Friday, 24 October 2025

Book Quotes

"To hear the classics as a distant echo…" Italo Calvino in "Why Read the Classics?"

That's a good allegory. As if the past resonates within us.

"A book in your hand can be a real lifeline - when the sea of life is too rough, you cling to stories and let them bring you to safety." (Ein Buch in der Hand kann ein echter Rettungsanker sein - wenn die See des Lebens zu rau ist, klammert man sich an Geschichten und lässt sich von ihnen in Sicherheit bringen.) Jasmin Schreiber in "Marianengraben" [Mariana Trench]

This book deals with death and how we deal with it - or not. The quote is one of the best to show us how books can help us get through the difficult parts of life.

"One benefit of summer was that each day we had more light to read by." Jeannette Walls, The Glass Castle 

Aren't we lucky to live in an age where we don't have that problem?

Find more book quotes here.

Thursday, 23 October 2025

Hemingway, Ernest "In Our Time"

Hemingway, Ernest "In Our Time" - 1925

I chose this book because the year 1925 was given for our Read the Year challenge. A whole century ago. I had read a few books from that year already, so the choice was not exactly limited but there wasn't a single book on my wishlist that would fit the challenge. So, I went for an author that I like and that I wanted to read more from.

Had I chosen it if I'd been aware that this is a collection of short stories? Probably not. Granted, they were linked with each other, somehow. But it still wasn't enough to really grip me.

However, this was his first publication and we can see a lot of topics that will come up in his later work. Having read some of those helped.

So, not my favourite of his books.

Book Description:

"A strikingly original collection of short stories and accompanying vignettes that marked Ernest Hemingway’s American debut.

When In Our Time was first published in 1925, it was widely praised for its simple and precise use of language to convey a wide range of complex emotions, and earned Hemingway a place among the most promising American writers of that period. In Our Time contains several early Hemingway classics, including the famous Nick Adams stories 'Indian Camp' and 'The Three Day Blow', and introduces readers to the hallmarks of the Hemingway a lean, tough prose, enlivened by an ear for the colloquial and an eye for the realistic. His writing suggests, through the simplest of statements, a sense of moral value and a clarity of vision.

Now recognized as one of the most important short story collections of twentieth-century literature, In Our Time provides key insights into Hemingway’s later works."

Ernest Hemingway received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954 "for his mastery of the art of narrative, most recently demonstrated in 'The Old Man and the Sea' and for the influence that he has exerted on contemporary style".

I contribute to this page: Read the Nobels and you can find all my blogs about Nobel Prize winning authors and their books here.

Find all my Read The Year books here.

Tuesday, 21 October 2025

Top 5 Tuesday ~ Travel Inspiration

Top Five Tuesday was originally created by Shanah @ Bionic Book Worm, but is now hosted by Meeghan @ Meeghan Reads. To participate, link your post back to Meeghan’s blog or leave a comment on her weekly post. I found this on Davida's Page @ The Chocolate Lady.

Unfortunately, Meeghan has not posted anything for a while. If anyone knows what has happened to her, please, let me know.

And here is a list of all the topics for the rest of the year.

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This week’s topic is Travel Inspiration.

I have read a lot of travel books since I love travelling. You can find them all here. For this challenge, I have used some unusual ways of travelling to some unusual destinations. I know I will never be able to do a trip like that anymore but I always love reading about them and I hope it gives someone an idea where to go next.

So, with these books, we travel to several parts of South America, to Oceania, Pakistan, Egypt, India, Kenya, Middle East, Philippines, South Africa, Tanzania, Travel, Zimbabwe and India, Italy, Middle East, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania 
and through various centuries.
Kehlmann, Daniel "Measuring the World" (GE: Die Vermessung der Welt) - 2005 

Milton, Giles "Nathaniel's Nutmeg" - 1999

Mortenson, Greg
"Three Cups of Tea" (with David Oliver Relin) - 2006

Newsham, Brad "Take me with you" - 2000

Trojanow, Ilijya "The Collector of Worlds" (GE: Der Weltensammler) - 2006 

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📖 Happy Reading! 📖

📚 📚 📚

Monday, 20 October 2025

Hammond, Richard "As You Do"

Hammond, Richard "As You Do: Adventures With Evil, Oliver And The Vice President Of Botswana" - 2008

I have always loved Top Gear and espcially Richard Hammond, "The Hamster" (see his book On the Edge). The adventures the guys had in their show, they were always hilarious albeit very scary.

