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Tommy's World - Billy Hopkins.

Book 6 of 7 charting the (true) history of the Hopkins family.

Bought this as a filler, 4 for a £.

The book itself although part of a series easily stands alone as a story in it's own rights.

Do I want to find the other books in the series ?

Simple answer - NO.

 

Set in the late 60's early 70's, while I quite like looking through rose coloured spectacles myself,

at times you feel like the story line is set around a 1970's shopping list of goods, places no longer there

and Events rather than a story that mentions them in passing.

Really annoying how probably 8 out of 10 new characters introduced into the story line have names that are 

Alliterated.

 

Hat's off to Billy (no longer with us) for putting his memoirs down on paper and achieving quite a following 

from those who enjoyed his books,

Sadly, not for me.

 

Keep save read well.

 

 

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Finished The Magus of Hay and the novella The House of Susan Lulham, both by Phil Rickman.  Excellent, as ever.  Just started Friends of the Dusk by the same author. 

 

It's all smart, spooky and intriguing, but the author does have his hobby-horses.  Atheists, psychiatrists, medics and sceptics don't do well in the Merrily series; they're either saddled with varying degrees of villainy, bumped off or soundly castigated by sympathetic pagans, musicians and vicars.  I love the series, but then I'm secure in my atheism and scepticism, and the odd poke is worth it for the superb storytelling and the delightful Gomer, Athena/Anthea and Frannie Bliss. Though I do hope Richard Dawkins has a sense of humour.

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So Anyway, John Cleese
I was curious what produced such a funny man. He comes across not  so much as angry but rather frank and compassionate and tells some great stories. His old teacher had gone to Oxford hoping to become a scholar and was thrilled to discover one of his tutors was to be a famous philosopher, R G Collingwood.
Hoping to make a good impression, he researched an insightful and original question for their first meeting. Apparently, without pausing, Collingwood told him (without looking round) that if he would go to the bookcase behind him and from the second shelf up, take the sixth book from the left, the one with the red cover, and then turn to page 134, the fourth paragraph would answer his question. It did.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Here's my August round-up with some really good ones in amongst them.

 

Robert Thorogood - The Marlow murder club. While swimming in the river, sprightly pensioner Judith Potts hears her neighbour being murdered and decides to investigate, assisted by the vicar's wife and a local dog-walker. I really enjoyed this one up until the final solution which suffered from Highsmithian improbability. It had the misfortune to come out at the same time as the similarly titled Richard Osman book but well worth seeking out in its own right. He is of course the man behind the Death in Paradise TV series.

Jenny Randles - The Pennine UFO mystery. Strange goings on in the Todmorden area in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Supposedly factual - make of it what you will.

Hulbert Footner - Easy to kill. Old men in Newport, Rhode Island are being threatened and if they don't pay up, seemingly frightened to death. Madame Storey and her sidekick Bella Brickley are on the case. Quite thriller-y rather than detective-y but not bad.

Martin Edwards - Gallows Court. Edwards' attempt to write a cross between a modern thriller and a Golden Age detective story. Reporter Jacob Flint investigates a clutch of murders, all of which seem to lead back to the mysterious Rachel Savernake. Very good.

Mrs. Victor Bruce - The Peregrinations of Penelope. A 1920s flapper tries her hand at motoring, flying a plane, speedboating etc. In a striking example of the phrase 'Write what you know', Mrs Bruce herself was a famous motor racing driver, aviator, speedboat racer etc. (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mrs_Victor_Bruce). Gently amusing.

Dorothy L. Sayers - Unnatural death. Lord Peter Wimsey investigates the possible poisoning of a pensioner. Excellent. Read it now before it gets cancelled for racism, anti-Semitism etc.

Agatha Christie - Cards on the table. While his eight dinner guests are playing bridge, Mr Shaitana is polished off with a stiletto through the heart. Four of the guests are possibly murderers, four of them are sleuths, including Hercule Poirot. Excellent. Read it now before it gets cancelled for racism  etc.

Jack Vance - Alastor: Marune 993. Typical Vance hero Pardero is found at a spaceport with complete amnesia. Can he recover and fulfil his destiny as a Kaiark of the Rhune clan? You bet. As enjoyable as all other Vance novels.

Harry Stephen Keeler - The voice of the seven sparrows. Author of some of the most bizarre mysteries ever, Keeler was (in)famous for his webwork plotting system (if you want to know how he did it, just download the document on this page: https://site.xavier.edu/polt/keeler/onwebwork.html). This was his first book so the plot wasn't quite as convoluted as later ones, but is still completely bonkers (and impossible to summarise). And if you think the Sayers and Christie are racist, you really won't like this one.

John Scalzi - Lock in. A viral pandemic has left 1% of the population completely paralysed. Now, about 20 years later, they interact with the world through robotic bodies or by taking over the bodies of certain others, called Integrators. But now someone has found a way to use these arrangements to commit murder. A somewhat more serious work by Scalzi, with the usual wisecracking toned down a bit. Very good.

 

Now reading: Henry Wade - Heir presumptive. Eustace Hendel finds himself nearly in a position to inherit a peerage and lots of money, if he can only bump off his cousin. Excellent so far.

 

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