is of a more recent vintage though. My 2 contemporary favourites being Patricia Melo (from Brazil) and Niccolò Ammaniti (Italy).
Alvey gladdens my heart.
I read a huge number of contemporary authors in my mid-twenties, including Rushdie, Carolyn Slaughter, the later Fowles (until I could stand him no longer). Also - slightly earlier in vintage - Updike, Burgess, Doris Lessing, Alan Paton, V.S. Naipaul. Read little in the way of fiction now except old favourites. I should go back to verse. I used to love Eliot, Dylan Thomas, Edith Sitwell and the like. But I've mixed the serious stuff with people like Stephen King and Elmore Leonard and am happy that my younger daughter, in spite of her interest in Plath, Sexton and their like, is doing much the same.
Elmore Leonard I love. Stephen King I find unreadable. I am fussy.
Non-fiction - try Francis Kilvert's Diary. Also - hardly Christmas reading but essential - Barnett's 'Collapse Of British Power' in which the author lays into Dickens and Rupert Brooke, among others. A corrective to the 'Lost Generation' platitudes surrounding 1914-1918.
I wasted my time a couple of years ago reading up on Lawrence, Woolf, Strachey et al.
King: began pretty well before lapsing, pretty quickly, into fast-buck-penny dreadful drivel. Then - which is even worse - pretentiousness.
I read the four Ripley books that followed Talented.
I absolutely loved them. Highsmith was supposed to be an anti-Semite but had affairs with several Jewish women.
All the best fascists hide behind a veneer of respectability. Often a mixture of establishment, academic or art.
It’s only when you scrape it off their views became clear.
These revisionist historians start from a point of denying the Holocaust and soon move onto the concept that Jews have benefitted from it. It’s right out of their playbook.
Anyhow back to the topic
For my birthday my wife bought me the 80’s tv series of Maigret.
Really enjoyed it so I recently bought a couple of Simenon titles.
A few years back I attempted the first Maigret novel. Didn’t enjoy it but Maigret at Christmas was far better. I read it in Paris a few weeks before Christmas to get the full vibe.
My families first Air B&B. We stayed directly opposite a Paraboot boutique that I deeply regret not even visiting.
I did come back with one of the last of Keydge tweeds produced though.
To tie this to another thread, Highsmith wore Fair Isle sweaters.
When I go into charity shops these days it’s more to look at the books and CDs than in the hope of finding anything I might want to wear. I need reading fodder for the train journey into work as I refuse to do work, it’s my time for myself. So at any point I always have half a dozen or so unread paperbacks. Currently half way through a biography of Eddy Merckx and waiting are a pilot’s personal account of the Battle of Britain, books about the 1980s Soviet/US arms race, MI5 post 9/11 and the Stasi. Also re-reads of Tom Wolfe, Charles Bukowski and Joseph Mitchell.
I’ve recently gone part time and I have an extra day off per week at my disposal, so on those days when the weather is not fit to go out I expect to be making inroads on this stuff. My loss no doubt, but overall I prefer to expend my time on factual or semi factual material rather than something someone has made up.
Not at all tinsel-y but I've just recommended Hughes' 'Shock Of The New' to my younger daughter, who is doing one of these pick n'mix degrees at Nottingham University. Browsing on Amazon led me to a Thames And Hudson World Of Art books on mid-century graphic design... which leads me to fancying something solid on Saul Bass... (which leads me back to Hitchcock)... Also Diane Arbus, Claxton and Hopper. T&H did great art, architecture and design books: sold for a pound or two now online.
Tomorrow, however, I'm selling a fair chunk of my thousand-odd book library to a dealer. I'll almost certainly have snuffed it inside another ten years and don't want to put anyone to any trouble.
Intellectual posturing aside, I've just been casting an eye over my four year old grandson's present, a Hot Wheels Mega Rex. Apparently it chews up Hot Wheels cars, making disgusting noises whilst doing so, before shitting them out. A snip at £42.99. My wife told our daughter, 'Well, your Dad seems to like it and he's got the mind of a four year old...' How well she knows me.
Robert Hughes 'Shock of the new'. Good recommendation. I went to a lecture, based on the book, he gave in 1993 in Toronto. Electric. I loved his TV series.