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Ophelia  Embodiment of Reason Silver Contributor


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Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 4:10 pm Post subject:
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Citizen Girl by Emma McLaughlin
Searching for God Knows What by Donald Miller |
Hello Audrey, nice to have you back.
It's always a lovely feeling when exams are over.
Which subjects are you taking, besides French?
I gave a reference to my favourite books in French a while ago-- and then promptly forgot about it.
At the moment I'm reading Year of Wonders
by Geraldine Brooks.
I had already read a few books about the plague in England but a friend recommended this to me and I'm enjoying it-- it takes place in an English village, the setting in 1666 is very nicely done. |
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Saffron  Amazingly Intelligent

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Location: Purcellville, VA

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Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 4:47 pm Post subject:
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| Ophelia wrote: |
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Citizen Girl by Emma McLaughlin
Searching for God Knows What by Donald Miller |
At the moment I'm reading Year of Wonders
by Geraldine Brooks.
I had already read a few books about the plague in England but a friend recommended this to me and I'm enjoying it-- it takes place in an English village, the setting in 1666 is very nicely done. |
I really enjoyed this book until the end. I'd love to know what you think of the way Geraldine wraps this book up.
Saffron |
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Ophelia  Embodiment of Reason Silver Contributor


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Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 5:14 pm Post subject:
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"I really enjoyed this book until the end. I'd love to know what you think of the way Geraldine wraps this book up."
Saffron
OK I'll open a thread for this book and I can also mention the two other books I've read about the plague in England. |
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ralphinlaos  Intern

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Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 12:34 pm Post subject:
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Not much reading this week, but I just started reading A Stained White Radiance by James Lee Burke. I'm twenty pages into the book, and I THINK I'VE READ IT BEFORE! Not the first time this has happened - probably not the last.
Ralph |
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Penelope  Stupendously Brilliant Silver Contributor


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Location: Cheshire, England

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Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 12:45 pm Post subject:
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tis sooooooo good to have you back.
It is 'summer' here.....weather hot and sticky....we are having a barbecue - Aberdeen Angus Steak and Salad.......because we have to catch the warm weather before it goes away again.
We mark whether it has been a good summer by the number of barbecues we get in.
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ralphinlaos  Intern

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Posted: Sat May 10, 2008 1:01 pm Post subject:
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It's also hot and sticky - and rainy - here, as it is most of the year (lovely weather in December and January).
So I, too, barbecue outside a lot - lots of shishkebob (pineapple and green peppers and tomatoes and mushrooms and cucumbers(!) and beef).
Ralph |
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anotheradmirer Eligible to vote!

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Location: P.O.Box29 (Twenty-nine) Chiang Mai University Amphur Maung Chiang Mai 50202 Thailand

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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 1:58 am Post subject:
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| ralphinlaos wrote: |
| I agree with you, Ophelia; dubbed movies are usually just awful. I would much rather see a movie with subtitles. All the American movies which come to Thailand are dubbed into Thai - and I think they use the same three or four people to do the dubbing - they all sound the same. |
Yes, Ophelia and ralphinlaos, dubbed movies are awful. I like to see movies with subtitles too.
No, ralphinlaos, not all American movies, or British or French and so on, which come to Thailand are dubbed into Thai. American and European movies can be seen with subtitles at the cinema. There are options, by the way, dubbed or subtitles. I always prefer the latter. It’s weird watching all the actors/tresses speaking Thai and, you’re definitely right, ralphinlaos, they all sound alike. Moreover, and probably worst of all, “they” don’t seem to respect the scripts. They add, they change, they distort. Even my mom, who doesn’t know English, likes movies with subtitles. She thinks that there’s some essence of the movies missing when they are dubbed. (It’s not usual as people who don’t know English tend to watch dubbed movies. They don’t like to read while watching, that’s what they say.) My mom and I don’t know French or Korean etc. but we enjoy watching movies the way they were made, not distorted.  |
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Penelope  Stupendously Brilliant Silver Contributor


