To follow the epic of War and Peace, I treated myself to one of my favourite authors - Terry Pratchett - and book number 69 on the top 100 reads. It's called Guards! Guards! and I read it in 2 days with a great big smile on my face. When Pratchett is on form, boy is he good! This is one of the best of his Discworld books in my opinion, and features The Watch - the much maligned and ignored police force who only work the night shift in the great city of Ankh Morpork. For their own health, The Watch basically ignores the crime that goes on around them. There are less than a handful of them, all with "issues" and their chief is constantly drunk. Into this mix, comes a young innocent lad - name of Carrot - who was raised by dwarfs who discovered him as a toddler in the forest. His adopted father sends him to the big city to learn to be human. Carrot studies all the laws, rules and regulations that The Watch are supposed to uphold, and, much to the amazement of his fellow Watch members, starts to arrest people! As if this wasn't weird enough, a dragon keeps on appearing and burning people to a crisp. Can The Watch save the day and tackle the use of magic which seems to be at work here? Will they accept the help of the Librarian of Unseen University (where wizards learn their craft). Okay, so he might be an orangutan following an accident involving magic, but he does have a bucket load of knowledge gained from years amongst all those books, and has exceptional strength in those long arms. This is such a great read and I laughed out loud on numerous occasions. Great characters, great story telling - fantasy fiction at its very best.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 416 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.50 (second hand shop).
Formats available: print; audio CD; audio download; multimedia CD; ebook.
It's year SIXTEEN of my reading challenge blog, and this year I'm continuing to focus on reading those books that people have gifted to me that have been saved "for a rainy day" ... well, the rainy days are here! No longer will they languish in the gathering dust, but instead, they'll be given the priority they deserve! Oh, and I'm really, REALLY going to try and read more in general after a few years of struggling to muster up more than 5-10 minutes at the end of a day. Wish me luck!
Thursday, 27 June 2013
Monday, 24 June 2013
War and Peace (20) ... phew, done and dusted!
At long, LONG last, I have completed War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy. I read the first half as an audio book, and the second half as an ebook. I enjoyed reading by both methods, although it took me a while to get used to the names in the ebook which I'd only ever heard before and not seen written down. This is an epic in every sense of the word. The size of the book puts people off - but it shouldn't. It's not a hard read, but bowls along with plenty of action (both in war and peacetime) and has a good set of central characters - especially the Rostovs and Bezukhovs. The backdrop to the tale is the invasion of Russia by the army of Napoleon Bonaparte and the impact this has on five different families. Initially, the Russians love Bonaparte and think he's a great man and ally - but when relations between him and their own Emperor fall apart, the country starts to realise how ruthless an opponent he is and are puzzled that their own glorious army is apparently powerless to stop him. Over the years, as the action continues, we switch between the fighting at the front, and the people left behind. The two worlds are initially very separate, but they slowly become closer and closer and eventually, all the citizens feel the dreadful impact of events. Love, death, power, loyalty - it's all here. The young men dream of the glory that fighting and dying for their Emperor will give them, without fully realising the real horrors of the actual battles - no-one is left unchanged. Bouncy, playful boys become serious men very quickly, and giggling, fluffy girls become sombre women as the action continues. But it's not all doom and gloom - there is humour and happy endings for at least some of the characters. The book is full of historic facts to help place it in the time and events in which the story takes place. My only problem with the book is when the author starts to drift into his lectures on the meaning of history and power ... he can go on a bit! Overall, a book that everyone should read ... just give yourself the time and space to do so.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 1440 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99 for the audio section; £0.49 for the ebook.
Formats available: print; audio; ebook.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 1440 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99 for the audio section; £0.49 for the ebook.
Formats available: print; audio; ebook.
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