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What Book/Books Are You Reading?

Denv12
Community Member

I got to admit,I love reading at the best of times.Those of us who love to read tend to get the most out of books.I'm a big fan of books that I can learn from.Self help books,relationship books,etc.There's something worth learning.I even read up on dating books just to relearn some skills.As a guy I also love the guy stuff,cars,hobbies,interests,man cave,etc.

What book are you reading? What books are you reading? What helps you?

Thanks.

289 Replies 289

Matchy69
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member
The book i am now reading is The Hero Of ST. Basil's by C. Serjeant.This book was presented to my dad in 1941 by his church.

Hi Matchy

That book sounds intetesting. Can you please tell us what it's about?

Hi Summer Rose it is basicaly about a boy who is sent to boardimg school and has to deal with a bully.It is book i pulled off my bookshelf randomly.I have heaps of books that were my parents.My dad was a huge reader.

Guest_1643
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member
Hi Mark that's so nice... it always frustrated me that no one in my family read.... I always wished I had someone to recommend books to me....I love books also. I will check out that book online. Thanks 🙂

Hi Matchy

It sounds like a good read. So nice to have a literary connection with your parents

Matchy69
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member
Now i am reading a book that was my mothers and must be old as it has her maiden name in it.Its called Lavender and Old Lace by Myrtle Reed.

Paw Prints
Valued Contributor
Valued Contributor

Hello All,

Matchy, I still have all my parents books & I have read them all. I'm someone who re reads books as I find my view point about the book can change over the years. What I notice now compared to what I noticed as a teen can be vastly different.

I've just finished re-reading a book The Sands of Windee by Arthur Upfield, who was an Englishman who migrated to Australia a few years before the WWI & spent those years & the years between the wars mostly living & working in the outback. He is primarily known for his detective novels, where the lead character Bony is a man whose father was white & his mother an aborigine & the books are all based in the outback that Upfield knew.

I always find it such a strange experience reading this book as there are so many different levels of racism apparent in it, despite Upfield being lauded for his progressive thinking about aboriginal culture. Upfield deliberately shows the racism his lead character has to deal with & that the aboriginal people have to deal with. He even writes a section where he extols aboriginal culture & how long it has existed for. Yet there is so much unconscious racism in his writing, even his lead character expresses it. I first read it back in my early teens & as I've aged when I read it I see more & more the subtle expressions of British superiority to all other peoples in it. As a detective novel it is very average, as a snapshot of the attitudes & beliefs of the time it is fascinating.

Paws

Matchy69
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member
I have heaps of books of my parents to read.I am just choosing one randomly to read.

Paws I have heard of that writer's name but can't remember reading anything by him - how interesting to find you can read it now and perceive such a different impression and have a new awareness of his notions of superiority. I have noticed that in some British writers about Australian books.. David Marr's biography of Patrick White showed the sort of attitudes that Australian writers were up against when they tried to get their books published by British publishers and the appalling reviews that White received from them. Thanks for the review!

Guest_1643
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hey everyone and warm welcome to newbies.
How are you goig with lockdown reads?
Anyone else finding it hard to concentrate?

I am reading graphic novels and short stories,

including an amazing collection of essays called

What my Mother and I Don't Talk about.

I've also been interested in reading some work on trauma - including The Body Keeps the Score (Bessel Van Der Kalk) and Waking the Tiger (Peter Levine).