On dévore cette suite du Loup des Cordeliers où le tempo s'accélère. J'ai bien aimé le crossover avec d'autres livres de @loevenbruck@toot.portes-imaginaire.org. Ca ne change rien pour ceux qui ne les ont pas lu, mais pour ceux qui les ont lu, c'est rigolo de voir soudain apparaître un personnage d'un autre bouquin. Henri est d'ailleurs en bonne compagnie puisque Stephen King le fait aussi.
Reviews and Comments
Retired linguist/law/IT. Avid reader in all languages (see polyglot.city/@FrankauLux/ ), both paper and ebooks. Mostly fictions these days.
This link opens in a pop-up window
François finished reading Le Mystère de la main rouge by Henri Loevenbruck
François finished reading Le Loup des Cordeliers by Henri Loevenbruck
Une histoire intéressante de notre @loevenbruck@toot.portes-imaginaire.org favori ? Non ! deux pour le prix d'une ! On a une vision un peu différente (mais probablement plus correcte) de la révolution française (et je dis plus correcte car on sait qu'Henri se documente comme un malade :-) ) et une histoire policière en prime. A découvrir donc...
François finished reading The Second-Worst Restaurant in France by Alexander McCall Smith
Excellent as usual. #2 after the italian bulldozer, maybe a bit more philosophical and less funny, but always a good read.
François finished reading The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
François finished reading Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari
Just like the previous one (Sapiens), this book is an eye-opener. You don't need to have read the previous one, as the main point are covered enough toenable you to follow the new arguments. same remarks as for the previous book: excellent read. It is history, economics, borderline philosophy, but reads like a thriller and is duly documented, as a scientific work (about 25% of the book is taken up by the references). So highly recommended.
François finished reading We Solve Murders by Richard Osman
François finished reading Les disparus de Blackmore by Henri Loevenbruck
Encore un excellent bouquin de @loevenbruck@toot.portes-imaginaire.org. J'ai pas trop envie de déflorer le sujet. Ca se lit vite et bien, c'est plein d'un humour charmant et de tas d'allusions à plein de choses (je vois pas comment faire plus vague, désolé). J'ai un petit regret, je reste un peu sur ma faim à la fin du livre. Une fois le dénouement arrivé, tout est très vite réglé. J'aurais volontier lu quelques pages de plus sur certaines sociétés. Par contre les notes totalement étrangères au bouquin qui se trouvent à la fin sont super intéressantes (et sic transit gloria mundi)... Bref. Lisez le, c'est génial :-)
François reviewed Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari
Mandatory reading
5 stars
This book should be mandatory reading. It explains many things in a simple way and reads like a thriller, despite being a history book. It just makes sense. So do yourself a favour and read it. now.
François finished reading Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari
Un excellent bouquin de @ploum@mamot.fr. Un monde futur alternatif d'où l'électricité a disparu. Plein de rebondissements jusqu'au dernier moment - chaudement conseillé. Peut-être un peu tard pour l'avoir à temps pour mettre sous le sapin, mais cela vaut la peine d'essayer :-)
François finished reading Goodbye, Things by Fumio Sasaki
This book was a gift, so I felt compelled to read it. However, I have very mixed feeling about it. I am old and have started my döstädning, so I don't need convincing and I was hoping a couple of technique. I did get that, but at what price!! The author and I live on completely different planet, so it was very difficult to relate to anything in the book. A lot of what he says is just not applicable here * "put everything in a bag and bin it" - well no. we have to sort paper, metal, plastic, etc and that's what takes time... * "you can always order this and that and have it delivered" Can you really ? Well, not in my country... etc, etc. And then the enthusiasm of the born again minimalist ! tiring ! "Since I turned minimalist, I lost 5 kilos, won …
This book was a gift, so I felt compelled to read it. However, I have very mixed feeling about it. I am old and have started my döstädning, so I don't need convincing and I was hoping a couple of technique. I did get that, but at what price!! The author and I live on completely different planet, so it was very difficult to relate to anything in the book. A lot of what he says is just not applicable here * "put everything in a bag and bin it" - well no. we have to sort paper, metal, plastic, etc and that's what takes time... * "you can always order this and that and have it delivered" Can you really ? Well, not in my country... etc, etc. And then the enthusiasm of the born again minimalist ! tiring ! "Since I turned minimalist, I lost 5 kilos, won the lottery and I'm nominated for a Nobel Peace Price" (ok, slightly exaggerated, but not much). So there you go. I'm pretty sure plenty of people will enjoy this book and find it useful. I'm obviously not in the target audience.
This book was basically a trip down memory lane for me, as I remember most of the things described in it. I still learned a couple of facts. I'm not sure anybody below 35 y/o would enjoy or appreciate the book though. It has aged a lot.
François finished reading Malpertuis by Jean Ray
François finished reading My Italian Bulldozer by Alexander McCall Smith
Excellent, but then again, I still have to find a book by A. McC-S. that I don't like :-) If you don't know him yet, do yourself a favour and get one of his books, any which one will do. He's probably most famous for The N°1 Lady detective agency, which was made into a movie, but it's a whole series (probably 20 I reckon). The audio books made by the BBC (I think) are of very high quality, so recommended as well (got several of those and never disappointed). He has several series with different settings and heroes, my favorite being Dr Igelfeld, scholar in a linguistic department, and having been there myself I can swear Alex was a fly on the wall so close it is to reality. All his books are great, he is great. More here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_McCall_Smith . Ho yes, this specific book, I hear you …
Excellent, but then again, I still have to find a book by A. McC-S. that I don't like :-) If you don't know him yet, do yourself a favour and get one of his books, any which one will do. He's probably most famous for The N°1 Lady detective agency, which was made into a movie, but it's a whole series (probably 20 I reckon). The audio books made by the BBC (I think) are of very high quality, so recommended as well (got several of those and never disappointed). He has several series with different settings and heroes, my favorite being Dr Igelfeld, scholar in a linguistic department, and having been there myself I can swear Alex was a fly on the wall so close it is to reality. All his books are great, he is great. More here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_McCall_Smith . Ho yes, this specific book, I hear you say ? More of the same. funny, witty, crazy and extremely well written, as usual. The title sums it up, actually :-)