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Suggestions for a good read.
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JamesWhiteheadOffline
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PostPosted: 19-10-2012 22:30    Post subject: Reply with quote

Two of the Opies' books on childhood turned up in a library sale today. Hurrah!

"The Lore & Language of Schoolchildren" (1959) is not too hard to find. I read it years ago. But, "Children's Games in Street & Playground" from ten years later is a bit of a rarity, I think.

Here one can learn of such innocent delights as "Hi Jimmy Knacker," "Split the Kipper," and "Knifing!"

" . . . we see who can get the other's throat first. But there are certain rules, which are, no kicking, and keep your free hand behind you."

So that's OK then! Shocked

edit: "innoncent" put right.
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davidplanktonOffline
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PostPosted: 20-10-2012 18:12    Post subject: Reply with quote

JamesWhitehead wrote:

Here one can learn of such innocent delights as "Hi Jimmy Knacker," "Split the Kipper," and "Knifing!"


We used to play split the kipper and another knife throwing game back in the seventies.
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gncxxOffline
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PostPosted: 20-10-2012 18:39    Post subject: Reply with quote

escargot1 wrote:
That sounds a laugh! Laughing

Tell us some of the failed predictions, then?


There's loads, it's a really extensive book, but leafing through the celebrity predictions I find Fidel Castro has his own chat show, Bob Dylan has founded his own religious cult, Billy Graham is a New Age guru and Muhammad Ali is a hugely successful actor on Broadway!
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Spudrick68Offline
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PostPosted: 28-10-2012 21:06    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you fancy a free read near to hallowe'en "Haunting Experiences: "Ghosts In Contemporary Folklore" is a free download book from here:

http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs/18/
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sherbetbizarreOffline
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PostPosted: 01-11-2012 03:14    Post subject: Reply with quote

Jeremy Dyson's The Haunted Book looks interesting...

Quote:
What unspeakable horror glimpsed in the basement of a private library in West Yorkshire drove a man to madness and an early grave? * What led to an underground echo chamber in a Manchester recording studio being sealed up for good? * What creature walks the endless sands of Lancashire's Fleetwood Bay, and what connects it to an unmanned craft washed ashore in Port Elizabeth, nearly six thousand miles away? In 2009 Jeremy Dyson was contacted by a journalist wanting help bringing together accounts of true life ghost stories from across the British Isles. The Haunted Book chronicles the journey Dyson, formerly a hardened sceptic, went on to uncover the truth behind these tales.

Jeremy Dyson is best known as the co-creator of the BAFTA award-winning comedy series The League of Gentlemen. He is the author of three works of fiction. His book The Cranes that Build the Cranes won the Edge Hill Award for short fiction. He is also the co-writer of the hit West-End show Ghost Stories.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Haunted-Book-Jeremy-Dyson/dp/0857862421/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1351734479&sr=8-1

Article:

Quote:
League of Gentlemen's Jeremy Dyson on the truth about ghosts

Why do so many of us, against all reason, choose to believe in the supernatural asks The League of Gentlemen's Jeremy Dyson....

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/9631512/League-of-Gentlemens-Jeremy-Dyson-on-the-truth-about-ghosts.html
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Pietro_Mercurios
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PostPosted: 01-11-2012 09:18    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you enjoy reading well crafted and thought provoking short stories, I can recommend Michael Moorcock's, London Bone. It's not in print at the moment, but second-hand copies can still be had. One of which I recently bought.

It serves as a sort of companion volume to Mike's other London based works of fiction, particularly, Mother London and King of the City. Recommended as first rate, non-SF, novels of the Great Wen. By an indigenous Londoner, in exile, who still has a deep love-hate relationship with the City.

It's not set entirely in London and characters from Mike's other works sometimes make fleeting appearances, it's not even what you'd call SF, but this collection stands on its own as some rather fine, good old fashioned, stand alone, short stories.
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rynner2Offline
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PostPosted: 07-11-2012 19:17    Post subject: Reply with quote

The trouble with a good read is that the next book you read may seem rubbish by comparison! This has just happened to me, although often I'm lucky and the next book will be be just as interesting, but in a different way.

My good read was "The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest", by Stieg Larsson. This Swedish crime novel/thriller is in fact the third volume of a trilogy, and although I hadn't read the first two books it stands up well on its own. Despite having a huge number of characters (with foreign names), they're never all together at once, so it's easy to follow the story. And it's a good long book, so even a fast reader should get the pleasure of picking it up several times for a few more chapters!

But that was followed by another crime/thriller story based on a sailing boat. But I know a lot about sailing, and it just doesn't ring true to me. A family go sailing for the first time in several years, but there's no mention of seasickness or precautions. At sea a girl goes overboard, so the skipper goes in after her! That's a big no-no! And when night comes the family all turn in, apart from the skipper, presumably, without any discussion of watch rotas, etc. There's no mention of wind speed or direction, or the course they're sailing... I could go on and on!

Not recommended by rynner! I'll give it one more try tonight, and unless it picks up a lot it'll be back to the library tomorrow! I won't give the book's title, to avoid embarassing a famous internationally printed author...
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tonylovellOffline
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PostPosted: 07-11-2012 20:08    Post subject: Reply with quote

Not Arthur Ransome then.
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Pietro_Mercurios
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PostPosted: 07-11-2012 21:03    Post subject: Reply with quote

tonylovell wrote:
Not Arthur Ransome then.

