What are you reading tonight?
Moderator: Zulus Thousand of em
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- Bruce Rioja
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Really? I'm sure that he'd find your posts on here simply riveting!Batman wrote:bryson bores me these days

May the bridges I burn light your way
- Bruce Rioja
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- TANGODANCER
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- Dujon
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I have just finished reading Rudyard Kipling's Kim. Having recently read a biography of Kipling's early life - to age 35 - and also a collection of some of his short stories (Plain Tales from the Hills) about India and its people I thought that, not having read much of Kipling at all, I'd best read his most celebrated publication. Whilst the collection was written by a quite young Kipling Kim seems to me to be a product of a much more mature and broad thinking mind.
The plot is simple (if you can call it a plot) but the description of life in India under the rule of the Sahibs is fascinating as are the minutiae of day-to-day doings of existence at that time. No doubt things have changed since Kipling wrote Kim just as they have in most other parts of the world; I also have to accept Kipling's descriptions as being true as I have nothing else with which to compare them.
Did Kipling gild the lilly? I don't know, but if he did I suspect that it would be in the small detail rather than the large. The caste versus caste, the religion versus religion, life versus death, the Indian versus European - never mind the man versus man - combine to form an intricate web describing the internal structure of India at that time.
This is a work of fiction. This is a work written by a man who spent his formative years in India and then was shuffled off to England by his parents, for educational purposes, but who then returned to India in his later, but still young, life. As I understand it Kim was conceived whilst Kipling was living in the U.S. of A. - a short stay of just three or four years - after his marriage to an American lass. Therefore I must look at the work as a (possibly) nostalgic look back at what was, might have been or even distorted memories of a happy childhood: the latter I suspect afflicts us all.
If you have not read the book then I recommend that you do so.
The plot is simple (if you can call it a plot) but the description of life in India under the rule of the Sahibs is fascinating as are the minutiae of day-to-day doings of existence at that time. No doubt things have changed since Kipling wrote Kim just as they have in most other parts of the world; I also have to accept Kipling's descriptions as being true as I have nothing else with which to compare them.
Did Kipling gild the lilly? I don't know, but if he did I suspect that it would be in the small detail rather than the large. The caste versus caste, the religion versus religion, life versus death, the Indian versus European - never mind the man versus man - combine to form an intricate web describing the internal structure of India at that time.
This is a work of fiction. This is a work written by a man who spent his formative years in India and then was shuffled off to England by his parents, for educational purposes, but who then returned to India in his later, but still young, life. As I understand it Kim was conceived whilst Kipling was living in the U.S. of A. - a short stay of just three or four years - after his marriage to an American lass. Therefore I must look at the work as a (possibly) nostalgic look back at what was, might have been or even distorted memories of a happy childhood: the latter I suspect afflicts us all.
If you have not read the book then I recommend that you do so.
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Ive read that, made me chuckle.Prufrock wrote:'Is it just me or is everything shit'
Brilliant, recomend it to everyone.
Edit - There's a site with some of it in:
http://www.iseverythingshit.co.uk
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- Bruce Rioja
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the one i think i read was 'the best of is it just me or is everything shit'. Not sure if thats both together or the best of each.Any ideas?Bruce Rioja wrote:Volume Two 'Because, if anything, it all just keeps getting worse', is now available.Prufrock wrote:'Is it just me or is everything shit'
Brilliant, recomend it to everyone.
In a world that has decided
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
That it's going to lose its mind
Be more kind, my friends, try to be more kind.
- Dujon
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I've just finished reading a wonderful, weird and wacky, totally fun, book titled The Ultimate Aphrodisiac A Brief History of World War III by Robert G Barrett. It's a wild romp through the Pacific Islands and other parts of the world and includes U.F.O.s, gratuitous sex, a right wing American president and lots and lots of hemp and surfing. It also includes a fair bit of the Australian vernacular, but if you can figure out all that you'll be right - no worries, mate, fair dinks.
It seems that Barrett has also written a number of books based around a character known as Les Norton (this one is not). I shall be seeking them out.
It seems that Barrett has also written a number of books based around a character known as Les Norton (this one is not). I shall be seeking them out.
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