
Can Anybody Help Me?: 1: DS Claire Boyle Thriller
Book
It was crazy really, she had never met the woman, had no idea of her real name but she thought of...
Wall of Days
Book
This is a stunning novel of guilt and loss and remembering. In a world all but drowned, a man called...

Colin Newman recommended Tabula Rasa by Arvo Part in Music (curated)
Hard-Boiled Hollywood: Crime and Punishment in Postwar Los Angeles
Book
The tragic and mysterious circumstances surrounding the deaths of Elizabeth Short, or the Black...

Becoming Women: The Embodied Self in Image Culture
Book
In a culture where beauty is currency, women's bodies are often perceived as measures of value and...

Diversity in Gender and Visual Representation
Book
This book aims to encourage and develop understanding of the social category of gender, the concept...

Breaking Negative Thinking Patterns: A Schema Therapy Self-Help and Support Book
Gitta Jacob, Hannie van Genderen and Laura Seebauer
Book
Breaking Negative Thinking Patterns is the first schema-mode focused resource guide aimed at schema...

Germans on the Kenyan Coast: Land, Charity, and Romance
Book
Diani, a coastal town on the Indian Ocean, is significantly defined by a large European presence...

David McK (3587 KP) rated Biggles: The Camels Are Coming in Books
Jan 3, 2021
Thankfully, Amazon doesn't know (or care).
I've just re-read this for the first time in something like 30 odd years, and it's amazing how well it actually holds together all those years later.
Like 'Biggles Learns To Fly' (which I also re-read recently), this is more a collection of short stories with little in the real way of any over-arching plot: vignettes which, if the author is to be believed (and I've no reason not to) are all based on true stories that either happened to him or that he heard about during his earliest flying days in the latter stages of World War One.
While the character of Biggles may not be as popular or as well-known today as during the years in which the stories were written (the 1930 through to the 1990s), there's a reason why they have endured as long as they have ...

Ross (3284 KP) rated The Boys: The Name Of The Game in Books
Aug 19, 2019
This first volume gives an introduction to the boys, and their purpose, and the fact that the world is now full of twisted, power-hungry superheroes, who have corporate sponsorship.
Hughie is devastated when his girlfriend becomes collateral damage in a fight between supes, and is quickly invited into the boys to seek revenge.
Unlike the TV series, the boys don't go straight after The Seven, preferring a lower profile target to make their comeback known. They go after Teenage Kix, a group of young superheroes who engage in all manners of unsavoury antics behind closed doors. Through spying, blackmail and eventual violence, the boys take down this group and make their purpose known.
Brilliant artwork, fantastic dialogue and a real twisted, yet believable, storyline.