Book List 2012 Update Three
Continuing from where we left off from the previous book list update, here is the third update for my 2012 book list challenge.
I wasn’t too impressed with this although it was highly recommended. The book lacked any real character that I connected with and followed a cliché pattern with its characters. The story follows an award winning video producer to Somalia where she wants to uncover the real story behind Somalian pirates. Inevitably it involves the bigger picture and how it ties into Terrorism and a potential threat to the US. Snore. I finished it though…
16. A Drink Before The War - Dennis Lehane
Jesus I’m glad I read this. As stated earlier in a previous post, I really enjoyed Gone, Baby, Gone but this totally blew me away. I love the two main characters Gennaro and Kenzie and their tense relationship, I love the grittiness provided by their history and connection with tough cops to ex-cons. Overall the book just flew by and I enjoyed every moment of it. I enjoyed it so much I read the next book in the series straight away. I thoroughly recommend it to all,which is why I’m not divulging into too many details.
Read the rest of the post and more reviews by click through here
Source: robmacmusic.co.uk
Book List 2011 - Round UP
Mega mega late but I thought I’d just chuck this up as a round up. I’m going to sort 2012 out now :)
1. James Lee Burke - Bitterroot
2.Charles Bukowski - Hollywood
3. Ian Fleming - From Russia With Love
4. Nick Hornby - High Fidelity
5. Isabelle Allende - Eva Luna
6. James Lee Burke -Sunset Limited
7. James Lee Burke -Jolie Blons Bounce
9. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Love in the Time of Cholera
10. Gregory David Roberts - Shantaram
11. Paulo Coelho - The Alchemist
12. Chuck Palahniuk - Invisible Monsters
13. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - No One Writes to the Colonel
14. Ian Rankin - Knots and Crosses
15. Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner
16. Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart
17. Jim Thompson - The Grifters
18. Cormac McCarthy - All the Pretty Horses
19. Bateman - The Day of the Jack Russell
20. Phil Jackson - Sacred Hoops
21. Michael Ondaajte - Coming Through Slaughter
22. Gil Scott- Heron - The Vultures
23. Jack Higgins - Luciano’s Luck
24.James Lee Burke - In The Electric Mist With Confederate Dead
25. George R.R. Martin - Game of Thrones
26/27.George R.R.Martin - Clash of Kings/ Storm of Swords
28. George R.R. Martin - Storm of Swords 2
29. George R.R. Martin - A Feast for Crows
30. Henning Mankel - The Man From Beijing
31. Conn Iggulden - Wolf of the Plains
(Books I didn’t write about as I forgot)
32. Conn Iggulden - Lord of the Bow
33. George R.R. Martin - A Dance With Dragons
Book List 2011 - Book 30
As you might have guessed, I’m doing a backlog of blogs as I’ve really been slacking on the blogging front. Does anybody actually read it, well whether they do or not it’s good for keeping count of how many books I’ve read this year so far and I’ve hit a nice milestone in 30!
Henning Mankel - The Man From Beijing.
This was recommended to me by Mol’s Dad who is a big fan of the Wallander series that is also written by Mankel. The book start off in Sweden and then follows through different centuries and continents until everything is seamlessly linked. The description of every scene was described really well and the relationship between the characters felt unique and well crafted. Mankel is obviously a great writer otherwise he wouldn’t have had such wide success but I did feel that the story was a little unoriginal although it did take us to a wide variety of places the plot line in brief is simple, although I won’t explain due to spoilers.
Book List 2011 - Book 29
George R.R. Martin - A Feast For Crows
This has been my least favorite book so far from the series, as always I was completely immersed in the book when reading but the omission of many of the lead characters made me not really care about lots of the other people that were being described. I won’t ruin the book for anyone that is going to read it as I’m told it’s still really important to continue with the book even though it may drain you a little as the next book relies heavily on the knowledge you gain from this book.
I look forward to reading the next installment but at the moment I’m waiting for it to come down in price. I wouldn’t pay £25 for a CD let alone a book and also it must weigh nearly 3 Kgs, the thing is HUGE!
