What are you reading now?
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I'm about 2/3 of the way through TTSP - and I'd forgotten how LAYERED it is. So many side stories, etc. Really enjoying it this time.
As an aside, I'm watching the 2011 movie at the same time, but only watching up to where I am in the book. Movie is very faithful.
It's funny how, in the book, it takes forever to know why Ann left George, or should I say, why the marriage got into trouble. In the film, there are hints, but you don't really know that she was unfaithful until the SECOND shot of the Christmas party.
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I'm about a quarter of the way through "The Honorable Schoolboy."
What a slog. I keep waiting for something to happen, and it doesn't. So far, the most exciting thing is that "The Schoolboy" has gone to the East, and Smiley sees his wife through a window.
Yeesh. Don't know if i"ll bother to finish it.
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I had mild expectations - but it's quite good. I'm just at the point where he was in prison. His brother suggested he read Dale Carnegie's "How to Win Friends and Influence People" before going before the parole board. Knowing better, Malcom unloaded vitriol upon the board with the not expected result that he was denied parole. Subsequently, Malcom read the Carnegie book and took it to heart - won over prisoners, prison staff - and ultimately the parole board. The book changed his life.
I'm surprised at how much I'm liking the book.
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@George-K oh come now. U don’t read Le Carre for action. You read him just to enjoy the writing. and the far east buts are kinda interesting. The whole jungle opium Laos scenes.
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@bachophile oh, I get it. The writing is glorious. So many "train-of-thought" detours in one paragraph.
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Hang in there George, it is very much worth every page and to the very end.
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By the way, I just discovered that Amazon Prime has a documentary (3 parts) called "SAS Rogue Warriors." MacIntyre narrates and there are interviews with the actual members of the original SAS team.
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@kluurs said in What are you reading now?:
I'm surprised at how much I'm liking this book - particularly the audio version as there are live recordings. He does a real number on corruption in Miami. It's definitely worth a read.
Finished the book. He does segments on the Covid and opioid crisis along with some discussion of education, college admissions and diversity. It was a bit like his podcast. Overall, a decent and worthwhile book though I thought there would be more there.
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Started reading William Shirer's Ghandi, A Memoir. Shirer was in India back in 1931 - aged around 27. Ghandi was 61. Shirer was the only American journalist there at the time covering Ghandi. So far, a good read. He got to spend some personal time with Ghandi. He said that Ghandi walked about 4 miles a day - at a pace that was challenging to Shirer.