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Recent content by Phlebas

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    Welcome Stewart and Ice to the Admin Team

    I'll add my voice to the chorus - great job guys - site is always a pleasure to visit.
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    Usernames!!!! How did you get yours?

    TS Eliot and Iain M Banks. Wanted something suitably neutral and obscure. But with hindsight a bit gorey - ------- Phlebas the Phoenician, a fortnight dead, Forgot the cry of gulls, and the deep sea swell And the profit and loss. ------- but to be clear Im not dead :D
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    Jack London: The Sea Wolf

    Not read this one but that rings true of his "dog stories" - White Fang, Call of the Wild etc. They seem more concerned with keepng the story moving and action packed rather than dwelling on the details, as opposed to Moby Dick which ... if I recall correctly... has and entire chapter on the...
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    June 2008 - Book Group Suggestions

    i like the list idea as well. Let's folk plan ahead and I tend to do large orders off Amazon rather than bitty ones.
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    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle

    Good point - had missed this - I guess the Mavrino prison is probably a parallel with the luxusrious lifestyle to wicn Innokenty's family has become accustomered and the other prisons are the prisoner's family's homes. Also ties in with the circles of Dante's inferno. On a separate note -...
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    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle

    Was turning this over in my mind - surely you need to caveat the above note by saying that "unless the protagonist of the novel is the historic figure" I can think of loads of books with major historical figures in them from Shakespeares Histories, to Robert Graves I Claudius and more...
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    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle

    Yes, I read this with interest - I thought he had been introduced as a figure of, if not sympathy, at least of equality. For all his power and the fear he creates he is still a prisoner of his own health, mortality and paranoia.
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    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The First Circle

    OK, 11pm on a Friday and I've just finished it - in my case it was translated into English by Max Hayward, Manya Harari and Michael Glenny and published by Harvill. What a read, at 580 pages it's not a lightweight - found it very difficult to put down - I think having the events spread over...
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    Lyrec: Chapter 1

    No offence taken and no offence meant in the feedback. :) I take my hat off to anyone who posts their work publicly and you're obviously enthusiatic and well grounded enough to look at your own work with a critical eye. All too often people post their work or ask for opinions and get all...
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    stupid things you do because of films

    I bought a bright blue shirt to go with a black polo kneck some years back because of an outfit I once saw Wesley Snipes wearing in Passenger 57?. Didn't work quite so well on me - suspect it was the pasty white skin that ruined it:D
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    Robert Graves: I, Claudius

    I've read this and Claudius the God was a while back though but don't remember either hating it or loving it. I did really enjoy his autobigraphy Goodbye to All That and have read some of his poetry which seems to fit quite well with my sometimes cynical outlook on life.
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    Philip Roth: Goodbye, Columbus

    Interesting odyssey you're on. I've only read a few of Roth's books but from your review of Goodbye, Columbus (which I've not read) I can see that there are obviously some common themes weaving their way through his works which he explores in different ways.
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    Lyrec: Chapter 1

    Fair enough - just something that jumped out at me. Just once? - be prepared for a long hard slog of re-writes if you really want to get published.:eek: Can you perhaps introduce the concepts more slowly over the course of the book - remeber this is only a cocplf of paragraphs - you have...
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    Lyrec: Chapter 1

    Sorry Flueretta, doesn't grab me I'm afraid. If I picked this up I'd put it straight back down. It's too mundane and disjointed. A lot of new words are introdued too early which serve to confuse rather than intrigue. Why break the narrative the way you do? Therre are much more effective and...
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    Philip Roth fans

    Of the ones I've read I'd suggest American Pastoral had the biggest impact on me.
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