Book List 2011 - Book 28
George R.R Martin - A Storm of Swords 2 Blood and Gold
Book 3 of the series part 2. Continuing from where it left of, this was probably the best installment yet. The action came thick and fast and we are given a wider insight into the different kingdoms that have previously been unexplained. Obviously my favorite characters are the Starks but I also like Daenaerys a lot too. In the TV show I didn’t really warm to her, I know it’s hard to compare as that was only book one but as the books go on I’ve started to enjoy her character a lot more.
Book List 2011: Book 26 - 27
George R.R. Martin - A Clash of Kings
George R.R. Martin - A Storm of Swords 1:Steel and Sorrow
So i’ve got these books in the bag… I’m averaging one a week at the moment and if I carry that on I should get somewhere close to 52 books for the year.
I don’t want to go too much in to detail but the whole series has totally engrossed me and I thoroughly recommend them, although only if you have the time because there so gripping.


Book List 2011: Book 25
George R.R. Martin - The Game of Thrones
There has been loads of hype surrounding this book after the TV show being aired. I thought that the TV show was brilliant and I couldn’t wait until 2012 to find out the next part of the story so I decided to buy all the books a read them all.
The book, like the TV series, was fantastic. The TV series didn’t really miss anything but it was still great to read and get a wider understanding of the Seven Kingdoms and beyond. The one thing that the TV show can’t really explain is the sub-plots and how he is setting characters up to for the rest of the series of books, or at least it’s got me thinking who’s going to do what in the next book.
I’m nowhere near my 52 books a year after coming back from traveling but reading books that are 800 pages long with pretty small writing doesn’t help. So what have I done… like I said, I bought all of the books in the series which are all 700 pages +. I could adapt my New Years Resolution to finish all the books before the new year….
Book List 2011: Book 23
Jack Higgins - Luciano’s Luck
I picked this book up at a warehouse clearance in Bristol last year and never got round to it. The book is based during the Second World War and based in Sicily. I had just finished playing Mafia 2 and it has a similar open story.
The Americans are planning an attack on Italy via Sicily and they need the Mafias help to have a successful operation. By securing the Mafia’s co-operation, the peasants will assist the American landing and show no resistance, uniting with the allied forces to push through Sicily and drive the Germans out. The main problem is that Don Luca, the most important man in the Sicilian Mafia, hates Americans. His brother was sent to the electric chair. This is where Luciano comes in. Luciano is the most important Mafia member in America and hold a large influence on Don Luca, the only problem is that he’s in jail. The president of the United States pardons Luciano and Luciano goes to Sicily, via Liverpool to get Don Luca’s granddaughter, who moved away from home when her mother was killed by a car bomb.
The relationship between the characters was brilliant but the most enjoyable thing for me was the insight behind some of the Sicilian customs, the respect and brutality shown when dealing with enemies. The relationship of the mafia and the church. The scene I remember best is Salvatore, a Sicilian mob member who is an informant for the US, kills somebody who has betrayed him. He knocks on the door, grabs the man by the neck, kisses him and then kills him. ‘The Kiss of Death’.
I won’t elaborate anymore, in case someone reads this blogpost and then wants to read the book, but I thought it was fantastic. 8.5/10
You can read more about ‘Lucky Luciano’ here
Books so far:
1. James Lee Burke - Bitterroot
2.Charles Bukowski - Hollywood
3. Ian Fleming - From Russia With Love
4. Nick Hornby - High Fidelity
5. Isabelle Allende - Eva Luna
6. James Lee Burke -Sunset Limited
7. James Lee Burke -Jolie Blons Bounce
9. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Love in the Time of Cholera
10. Gregory David Roberts - Shantaram
11. Paulo Coelho - The Alchemist
12. Chuck Palahniuk - Invisible Monsters
13. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - No One Writes to the Colonel
14. Ian Rankin - Knots and Crosses
15. Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner
16. Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart
17. Jim Thompson - The Grifters
18. Cormac McCarthy - All the Pretty Horses
19. Bateman - The Day of the Jack Russell
20. Phil Jackson - Sacred Hoops
Book List 2011: Book 21
Michael Ondaajte - Coming Through Slaughter
I was recommended this book by my good friend Mfon, he claimed it was one of the best books written about Jazz ever. I haven’t read any books on jazz so I can’t make that statement, but it was damn good. The way that New Orleans is described is so poetic, Ondaajte really puts you in New Orleans at the beginning of the 20th Century. Ondaajte weaved a number or interviews and statements about Bolden’s life to give a fantastic representation about his life and struggles, including his time in a mental hospital.