Here, Richard Hammond has written about his race to the North Pole with a dog-driven sled against his friends in a car - with a lot of preparation beforehand (Polar Special, also known as the Polar Challenge). And about his trip through Africa in a car that he bought right there and kept later on because he had named it (Ollie) and you cannot sell a car with a name. LOL.

And there are other stories in the book, how he rescued some friends who were stuck in their house in the flood in Gloucestershire. And how he met Eviel Knievel, a guy I never was interested in and am even less after reading about him, even though he was one of the author's heroes.

In any case, this was a very interesting book with lots of funny scenes, almost like watching Top Gear. And it was an easy yet still worthy book to read.

From the back cover:

"The wry, honest and often hilarious chronicles of a very brave and clever TV presenter, Arctic Explorer and general drawer of the Short Straw. 

As one third of the BBC's Top Gear team, Richard Hammond's year since his near-fatal accident has been full of stunts and drama. From a race to the North Pole (with skis and dog-sled) to a journey through Botswana in a car named Oliver, and a seventeen-mile run through floods to his Gloucestershire home, in order to get to his daughter's birthday party, the year has been eventful, to say the least . . .

With his boundless optimism in the face of certain failure, Richard Hammond has become one of our funniest writers about a life (and a job) which constantly present a challenge."

Thursday, 16 October 2025

#ThrowbackThursday. September 2015

I've been doing ThrowbackThursdays for a while but I noticed that I wrote a lot of reviews in a short time when I first started. So, I listed more than one Throwback book every week. Now, I have reached the ones I posted ten years ago and will probalby just post one every month. These are my reviews from September 2015
A story about Famagusta, a town in Eastern Cyprus, that goes deep and shows how stupid any war is. People live their ordinary lives. They go to work, they go home. They love their families, they love their lives. Then the invasion. 

Lawson, Mary "Road Ends" - 2013
I like the author for her realistic description of the characters and their actions. 
An interesting story, not just about young Megan who leaves Canada for England but also and especially about the family she leaves behind, her father, brother, but mostly her mother. A story about mental illness in a time where that was such a taboo, people wouldn't acknowledge it anywhere.

Levithan, David "Every Day" - 2012
An interesting book. Not especially my genre. But an interesting concept about a "being" who is somebody different every day. Well written, certainly deserves to be a best-seller, especially for the "young adults" it has been written for because it poses so many questions that every teenager goes through. Who am I?

The author of "McCarthy's Bar" gives us another tale of his travels, this time from Ireland to Morocco, New York, the Caribbeans, Tasmania. A hilarious book by a funny writer who left us all too early.

Titchmarsh, Alan "Trowel and Error" - 2002
The presenter of "Ground Force" and "Gardener's World" writes about his life. He writes the way he talks, he is the same nice guy from next door as he is in his programmes. And listening to his story, you understand why that is the case.

I think that there is a lot about Oscar Wilde in Dorian Gray. The novel certainly raises many questions and gives everyone a lot to think about. How shallow are we really? How vain? And what would we swap for eternal beauty?

Wednesday, 15 October 2025

Boyd, William "On the Yankee Station" - 1981

Boyd, William "On the Yankee Station" - 1981

Several people recommended William Boyd to me lately. And I had found one of his books in a used book sale. So, I decided to tackle this.

This is a collection of short stories about teenagers, young people, students, boarding school, murderers, all about people completely dissatisfied with their lives.

Short stories have never been my favourite and this book certainly didn't convice me otherwise. Please, if you have read his short stories and his novels and think the novels are so much better, tell me, otherwise this would be the last I have read of his stories.

From the back cover:

"Adolescent sex in a Scottish boys' public school ... Oddballs on the seedy side of America ... Murder in a quiet Devon cottage ... Comical, ironical or lacerating - wit is the keynote of these stories, which include two early adventures from the career of Morgan Leafy, glorious anti-hero of William Boyd's prize-winning novel 'A Good Man in Africa'.

Wiliam Boyd, winner of the Whitbread and Somerset Maugham Awards, introduces unlikely heroes desperate to redeem their unsatisfying lives.

From California poolsides to the battlegrounds of Vietnam, here is a world populated by weary souls who turn to fantasy as their sole escape from life's inequities. Stranded in an African hotel during a coup, an oafish Englishman impresses a young stewardess with stories of an enchanted life completely at odds with his sordid existence in 'The Coup'" In the title story, an arrogant, sadistic American pilot in Vietnam underestimaets the power of revenge when he relentlessly persecutes a member of his maintenance crew. With droll humor and rare compassion, Boyd's enthralling stories remind us of his stature as one of contemporary fiction's finest storytellers."