[ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

  • From: "Elaine Harris \(Rivendell\)" <elaineharris@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2013 23:34:10 +1000

Oh, yes! Bernard Cribbins reading Winnie-The-Pooh was just brilliant and my
only knowledge of the "Just William" books, embarrassingly having never read
them, is having them brought alive by Martin Jarvis. He does the same with
Wodehouse whether you like the books or not, yet can bring superb pathos to
World War I poetry.

 

Agree totally about Stephen Fry and the UP books.

 

Take care,

 

Elaine

 

 

From: ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Trish Talbot
Sent: Friday, 28 June 2013 6:59 PM
To: Ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

 

Hmmm!  Maybe I'll have a go at the David Banks vreading of LOTR one day.
Elaine seems to think I hate the book, I don't, it just didn't grab me in
the way it does other people.  

 

Oh great!  Someone else who remembers and rates the Bernard Cribbins reading
of "Winnie-The-Pooh"!  I love it, but so many other people seem to think the
definitive version is that read by Alan Bennett.  The Bennett version is
good, but not, inmy opinion, as good.

 

We haven't mentioned women readers so far, apart from Joan Walker, who is
certainly one of the best.  Top of my list has to be Carole Boyd, with Kate
Binchy and Caroline Lennon for Irish books.  Anne Dover (Is that real  her
real name!) is also pretty good.

 

Martin Jarvis has to be the definitive reader of the "Just William" stories,
in fact, he can read just about anything and make it sound good, while the
Harry Potter books and Stephen Fry are inseparable in my mind, I'd find it
hard to listen to anyone else reading them.

Trish.   

  

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Ian Macrae <mailto:ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx>  

To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

Sent: Friday, June 28, 2013 9:26 AM

Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

 

One of the reasons I continue to love re-reading LOTR Elaine is that there
is a brilliant reading of it in the RNIB talking book library by David
Banks.  He avoids many of the cliches and stereotypes in terms of finding
voices for the characters.  True, Sam remains a bit of a yokel but the Orcs
have a kind of Yorkshire menace rather than being cocknified yobs and his
Smeagol is every bit as inventive as Andy Circis's in the Peter Jackson
movies.  Don't know whether it would turn any avowed Tolkien disparagers,
But this would be a good reading for a newby to start with.  

 

As for Gabriel wolf, he would certainly be one of the readers of my life.  A
very early radio memory is of him reading ring Of Bright Water by Gavin
Maxwell and that must have been in the mid or late 50s.  Incidentally, he is
also responsible for the RNIB reading of The Hobbit and makes a rather
disappointing job it in my view.  Other readers of my life would include the
legendary david Davis, Bernard Cribbins for a magnificent Winny  The Pooh in
the 1970s and, more recently David Thorpe, a reader of great versatility and
inventiveness.  

On 28 Jun 2013, at 06:45, Elaine Harris (Rivendell) wrote:





Oh, wow!

I'll have to think about these and submit a list later - probably over the
weekend.

Ian, I love Tolkien; I have both the BBC Radio drama version on CD and the
entire book read (acted in full) by the wonderful Rob English whom I was
privileged to meet in about 1987 when he was touring his one-man/one-hour
show of The Hobbit.

Another much-loved but lighter Tolkien is "Farmer Giles of Ham".

I will work on my list but "Watership Down" is definitely on there and it
would be all too easy to choose a book read by Gabriel Wolf; he's on my
short-shortlist of readers along with Tony Robinson, Martin Jarvis, Stephen
Fry and, as mentioned once before, Stephen Thorne.

"The Handmaid's Tale" is Margaret Atwood's best to my mind but so utterly
terrifying I don't know that I would ever re-read it.

I had to list my three favourite books last year but can now only remember
two of them so shall check back.

More when I can make up my mind.

Take care,

Elaine

From: ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ebooktalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Trish Talbot
Sent: Friday, 28 June 2013 6:03 AM
To: Ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BOOKS OF MY LIFE

Having read Ian's five favourite books,  thought I'd have a go at choosing
my own list.  I have to say it was almost as bad as trying to choose my
"Desert Island discs" (I've never yet managed to decide what my favourite 8
tracks would be).  Like Ian's list, mine might be very different in six
months, but these are my thoughts today, and although they are numbered, the
numbering doesn't indicate preference:

1.  George Eliot, "Middlemarch".  We read this book for A level, and I have
read it since, as well as watching TV versions and hearing it on radio.
Each time, it says something new to me.  I think Eliot was well ahead of her
time, her views are very feminist for the Victorian era.  All the characters
are superbly drawn, and I particularly enjoy the contrasting characters of
Dorothea and Rosamund - both strong women, but with very different ideas
about life.    

