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Which Book Are You Reading thread

I'm reading three books concurrently, with another I haven't quite finished.

THE ROAD TO RUIN : NIKKI SAVVA

Well researched. It is how Tony Abbott and Peta Credlin destroyed their own government. Abbott was completely dominated by Credlin. The way NS portrays PC is she is the nastiest person I've read about in Aus politics.

THE HALLMARKED MAN : ROBERT GALBRAITH

RG who also wrote as JK Rowling, is probably my favourite author. Very entertaining! I don't want it to end.

TASMANIA'S CONVICTS: ALISON ALEXANDER

How Felons Built A Free Society. Particularly informative. Have referred to it earlier.

MR CLEANSHEETS: G and Gs own Mr C.

Can't bring myself to finish this entertaining book, as the main character, Mr C, hasn't had good news regarding his body holding together late in the book. His future looks bleak.
Hey Decentric, am I right in understanding that you have paused finishing a book because you are so worried about the character's demise that you cant bear to read about it?

If so, thats gotta be the most endearing thing I have ever read on this forum....
 
Just as an aside. Peta Credlin has the biggest head in Australian politics. An absolute massive bonce.
 
All the books on Project Gutenberg are in the public domain though so the vast majority of them are older works, and you're now limited to what they already have since they're not going to be adding any more as of the start of this year.
I like to occasionally read those English literature classics....

Looking at Project Gutenberg it has a mixed focus on this kind of thing so I might find the odd interesting one here or there.
 
Hey Decentric, am I right in understanding that you have paused finishing a book because you are so worried about the character's demise that you cant bear to read about it?

If so, thats gotta be the most endearing thing I have ever read on this forum....
It is Mr Cleansheets! The book.

True. Guilty as charged!

I just can’t see a good future for the main character. Our own Mr C is an entertaining writer. To me a sad end beckons. I can’t bring myself to read it.
 
Just as an aside. Peta Credlin has the biggest head in Australian politics. An absolute massive bonce.
I’m not sure if Nikki Savva has it in for Credlin, but the way she treats people who work for her, and most Lib MPs, is disgraceful!

PC is so nasty and arrogant! The worst bully ever! The poor staff!

Turnbull got her out of the way pronto.

Although this isn’t the right thread, I read a Guardian article where Dutton was almost bullied by Abbott and Credlin to adopt more conservative positions than he wanted to in the last election.
 
Keep the political dribble out of this thread please, we have plenty of other places on this forum to do so.
 
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Set in the otherworld of pool halls of 1950's America it explores the journey of "Fast" Eddie Felson a pool player of unbelievable talent who journeys across America with his "manager" and hustle several thousand dollars off lesser pool players whilst pretending to be a lesser pool player. As he inexorably gets to his personal Mecca of pool halls called Bennington's in Chicago it inevitiably falls apart after a 40 hour pool game with the best where he gets drunk, gets proud and gets arrogant and loses 10,000 dollars. The rest of the book is a journey of redemption the hard away and doesn't have a happy ending.

The book was much better than the very famous Paul Newman film however ironically the follow up The Colour Of Money about 25 years later or so was a case where the film was much better than the book, well have Paul Newman and Tom Cruise and directed by Martin Scorcese will do that.
 
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Don't read this, EZ. It might interest others though. Political books appear to interest G and G readers more than the Crime series I read.

BULLDOZED - SCOTT MORRISON'S FALL AND ANTHONY ALBANESE'S RISE: NIKKI SAVVA

Genre: non-fiction/Australian politics

Setting: Australia preceding the 2022 Federal election

Length - about 280 pages

Date - read it in November 2024

I chose this book because it was being discussed in the Aussie media. Nikki Savva calls herself a Left Wing Conservative - a contradiction in terms!

Nikky Savva is particularly thorough at researching a plethora of anecdotes and conversations amongst significant political entities.

