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Book Club - by Luke

Some books I read lately

November 27th 2007 10:28
Whilst I enjoyed my extended holiday from Orble I read a few more books. I might review these properly at another point in time, but for the moment here are three of them in brief...


Vodka Doesn't Freeze by Leah Giarattano
This is a debut crime novel from an Australian criminal psychologist. And it was really freaking good. Basically, it follows one Sydney police officer's investigation of a diabolical paedophile ring and the murders that are bringing it to light. Of course, she also has a personal stake in the case, which only serves to up the tension somewhat. A really well-informed and well-constructed first book, full of local colour and some damn creepy characters!


The Earthsea Quintet by Ursula Le Guin
Le Guin's five books about the fantasy world of Earthsea are a deadset classic. Perhaps every bit as influential to modern fantasy fiction as Tolkein (you can see Le Guin's influence particularly in the various trilogies of Robin Hobb), Le Guin's Earthsea is a wonderfully described and original vision. Not only does she entertain with broad strokes of adventure and world-building, but she also manages to intelligently explore issues of a more high-brow nature (a far cry from the usual sword and sorcery-style fare that characterises a lot of fantasy books).

Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
Depression-era America has never seemed such a grim and bittersweet place. Steinbeck's short tale of two drifters - one small and clever, the other large and mentally retarded - and their struggle to chase their dreams will moisten even the most tearless of eyes. A highly memorable story from a master storyteller.
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I'm back

October 12th 2007 08:08
Hello

I am coming back to Orble after a bit of a rest. After squeezing out a year's worth of blogs for BookClub, OldMovies, Cult Fiction, Music Australia and Cane Toad Warrior I decided I couldn't hack it any more and I basically went nuts and left a trail of dirty tequila and broken lemons across Mexico. It was great. But now I am back... still reading books and watching movies and being a colossal doofus. I will not be touching Cult Fiction anymore as someone has been kind enough to take it over and keep on fighting the good fight. I will however be making sporadic posts across my other former posts... nowhere near as frequently as I used to but we'll see what happens.


Thank you to Jon for asking me to come back - how flattering! I feel like Sean Connery being lured back to do an unofficial James Bond film.

The strangest thing about all this is that my traffic remained pretty much the same after I stopped adding new blogs... what does this say about me or the nature of the internet itself? No doubt something completely uninteresting!

And now I shall leave you with some pictures of me shaving my head, just for kicks...

Rough as gutz
Rough as gutz


Monking it up
Monking it up


so good
The Mighty Monk Cut


Thanks to Keira and Nicole for the pics and haircut
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Kurt Vonnegut dies

April 12th 2007 13:54


I just heard that Kurt Vonnegut has died at the age of 84. This is terrible news, he was pretty much my favourite author. I'm speechless, I don't know what to say... I thought he would be around for a while longer, that we might even get one more book out of him. He died a few weeks after he fell in his home.

He left behind nearly 20 books and short story collections, and will be remembered for his unique contribution to American literature.

I feel very sad right now.
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Some book reviews

April 10th 2007 05:01
A bit busy at the moment with other projects at the moment, thought I'd just chuck up some quick links to previous reviews you might've missed on this blog.

Cheers, Luke.

Incompetnce - funny and original comedy/sci-fi/detective novel from Red Dwarf co-creator Rob Grant.
The Reluctant Republic - a look at Malcolm Turnbull's book on why Australia should become a Republic.
Perfume - Patrick Suskind's modern classic of olfactory decadence and adventure.
Charles Bronson Superstar - a hilarious 70s biography of Charles Bronson, features a great quote from Bronson on how he lost his virginity.
Tomorrow When the War Began - the first book in John Marsden's famous Australian speculative teen-fiction series.
The Van - Roddy Doyle's wonderful Booker-prize nominated novel about unemployment, fish n chips, and mid-life crisis.
Watership Down - one of my all-time favourite novels.
The Spy Who Came in From the Cold - John Le Carre's classic and influential spy novel.
The Infinitive of Go - inventive and pulpish hardcore science-fiction novella.
The Life of Pi - a wonderful and great novel, winner of the Booker Prize for 2003.
Grendel - a brilliant piece of fantastic literature well deserving of more attention.