2.  Richard Addams, "Watership Down".  Often misjudged as a children's book,
just because its characters are rabbits, it is, in fact, a book about a team
of creatures, all very different in character, but using their skills and
talents to achieve their aim.  It has its sadness as well as its happier
moments, and the story keeps moving.  This was the first book I ever (to use
Ian's word) chain read, which has to make it a special book for me. 

3.  Andrea Levy, "Small Island".  I read this a couple of years ago, and
couldn't put it down!  There is so much misunderstanding from people who
think they understand, so many conflicting views, but the author manages to
convey the fact that not every white British person is hostile to the new
West Indian imigrants.  I'm glad I read it as an audio book, though, it
definitely gained something from being read by readers who could make sense
of the Jamaican dialect.  

4. Margaret Attwood,  "The Handmaid's Tale".  A disturbing, but
thought-provoking book, which, once I read it, stayed with me.   

5.  J K Rowling, "Harry Potter And The Gobblet Of Fire."  (There had to be
one.)  I loved the whole series, with reservations about the last one, but
this one was, to my mind, the best.  It has everything - characters who are,
by this stage, well developped, humour, suspense, and a brilliant story.  I
suppose the series being set in a boarding school appeals to me as well,
knowing how it feels when you're away from home and have to think for
yourself and/or include our friends. 

I struggled to limit the choice to five, as I narrowed it down to six and
couldn't decide which to leave out.  Cheating, I will sneak in the fact that
I wanted to include:

Winifred Holtby, "South Riding", the stroy of life in a Yorkshire town prior
to the creation of the Welfare state.  I love this book, and I think it can
tell us a lot about where Britain seems to be heading.

Anyone else up for "Desert Island Books"?

Trish.     

----- Original Message -----

From: Ian Macrae <mailto:ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx> 

To: ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 10:50 PM

Subject: [ebooktalk] Re: BVOOKS OF MY LIFE

I'm sure some of you will think this very predictable and disappointing,
and, of course, if I was asked to draw up the same list in six months time,
I'd come up with something a little different.  But here we go and I'll fill
in some of the background and detail  for my choices.  

1.  The Lord Of The rings:  J R R Tolkien - like many of my generation I
discovered Tolkien in my teens during the 60s.  There are other books I read
back then such as For Whom The Bell Tolls, Catcher In The Rye and Catch 22
which simply no longer work for me.  But I re-read LOTR at least once a
year.  I appreciate all that's wrong with it - the master servant
relationship, the slightly old fashioned values, the literal denegration of
black, but it remains a story which never fails to chime with me.  

2.  F Scott Fitzgerald:  the Great Gatsby:  the first book I ever chain
read.  that's to say, like a cigarette, as soon as I'd finished it, I
started again.  The sense of suffocation and frustration coupled with the
mystery (or not) surrounding Gatsby himself combine to make this possibly
the most perfect novel ever written.  

3.  A self compiled anthology of 20th century poetry:  this would include
the Georgians, WW1 poets, eliot, the protest poetry of the 30s, poems from
WW2, philip Larkin, on through the beats and Liverpool scenes and up to
~John cooper-clark and beyond.  

4.  John le Care:  tinker Taylor Soldier Spy:  Having gone through
institutions all my life, I find his evocation of the inner workings of the
intelligence service utterly convincing, although it may well be total
hooey.  Smiley is a central character without compare and le Care's style is
perfectly suited to the subject and genre.  

5.  Alan Clark: Diaries 1983-91:  No-one takes you quite inside politics
like Clark.  I hate him as a politician and despise him in many respects of
his life, but no-one takes you inside politics, and particularly Tory
politics like he does.  

On 26 Jun 2013, at 22:17, Shell wrote:






You can't expect us to wait for that one Ian. Please tell us straight away!

Shell.



--------------------------------------------------
From: "Ian Macrae" <ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, June 26, 2013 9:15 PM
To: <ebooktalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [ebooktalk] BVOOKS OF MY LIFE

> Tomorrow afternoon I'm going to RNIB talking book studios in Camden north
London to record my Books Of My Life feature for the October issue of Read
On.  Five favourites from all these years of reading.  Would people like to
know what they are or would you rather wait till the mag comes out?  
>

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