One scenario I didn't know much about before reading this book, was that Scott Morrison was only really close politically to a NSW Fed Liberal MP, Alex Hawke. Hawke was very much Morrison's numbers man and his political operative in the shadows.

Like many PMs prior, Morrison didn't listen to supposedly sage advice. He was also close to the more moderate senior minister, Josh Friedenberg, who lost his seat, and presented a different style of LIberal face to the media than many of the Hard Right Libs and Nationals.

Morrison shafted plenty of his political mates on his side of politics. He is weirdly fatalistic with his Hillsong Church affiliation. How Savva compiles all these stories and conversations is incredible! Morrison wasn't a good team builder.

Morrison also totally underestimated Anthony Albanese - according to NS. Morrison is a very effective campaigner, and thought he would outperform Albanese in the 2021 election campaign.

The current Labor PM, assembled a very effective team unit of capable ministers who have worked as a team unit then - and since. The Labor team, was very much a team unit, and met a lot in person, who Albanese kept in the loop at all times, and has continued to so so. According to Savva, Labor has had more cogent policies at election times.

From direct experience, the one influence that Savva appears to know little about, was the union movement's mobilisation against Morrison in that election.

I'm simply astonished how much access NS gets, and records, from senior Liberal stakeholders. I'm simply gobsmacked how much is disclosed to her!

I'll put a note that this book is reviewed in Aus politics thread. If there is any response, some can be written in the Aus politics thread.
 
Just edited with my thoughts.

I'm rereading The Queens Gambit as well because my daughter is heavily into chess and loves the TV series and it rewatching it currently.
Like the way you, and others, post the images/photos of the books in the thread.

I can do it on FB.
 
View attachment 3381

Set in the otherworld of pool halls of 1950's America it explores the journey of "Fast" Eddie Felson a pool player of unbelievable talent who journeys across America with his "manager" and hustle several thousand dollars off lesser pool players whilst pretending to be a lesser pool player. As he inexorably gets to his personal Mecca of pool halls called Bennington's in Chicago it inevitiably falls apart after a 40 hour pool game with the best where he gets drunk, gets proud and gets arrogant and loses 10,000 dollars. The rest of the book is a journey of redemption the hard away and doesn't have a happy ending.

The book was much better than the very famous Paul Newman film however ironically the follow up The Colour Of Money about 25 years later or so was a case where the film was much better than the book, well have Paul Newman and Tom Cruise and directed by Martin Scorcese will do that.
Excellent review, EZ.
 
You'd like Recollections of a bleeding heart by Don Watson as Australian politics seems to be your thing.

It's a portrait of Paul Keating.

View attachment 3404
Thanks, EZ.

Have heard of this book. Will look out for it in secondhand bookshops.

Believe it or not, I am much more active in politics than I read books about it.

My main reading genres are crime, historical fiction and domestic fiction in the general fiction genre.

I probably read history books most in non-fiction. More so than politics. I have also read a lot of football and cricket books.
 
"The Coping Stone" by Paul Nicholls

The story of the English FA football tour of Australia in 1925.
From Fremantle to Bundaberg, and back.
25 matches in 12 weeks.

England won every match. The English heroes were Bert Batten (Plymouth), 47 goals. Also Stan Seymour (Newcastle) and Jack Elkes (Tottenham)
Australia's stars were Judy Masters (Balgownie), Tom Thompson (Balgownie) and Roy McNaughton (Cessnock)
 
"The Coping Stone" by Paul Nicholls

The story of the English FA football tour of Australia in 1925.
From Fremantle to Bundaberg, and back.
25 matches in 12 weeks.

England won every match. The English heroes were Bert Batten (Plymouth), 47 goals. Also Stan Seymour (Newcastle) and Jack Elkes (Tottenham)
Australia's stars were Judy Masters (Balgownie), Tom Thompson (Balgownie) and Roy McNaughton (Cessnock)
This looks like an interesting book to read.

This could be posted in the Football Books thread too.
 
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