

Anyway, I'm on Sharpe's Tirumph, the battle of Assaye which of course launched the rise of Arthur Wellesley's military career.
--A
Moderator: Orlion
I Kinda think I'm supposed to read that book sometime.. not sure.Orlion wrote:The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
I feel like I should know who Rushdie is.. but I don't even have a time period. If you have compelling reasons why people should read 'im, I wanna hear.Yeah, I'm also reading Two Years Eight Months Twenty-Eight Nights by Salman Rushdie..... and Don Quijote... and probably something else...
Well hell man...peter wrote:I was really impressed with Cornwell's factual account of Waterloo Av. I might give his fiction a go on the strength of it - the man can clearly tell a tale. Any recommendations as a first book to read?
I have not read Midnight's Children, but I have read The Satanic Verses and loved it. He does have a loose writing style that can rub people the wrong way, I suppose, but it works very well with the magic realism.Fist and Faith wrote:Rushdie wrote The Satanic Verses. At which point I think he went into hiding for a while, because Khomeini called for his assassination. It ridicules, or mentions, Mohammed. Something like that.
He also wrote Midnight's Children, which is generally considered to be extremely good. I have read it. I tried, but didn't get too far. I wasn't crazy about the pov/narrative. But I'll give it another shot.
Haha, shoulda started with Tiger.peter wrote:One a day Av - I'm still a quarter way into Sharpe's Trafalgar and I've been reading it for three days!
See, now that was the kind of information I was curious to hear! Huh...Fist and Faith wrote:Rushdie wrote The Satanic Verses. At which point I think he went into hiding for a while, because Khomeini called for his assassination.