What are you currently reading?

5TailFox

Member
Aug 19, 2024
16
4
47
Northumberland
Not sure if it’s reading in the technical sense but as I have a long commute I regularly listen to Audiobooks. I have just finished Ashfall by Mike Mullin. A **** story of life after Yellowstone super volcano goes off. I really enjoyed it and will definitely be listening to the other books in the current trilogy (a fourth is rumoured to be in the works)

I also have Prepper’s Apocalypse by Anthony Newman on the go. Set after an unknown EOTWAWKI event which has knocked out all electronics after a high atmosphere atomic detonation, it follows a family’s struggles to cross the country to hold up in their off grid ranch. Quite good so far.

Both worth a read/listen if you are into this genre
 
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Falstaff

Forager
Feb 12, 2023
240
101
Berkshire
Simon Scarrow series on Roman soldiers - interested in their kit/off grid & travelling methods
R.Mear & Raymond Hill's Wild Food, incl Ancients cooking methods.
Collins Gem little book on Trees
 

matarius777

Nomad
Aug 29, 2019
358
137
59
Lancaster
Gordon Hillman? Loved the Wild Food TV series. He sadly died a few years ago.
This is what I was wondering, there is a book called Wild Food by a Jason Hill, published, I think, in the 1940s. Turns out I actually had the Mears/ Hillman Wild Food book, I’d bought it when buying Ray Mears’ books when highly reduced, to add to my Bushcraft collection, totally forgot about it- I’ll give it a read now!:)
 

TeeDee

Full Member
Nov 6, 2008
10,992
4,098
50
Exeter
This is what I was wondering, there is a book called Wild Food by a Jason Hill, published, I think, in the 1940s. Turns out I actually had the Mears/ Hillman Wild Food book, I’d bought it when buying Ray Mears’ books when highly reduced, to add to my Bushcraft collection, totally forgot about it- I’ll give it a read now!:)
Enjoy getting annoyed that the proof reader was on holiday.
 

Pattree

Full Member
Jul 19, 2023
2,167
1,162
77
UK
Re-reading the “Bony” (Detective Napoleon Bonaparte) series by Arthur Upfield. They are Whodunits but involve a lot of indigenous Australian culture. While I know little, the bit that I do know accords with what he writes so just maybe it’s right!
 

bearbait

Full Member
The Power, by Naomi Alderman.

I'm finding it a very powerful and compulsive read. (As was the previous book of hers I read - The Future.)

[Quote from Wikipedia:] The Power is a book within a book: a manuscript of an imagined history of the tumultuous 21st century period – now 5,000 years in the past – during which womankind became the dominant gender after developing and sharing the power to emit electricity from their hands.
 

Paul_B

Bushcrafter through and through
Jul 14, 2008
6,413
1,702
Cumbria
Just finished coffin Road by Peter May on my kindle in landscape mode, e ink kindle that is.

I'm wondering about buying another one but they're over five quid. Library might be better and cheaper but I find I can read a kindle but a paper book I don't.

No idea why this is, but it could be because it's easier to use. Close the kindle it switches to standby or off, open up you swipe to waken and you're straight at the page you were reading. