It was on a train journey to Plymouth (the reason for which is another story that I might tell one day) when a fellow passenger noticed that I was reading a Wilbur Smith book. He suggested that I might enjoy Robert Goddard's writing and advised reading In Pale Battalions as an introduction to his work. That was, I think, Goddard's second or third book - and I have been hooked ever since, having read all his titles at least twice, several of them (including In Pale Battalions) three or more times.
It seems to me that blogging is about as useful a way of passing the time as tossing pebbles into the sea, so for what it's worth - and that's not a lot - here are a few pebbles.
Thursday, 11 September 2008
Found Wanting
I see from an ad in this morning's newspaper that Robert Goddard's latest book, Found Wanting, is now in the shops. Goddard is the only author whose books I have to buy as soon as possible after they reach the shelves.
It was on a train journey to Plymouth (the reason for which is another story that I might tell one day) when a fellow passenger noticed that I was reading a Wilbur Smith book. He suggested that I might enjoy Robert Goddard's writing and advised reading In Pale Battalions as an introduction to his work. That was, I think, Goddard's second or third book - and I have been hooked ever since, having read all his titles at least twice, several of them (including In Pale Battalions) three or more times.
Add a Goddard: result - bliss!
It was on a train journey to Plymouth (the reason for which is another story that I might tell one day) when a fellow passenger noticed that I was reading a Wilbur Smith book. He suggested that I might enjoy Robert Goddard's writing and advised reading In Pale Battalions as an introduction to his work. That was, I think, Goddard's second or third book - and I have been hooked ever since, having read all his titles at least twice, several of them (including In Pale Battalions) three or more times.
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2 comments:
Wilbur Smith!!!
Yeah, he's an author I like... Oh, John Grisham, too, and Edward Rutherford.
I enjoyed Smith's earlier books (especially Eagle in the Sky) but his later ones seem to contain a lot of gratuitous (or superfluous) violence - or maybe it's the detail that I find superfluous. John Grisham is another of my regulars. If you like those two you will also like Goddard. I don't know Edward Rutherford's work, but I'll see if they have any of his books at the library when I next go.
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