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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 6:55 am Post subject:
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I love the sound of foreign languages - even when I have no knowledge of the language, I can sometimes conclude from which area of the globe they originated.
In our shop last week I heard a man and wife speaking to each other. They were dressed very differently to the rest of us.....and so I asked the man what language they were speaking and where they came from...because I couldn't place it at all. 'Mongolia' he replied. I said, 'Wow!!!!' and they both knew what I meant. How great to go to the Co-op in our little village and meet people from so far away. Furthermore they seemed very pleased that I had spoken to them and that I informed the rest of the queue and the ladies behind the cash tills, where they came from.
The trouble is, we watched a very bleak film from Iceland, with very little dialogue......subtitles......and the language sounded so funny/amusing to our ears....that we kept laughing and ruined the atmosphere.  |
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Audrey  I can enter The Chamber

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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 8:16 am Post subject:
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Ophelia-
I am so happy to be back I was sad when I didn't get to have any laughs with you guys. It is such a relief my exams being over. Focusing really paid off though, I ended up getting straight A's this semester and I am extremely excited about that. I am still studying French and I am starting to double it with business. That sounds pretty good right? I hope so. The future is extremely scary and I want to make the right decision.
And those French books would be fabulous. I need to start some summer reading, so I can keep up with the language. I thought I would read La Fantôme de l'Opéra again  |
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Ophelia  Embodiment of Reason Silver Contributor


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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 9:32 am Post subject:
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Congratulations on the great marks Audrey!
The novels I have mentioned in the "Books in French" thread would be just fine for summer reading I think.
If you read any of them let me know what you thought. |
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Audrey  I can enter The Chamber

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Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 3:48 pm Post subject:
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Thank you.
I will make sure to check some of them out  |
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ralphinlaos  Intern

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Posted: Thu May 29, 2008 4:01 am Post subject:
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I just finished reading "A Stained White Radiance" by James Lee Burke (he's one of my favorite authors in the detective fiction genre - along with James Elroy). Burke's detective, Dave Robicheaux, is an interesting character and the settings - in and around New Orleans - are fascinating to me (I've never been in that part of the States). "A Stained White Radiance" is a terrific book, characters who are offbeat and a plot which keeps you interested to the end.
Does anyone else read James Lee Burke? Or James Elroy? Or Ruth Rendall (I like her Inspector Wexford mysteries very much).
Ralph |
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Penelope  Stupendously Brilliant Silver Contributor


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Posted: Thu May 29, 2008 10:26 am Post subject:
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I'm not much into Detective Fiction...although I have read the odd one.
Inspector Wexford - is a Detective Series - from Ruth Rendell's novels on our TV - Wexford played by George Baker....and I like those....because he always looks suitably puzzled.
I like people who are permanently puzzled...like me!  |
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coffeeaddict Eligible to vote!

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Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 5:42 am Post subject:
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I have just wandered into this thread (and into the forum!).
At the moment, I have Can You Keep a Secret by Sophie Kinsella for my night time reading. Here in Australia it is winter, so I am finding myself snuggling down into bed earlier and earlier each night, and just reading. I like to read easy going stuff at night...some fluffy chick lit is just the thing for me right now because during the day I am reading such things as Sir Gawain & the Green Knight and Antony & Cleopatra, for my lit class! |
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Penelope  Stupendously Brilliant Silver Contributor


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Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 9:22 am Post subject:
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Hello Coffeeaddict - Welcome - I have read a couple of Sophie Kinsella's - One was the Confessions of a Shopaholic and the other was a spinnoff from that with a similar title......they were both great fun to read.
I am amazed at your reading 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'.....that was reputed to have been written by a Monk in Shropshire (I think) very close to here.....on the borders of Wales. Are you in the UK?
Sir Gawain is the Welsh equivalent of Sir Gallahad in the King Arthur Legend I think. It is not an easy read is it? But I do like it somehow. Was it written in the Dark Ages? I would be interested to hear what you all think of it and what your tutor says about it. In fact I would love to come and sit in on your classes because that book/poem needs a knowledgable tutor to help the reader appreciate it properly I would have thought. |
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