Harp
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,508
- Location
- Chicago, IL US
Upton Sinclair's The Journal of Arthur Stirling.
Just got in a book that was backordered called "MGM Hollywood's Greatest Backlot."
I think it came out recently. This is a big coffee table book filled with history, and pictures from the golden era.
So far I'm very impressed and thrilled to have it, which is rare for me! LOL
Mine came from Amazon for $22.60, but here's a link to the book.
http://www.mgmbacklot.info/
So I'm at the inlaws, staying in the backroom (has the washer and dryer in it!), keeping away from screaming kids and family.
I brought several books, a cooler to keep my wine cold (a 5 day cooler and honestly the wine is still cool without adding too much ice), and a portable A/C to keep me comfy in the TX heat. I brought a book I'm finishing on Laurel and Hardy, kind of a look at their works listing what went into each film, and why they were so funny. But I brought one out of storage, that I had forgotten about. It's a collection of all Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, as they appeared in the Strand. I got it 20yrs ago at Sams! The book is in a leather bound cover, with gold on the page edges. It's really nice. If I can find one online and find a link, I'll add it later.
If you are a fan of Christie and haven't already read her, Dame Ngaio Marsh is a must. She was writing at roughly the same time as AC but IMHO Marsh pips the Queen of Crime with her characterisation. Worth hunting down.
A modern find which has thrilled me is Barbara Cleverly who writes traditional British Crime set in the inter-war period. Her Joe Sandilands novels are hugely enjoyable and the first few were set in British India of the 20s which are hugely evocative. Her style and pacing reminds me greatly of AC.
R.S. Thomas: Poet of the Hidden God by D.Z. Phillips
Just finished a Dean Koontz storie, great writer
...as I prepare to tackle the raw untranslated Federalist Papers myself.