Below is Amazon’s review which I thought was a pretty good review too.
Bringing to life the fabulous, colorful panorama of New Orleans in the first flush of the jazz era, this book tells the story of Buddy Bolden, the first of the great trumpet players—some say the originator of jazz—who was, in any case, the genius, the guiding spirit, and the king of that time and place.
In this fictionalized meditation, Bolden, an unrecorded father of Jazz, remains throughout a tantalizingly ungraspable phantom, the central mysteries of his life, his art, and his madness remaining felt but never quite pinned down. Ondaatje’s prose is at times startlingly lyrical, and as he chases Bolden through documents and scenes, the novel partakes of the very best sort of modern detective novel—one where the enigma is never resolved, but allowed to manifest in its fullness.
8/10
Books so far:
1. James Lee Burke - Bitterroot
2.Charles Bukowski - Hollywood
3. Ian Fleming - From Russia With Love
4. Nick Hornby - High Fidelity
5. Isabelle Allende - Eva Luna
6. James Lee Burke -Sunset Limited
7. James Lee Burke -Jolie Blons Bounce
9. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Love in the Time of Cholera
10. Gregory David Roberts - Shantaram
11. Paulo Coelho - The Alchemist
12. Chuck Palahniuk - Invisible Monsters
13. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - No One Writes to the Colonel
14. Ian Rankin - Knots and Crosses
15. Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner
16. Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart
17. Jim Thompson - The Grifters
18. Cormac McCarthy - All the Pretty Horses
Book List 2011: Book 19
I knew this would happen, I’d get back and not really read many books, it’s true I’ve struggled to get into reading a book and it didn’t help that I was only getting 20-30 mins in when possible every other day. I started and read about 100 pages of a Marquez and a Robert Stone but wasn’t really enjoying them. I then went to the library in my hometown (Bishop’s Stortford) and just picked up something that was recommended and it was this:
Bateman - The Day of the Jack Russell
The book covers a book shop owner who specialises in crime thrillers who in his spare time, does a little bit of private investigating. He’s used to easy stuff such as finding out where people live etc but a case comes up that he thinks will be easy and it turns into a complex plot where he’s way out of his depth. The mystery man is a hypochondriac, taking pills for everything you can imagine and letting everyone else around him do the hard work but through his narrative the book was hilarious. It combined an interesting story with a good twist at the end and some black humour that had me laughing out loud yesterday on the train back from Manchester. To me it felt like a crime novel written by an author similar to Nick Hornby.
7/10
Books so far:
1. James Lee Burke - Bitterroot
2.Charles Bukowski - Hollywood
3. Ian Fleming - From Russia With Love
4. Nick Hornby - High Fidelity
5. Isabelle Allende - Eva Luna
6. James Lee Burke -Sunset Limited
7. James Lee Burke -Jolie Blons Bounce
9. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Love in the Time of Cholera
10. Gregory David Roberts - Shantaram
11. Paulo Coelho - The Alchemist
12. Chuck Palahniuk - Invisible Monsters
13. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - No One Writes to the Colonel
14. Ian Rankin - Knots and Crosses
15. Khaled Hosseini - The Kite Runner
16. Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart
17. Jim Thompson - The Grifters
18. Cormac McCarthy - All the Pretty Horses
19. Bateman - The Day of the Jack Russell