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The Raw Shark Texts

April 5th 2007 11:20
raw shark texts

'The Raw Shark Texts' is the debut novel from Stephen Hall, and is getting huge tractor-loads of hype from all over the place. The Australian-release of the book itself is covered in a litany of overflowingly positive reviews... Nicole Kidman allegedly wanted the author to change the protagonist from male to female so she could star in a film adaptation, and Mark Haddon (the celebrated author of 'The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time') called it "The bastard love child of 'The Matrix', 'Jaws' and the 'Da Vinci Code'". And it doesn't end there.

[ Click here to read more ]
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The Lovely Bones - The Film

April 3rd 2007 08:16
Lovely Bones Alice Sebold film


Spiralling into reality is the forthcoming film adaptation of Alice Sebold's popular literature book 'The Lovely Bones'. Angus and Robertson currently rank it within their Top 10 books (alongside 'The Da Vinci Code', 'Lord of the Rings' and 'Memoirs of a Geisha'), so it's no small fry in the literary world. And who will be helming this adaptation? Well, it's none other than Oscar-winning director Peter Jackson


[ Click here to read more ]
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6th Target James Patterson

6th Target by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro
This is the sixth novel in James Patterson's popular Women's Murder Club series that, so far, is made up of the following novels - '1st to Die', '2nd Chance', '3rd Degree', '4th of July' and 'The 5th Horseman'. Set to follow this latest installement is '7th Heaven', due for release next year. As with the previous two books in the series, this one is 'co-authored' by Maxine Paetro, a journalist who also wrote some romance novels in the 1980s


[ Click here to read more ]
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The Nobel Prize for Literature

March 29th 2007 12:03
Sully Prudhomme
Sully Prudhomme, winner of the first Nobel Prize for Literature

Orhan Pamuk, winner of the prize for 2006
Orhan Pamuk
Unlike other big literature prizes, the Nobel Prize for Literature is awarded to authors, not books, and recognises the entire body of work from a writer rather than a singular novel. As such, it is impossible for any author to win more than once. The Nobel Prize for Literature is one of the few truly international prizes for writing, and is based in Sweden. Winners of the prize are known as Nobel Laureates.
Sully Prudhomme – France (1901


[ Click here to read more ]
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The Windsor Conspiracy

March 28th 2007 11:47
Windsor Conspiracy

I was looking at the latest new releases in a bookstore the other day and I came across this intriguing thriller.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Best Opening Lines in Books

March 27th 2007 08:45
Ulysses


Nothing can reel you in to a book quite like a great opening line. Once they grab you they nary let you go, and if they do - they're mugs! It's all over! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAARRRRR! Yeah, that's right - over


[ Click here to read more ]
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Space Boy - Orson Scott Card

Space Boy by Orson Scott Card
Orson Scott Card turns his rather skilled hands from epic adult's science-fiction to adventurous children's science-fiction with this tale of interstellar travel and saving the world. James Patterson and China Mieville have both recently attempted to crack the tricky children's fiction market with varying degrees of success - time will tell if Orson Scott Card can do any better. Due for release in August 2007


[ Click here to read more ]
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Farseer trilogy by Robin Hobb


I recently reviewed the final part of the Farseer trilogy on this blog. For anyone who's stumbled across this and is unfamiliar with Robin Hobb's brilliant Farsser trilogy, I apologise for the obscure and self-indulgent nature of today's blog. Anyway, before I continue, here are links to reviews of the three books in the trilogy


[ Click here to read more ]
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The Costa Book Awards

March 17th 2007 23:59
Tenderness of Wolves
The winner of the Costa Book prize for 2006


Previously known as the Whitbread Award, this award was taken over by a different sponsor and has been re-named accordingly. The Costa Book Awards are awarded in five categories – Best Novel, Best First Novel, Best Children’s Book, Best Poetry and Best Biography – and are eligible to be won by United Kingdom-based authors. Below are the Best Novel winners, which are less genre-specific than most literary-awards (and hence, less snobby


[ Click here to read more ]
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