My TBR pile is threatening to topple over and still I’m rereading the old stuff. It’s not that I’m not reading the new books as well. I have the habit of reading several books at once. I just get sudden cravings for the old things. I’m sure I’m not alone in this.
So, what have I been craving recently? Terry Pratchett, Moving Pictures, for a start. I downloaded the audiobook, which is being read by Tony Robinson. I prefer his reading, even though it’s abridged, to Nigel Planer’s unabridged version. But it is abridged. I just had to go back and reread the book. It’s more or less standalone, though many of the characters appear in other books. Gaspode the talking dog later turns up as the thinking-brain dog of beggar Foul Old Ron. Young wizard Ponder Stibbons, a student in this book, later becomes the university’s token nerd and computer geek. Cut-Me-Own-Throat Dibbler, the man who sells sausages in a bun, becomes a movie mogul in this one.
I’m rereading Pratchett and Gaiman’s Good Omens for the umpteenth time and still laughing. The TV series will be starting soon and I think I can join Amazon Prime and watch it without wifi. If so, I will do it. It’s not too expensive and worth it just for this.
I downloaded the ebook of Game Of Thrones by George R R Martin, though I have a print copy, because it’s easier than lugging the thing in my bag, and it was only $2.99 in Apple Books. I haven’t followed the TV series, but the author has vowed to have Winds Of Winter, Book 6, on time for next year’s Worldcon, which I’d like to attend. It’s in New Zealand, so not too far for me to go. I was wondering whether I can get past Book 4 this time; I sort of gave up on it by Chapter 1 of the fifth book. It had become too soap opera for me. But no harm in trying.
I bought T.H White’s The Once And Future King in ebook - it’s all White’s Arthurian books under one cover. The first one, The Sword In The Stone, became an animated Disney film. The rest, of course, became the musical Camelot. Why? I don’t know, I just got a craving. I think
I last read it when I was at university. I do remember I was reading As I Lay Dying for English and promising myself a chapter of T.H White for every chapter of Faulkner I managed to get through. I know, I know, classic of American literature! But not my cup of tea.
In my new collection I’m reading The King Who Had To Go, a bio of the dreadful Edward VIII. I’m also reading a book of Scottish wonder tales. I think I bought it for research while I was editing my novel Wolfborn. I’ve nearly finished that, and it will go back on the shelves soon.
So, why reread old books when there is so much great new stuff around? The trouble is, there is so very much new stuff, coming out all the time. I simply can’t keep up with it all. And rereading is something I do for comfort.
What do you go back to for comfort?
So, what have I been craving recently? Terry Pratchett, Moving Pictures, for a start. I downloaded the audiobook, which is being read by Tony Robinson. I prefer his reading, even though it’s abridged, to Nigel Planer’s unabridged version. But it is abridged. I just had to go back and reread the book. It’s more or less standalone, though many of the characters appear in other books. Gaspode the talking dog later turns up as the thinking-brain dog of beggar Foul Old Ron. Young wizard Ponder Stibbons, a student in this book, later becomes the university’s token nerd and computer geek. Cut-Me-Own-Throat Dibbler, the man who sells sausages in a bun, becomes a movie mogul in this one.
I’m rereading Pratchett and Gaiman’s Good Omens for the umpteenth time and still laughing. The TV series will be starting soon and I think I can join Amazon Prime and watch it without wifi. If so, I will do it. It’s not too expensive and worth it just for this.
I downloaded the ebook of Game Of Thrones by George R R Martin, though I have a print copy, because it’s easier than lugging the thing in my bag, and it was only $2.99 in Apple Books. I haven’t followed the TV series, but the author has vowed to have Winds Of Winter, Book 6, on time for next year’s Worldcon, which I’d like to attend. It’s in New Zealand, so not too far for me to go. I was wondering whether I can get past Book 4 this time; I sort of gave up on it by Chapter 1 of the fifth book. It had become too soap opera for me. But no harm in trying.
I bought T.H White’s The Once And Future King in ebook - it’s all White’s Arthurian books under one cover. The first one, The Sword In The Stone, became an animated Disney film. The rest, of course, became the musical Camelot. Why? I don’t know, I just got a craving. I think
I last read it when I was at university. I do remember I was reading As I Lay Dying for English and promising myself a chapter of T.H White for every chapter of Faulkner I managed to get through. I know, I know, classic of American literature! But not my cup of tea.
In my new collection I’m reading The King Who Had To Go, a bio of the dreadful Edward VIII. I’m also reading a book of Scottish wonder tales. I think I bought it for research while I was editing my novel Wolfborn. I’ve nearly finished that, and it will go back on the shelves soon.
So, why reread old books when there is so much great new stuff around? The trouble is, there is so very much new stuff, coming out all the time. I simply can’t keep up with it all. And rereading is something I do for comfort.
What do you go back to for comfort?