The Swallows and Amazons, got two thumbs up from me, when I first read it. Great tips on boating and camping, too. Laughing
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rynner2Offline
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PostPosted: 07-11-2012 21:50    Post subject: Reply with quote

tonylovell wrote:
Not Arthur Ransome then.

No, AR's plots weren't about disfunctional families, extra-marital affairs, drug-taking teenagers, assassins, or drug smugglers, IIRC! Wink

But the sailing bits were good! Very Happy
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Spudrick68Offline
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PostPosted: 13-12-2012 20:55    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you are interested in cryptozoology there is a book titled "Extinct Pennsylvania animals, by Henry W. Shoemaker". This is from Hathi Trust so you may only be able to get access to it if you are in the U.S. though.

http://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/008595561
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sherbetbizarreOffline
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PostPosted: 12-02-2013 14:09    Post subject: Reply with quote

You wait seven years for a new Will Storr book, then two come along at once...

Quote:
Hello - this is Will Storr.

I'm writing to you because, at some point or other, you've contacted me via my website. I just wanted to let you know about a couple of new books that I have coming out over the next few weeks. (I'm truly sorry if this is of no interest - no need to unsubscribe, this is the only email I'm sending!).

In February, The Heretics: Adventures with the Enemies of Science

The book begins with a simple question: why don't facts work? Why, that is, do otherwise intelligent people believe in sometimes irrational things?

The journey takes me from Warsaw to Texas to Las Vegas to the Outer Hebrides, where I spend time with creationists, UFO spotters, ESP experimenters and people who believe they have alien worms living in their skin. I meet the controversial 'Skeptic' James Randi, the famous climate change sceptic Lord Monckton, and go on a holiday of World War II sites with the notorious right wing historian David Irving.

Michael Deacon gave it a 5* review in the Telegraph and said it's 'funny, personal and richly vivid . . . Read this book.' Read the review in full. The book will be available here from 14th February 2013.

In March my debut novel comes out. The Hunger and the Howling of Killian Lone is a kind of adult fairy tale. Set in the 1980s restaurant scene, it's about a talented young cook who discovers long-lost herbs with magical properties and uses them to become the most famous chef in the world. (There's a bit of a ghost story underlying the whole thing too). If you liked Roald Dahl books as a child, I'm hoping you'll like this.

You can find more information on my website www.willstorr.com or on picador.com.

Thanks very much, and I hope you enjoy what I've been working on.

Will
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SpookdaddyOffline
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PostPosted: 24-02-2013 12:27    Post subject: Reply with quote

Charles Nicholl - Traces Remain - Essays and Explorations.

Kind of random collection - being a selection of essays, reviews and articles from the last twenty years or so - but there's plenty of interest both for those who like history, and those who like mystery.

Unless, like me, you consider all human life and the history thereof to be utterly bizarre then you would probably not describe this as a specifically Fortean read - but included is a life of John Aubrey, an account of the rise and fall of Edward Kelley, an essay about the Shakespeare authorship question, accounts of the disappearences of Jim Thompson, Colonel Fawcett and Arthur Cravan, and an essay about Charles van Onselen's The Fox and the Flies, which suggested a new Ripper suspect (tenuously, I think, but that doesn't stop Nicholl's review being interesting), so there's plenty that does fit the bill.

Nicholl is a fantastic writer and a thorough historian - I'd also hugely recommend, The Reckoning - The Murder of Christopher Marlowe and The Creature in the Map - Sir Walter Raleigh's Quest for El Dorado. And, to be honest, everything else he's written.

sherbetbizarre wrote:
You wait seven years for a new Will Storr book, then two come along at once...


Great, looking forward to those - I thoroughly enjoyed Will Storr Vs The Supernatural.
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SpookdaddyOffline
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PostPosted: 17-03-2013 14:04    Post subject: Reply with quote

William Roughead - Classic Crimes.

Caught bookless on a job in Scotland I bought this in a rush and on a whim, not really expecting an awful lot of it - turned out to be one of the most enjoyable reads I've had for a long while.

Roughead - a lawyer and amateur criminologist - was a pioneer of that much self-abused area of literature known as True Crime (a definite candidate for the strict application of Sturgeon's Law). He was a friend of Henry James and worked with Arthur Conan Doyle in fighting the notorious Oscar Slater conviction. Notable fans of his work include Luc Sante, Dorothy L Sayers, Joyce Carol Oates, Henry James, John Buchan and FDR

The writing won't be to everyone's taste. Luc Sante, in the introduction to the new edition, describes Roughead's prose style as 'resolutely unmodern...not that it is in any way stiff, cold, musty or particularly quaint' - and I'd agree; these days I really don't get on with old-school prose, but I find Roughead incredibly readable. A keen observer - wry, critical and occasionally very funny - Roughead was not a mere narrator of proceedings, happy to simply relate the decisions of legal process. He has the gift of the great essay writer - which is to be entertaining without undermining your subject.

Most of the cases are Scottish (as was Roughead), some are historical (as in the cases of Katharine Nairn, Deacon Brodie and the West Port murders), some are viewed at a distance, and others have been observed literally from the sidelines - a product of Roughead's having attended (by his own account) every notable murder trial which took place at the High Court of Edinburgh over a period of sixty years.
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uair01Offline
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PostPosted: 18-03-2013 22:25    Post subject: Reply with quote

Wow! I discovered this last weeken in the second-hand book market. It is totally fortean!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_the_Khazars

http://www.amazon.com/Dictionary-Khazars-Lexicon-Novel-Words/dp/067972754X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1363467411&sr=8-1&keywords=milorad+pavic

Highly recommended.
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