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Book Corner.

I hope I will get to visit Rye Harbour one day as I love Monica Edwards' Romney Marsh horse stories. When I first saw it on Google Maps it didn't look like I had pictured it, but everything was there -- the William The Conqueror, the Old Vicarage, the Martello tower, the castle ruins, and the church -- just like in the books. I would like to walk along the beach one night by half-moonlight and listen for galloping hooves ...
 
I just finished Operation Thunderbolt, and two of Margaret Cabell Self's horsemanship books.

Now maybe it's time for me to try some Rebus if I can find some e-books.
 
I've just finished Beth Chatto's A Dry Garden. She was a brilliant lady, great ideas, lots of energy and a great friend of Christopher Lloyd of Great Dixter fame
A super interesting book if you're a gardener.
 
My next book or rather series is a reread of E F Benson's Luica and Mapp. It was addictive.
Thanks for the lovely person who posted on this thread, I didn't know it existed and love reading and ideas of where to go next. I'm totally eclectic and will have a read of anything........... well almost anything!! Like the idea of Sheds of Grey.
 
I've just started Lawrence Block's The Burglar in the Library, set in a supposedly "Merrie Olde Englande"-type B&B in upstate New York. I haven't gotten to the mystery part yet but so far there's a very good plot line about Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett, and some really funny bits.

Bernie and Carolyn, with the cat Raffles in his carrier, have just gotten off the train and approached the cab driver, who loads their suitcases but says he doesn't pick up animals. He has nothing again transporting them, but he draws the line at picking them up.

"Could be it strikes you as peculiar, but a man has to draw the line. People want you to haul all manner of livestock. If it's a cat today it'll be a horse tomorrow."

I snuck a peek at Raffles. He was a cat today, and somehow I couldn't make myself believe he'd be a horse tomorrow.
 
I've just started reading Vian Smith's Second Chance. It reminds me of the biker paperbacks I read in the '60s and also National Velvet and **** Francis.

LOL the website just ****'d out Mr Francis' first name! LOL
 
Reading a book by Lucinda Riley called The Love Letter - it was re-titled (cant think what from) this year. About a letter that is passed to a journalist after the funeral of a prominent actor. But the letter holds many secrets that shouldnt be exposed. Der der der

Next on my list is to finish London by Edward Rutherfurd and then maybe the next lot of books will be ready from the library
 
I tried the first Rebus book and couldn't get into it.
Now I'm reading Bill Bryson's One Summer and Daisy Newman's Diligence in Love. The first is pretty intense and the second is a 1951 Quaker novel that is very peaceful compared with Bryson's book but also really makes you think. As do all her novels.
 
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