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Going to London in March. Any reading suggestions? Thanks. (Original Post) callous taoboy Feb 2013 OP
What's your preference? krispos42 Feb 2013 #1
Something very British, comedy or history. TIA callous taoboy Feb 2013 #2
Jasper Fford krispos42 Feb 2013 #3
Sorry, it is a typo! Staph Feb 2013 #8
Oh, that's righte... krispos42 Feb 2013 #9
I've been searching for a WillSpeak machine for years! Staph Feb 2013 #10
English Writrs and Books set in England fadedrose Feb 2013 #4
To save some money, many books can be purchased online fadedrose Feb 2013 #5
Thanks! I will be attending a lecture inside studio 2 at Abbey Road, on my birthday! callous taoboy Feb 2013 #6
Specifically London-based contemporary mysteries include Lydia Leftcoast Feb 2013 #7
Everything by Norah Lofts. SheilaT Feb 2013 #11

krispos42

(49,445 posts)
3. Jasper Fford
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 11:09 AM
Feb 2013

and that's not a smartphone typo... Fford. Try "The Big Over Easy", then if you like it read the next book "The Fourth Bear".

Great writing and intricate murder mystery plots. They are also ridiculous and hilarious and funny as hell.

Staph

(6,355 posts)
8. Sorry, it is a typo!
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 04:57 PM
Feb 2013

It's Jasper FForde! I would also suggest his Thursday Next books, The Eyre Affair (2001), Lost in a Good Book (2002), The Well of Lost Plots (2003), Something Rotten (2004), First Among Sequels (2007), and One of our Thursdays is Missing (2011). They take place in an alternate British universe, where the Crimean War is still going on in the 1980s, and where fans of books are analogous to the sports fans of our universe. Imagine going to a live performance of Richard III, where audience members volunteer to play all the parts and treat the performance like a midnight showing of The Rocky Horror Picture Show.


krispos42

(49,445 posts)
9. Oh, that's righte...
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 05:36 PM
Feb 2013



I've read all the Thursday Next books, too. And then I went and bought a WillSpeak machine of my very own...

fadedrose

(10,044 posts)
5. To save some money, many books can be purchased online
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 11:34 AM
Feb 2013

at Amazon.com or Alibris.com

Library's books are too easy to lose, and used books are the way to go.

Many series started years ago, and they're still available online - pocketbooks being the cheapest and easiest to carry.

callous taoboy

(4,673 posts)
6. Thanks! I will be attending a lecture inside studio 2 at Abbey Road, on my birthday!
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 12:08 PM
Feb 2013

This is my first trip overseas, and I am really excited. Thanks for the reading suggestions.

Lydia Leftcoast

(48,219 posts)
7. Specifically London-based contemporary mysteries include
Sat Feb 9, 2013, 02:37 PM
Feb 2013

Prime Suspect (all seven series available on DVD and on Netflix streaming)

Books:

Mysteries by Deborah Crombie feature a man-woman team of Scotland Yard inspectors (later married)

Mysteries by P.D. James, many set in London

Can't think of any others offhand.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
11. Everything by Norah Lofts.
Sun Feb 10, 2013, 11:53 AM
Feb 2013

Although nothing of hers is contemporary. She wrote a large number of, I guess I could call them interlinked, novels set in a fictionalized part of southwestern (I think) England. The novels range in time from the very end of the Roman occupation up to the 1950's. They weren't written in time-ordered sequence, but someone who is a minor character in one will be the main character of another.

Interestingly enough, her very first novel was about the Donner Party.

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