Book of the Week
"The Thursday Murder Club" by Richard Osman - Book Review
The Thursday Murder Club is a crime fiction novel by Richard Osman that has taken the world by storm. The book combines an engaging crime plot with humor and warmth, creating a unique blend that both entertains and touches the reader.
By bookreviews2 years ago in BookClub
Reading Books Is Useless: Here’s a Better Way to Read
I love to read books. I always spend some time just sitting down and reading; it doesn’t matter how many pages I read or how long. I just stay still and read. When I really can’t use paper books, I use ebooks as an alternative.
By Aabusad Pathan2 years ago in BookClub
Rachel Reviews: The Lost Immortal by Tony Huston
The Lost Immortal was an enjoyable book to read for many reasons. The idea of immortality and the hunt for it when it is discovered to exist in the world is one that has woven its way through many a good novel and Huston uses the tragic figure of his protagonist, a man of many names but for this review we'll call him Alexandros, to show that it might not be all that it's cracked up to be.
By Rachel Deeming2 years ago in BookClub
Grapes of Wrath Review
In Chapters 1-3 of “The Grapes of Wrath” where the Joad family begins their journey to California in hope for a better life is a very intriguing scene. The author John Steinbeck exposes the desperate conditions under which the migratory farm families of America, along with focusing on the hardships and migration from Oklahoma to California of the Joad family during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Set during the Great Depression, the novel focuses on the Joads, a poor family of tenant farmers driven from their Oklahoma home by drought, economic hardship, agricultural industry changes, and bank foreclosures forcing tenant farmers out of work. Due to their nearly hopeless situation, and in part because they are trapped in the Dust Bowl, the Joads set out for California on the "mother road", along with thousands of other "Okies" seeking jobs, land, dignity, and a future.
By Kylecovey Smith2 years ago in BookClub
The Last Ruler of Jammu and Kashmir. Content Warning.
Maharaja Sir Hari Singh GCSI GCIE GCVO, born in September 1895, occupies a significant place in the annals of Jammu and Kashmir's history. As the last ruling Maharaja of the princely state, his reign was characterized by both opulence and tumult, culminating in the pivotal decision of accession to the Dominion of India. Let's embark on a comprehensive exploration of the life, legacy, and controversies surrounding this enigmatic figure.
By Avhishek Agarwal2 years ago in BookClub
"If You Tell" by Gregg Olsen: A Gripping Dive into the Dark Depths of True Crime
Gregg Olsen's "If You Tell" is not merely a true crime thriller; it is an immersive journey into the chilling realms of human depravity, resilience, and the unbreakable bonds of sisterhood. In this riveting non-fiction narrative, Olsen meticulously unravels a tale that transcends the conventions of traditional crime literature, leaving readers both captivated and horrified by the shocking events that transpired within the walls of a seemingly ordinary family home.
By Lilly Goldberg2 years ago in BookClub
ACCESSORY BEFORE THE FACT, Part 3/3
ACCESSORY BEFORE THE FACT, Part 3/3 He remained in his corner without moving, puffing violently at an extinguished pipe, gripped helplessly by the return of that first vile terror. It came again to him with an absolute clarity of certainty that it was not with himself they had to do, these men, and, further, that he had no right in the world to interfere. He had no locus standi at all; it would be immoral ... even if the opportunity came. And the opportunity, he felt, would come. He had been an eavesdropper, and had come upon private information of a secret kind that he had no right to make use of, even that good might come—even to save life. He sat on in his corner, terrified and silent, waiting for the thing that should happen next.
By Mountain Tree2 years ago in BookClub
ACCESSORY BEFORE THE FACT, Part 2/3
ACCESSORY BEFORE THE FACT, Part 2/3 Uneasy and distressed, he increased his pace. Midway in thinking what an unnecessarily clanking noise his nailed boots made upon the hard white road, there came upon him with a rush together the company of these things that haunted him as “unexplained.” They brought a single definite message: That all this business was not really meant for him at all, and hence his confusion and bewilderment; that he had intruded into someone else’s scenery, and was trespassing upon another’s map of life. By some wrong inner turning he had interpolated his person into a group of foreign forces which operated in the little world of someone else. Unwittingly, somewhere, he had crossed the threshold, and now was fairly in—a trespasser, an eavesdropper, a Peeping Tom. He was listening, peeping; overhearing things he had no right to know, because they were intended for another. Like a ship at sea he was intercepting wireless messages he could not properly interpret, because his Receiver was not accurately tuned to their reception. And more—these messages were warnings!
By Mountain Tree2 years ago in BookClub
ACCESSORY BEFORE THE FACT, Part 1/3
At the moorland cross-roads Martin stood examining the sign-post for several minutes in some bewilderment. The names on the four arms were not what he expected, distances were not given, and his map, he concluded with impatience, must be hopelessly out of date. Spreading it against the post, he stooped to study it more closely. The wind blew the corners flapping against his face. The small print was almost indecipherable in the fading light. It appeared, however—as well as he could make out—that two miles back he must have taken the wrong turning.
By Mountain Tree2 years ago in BookClub










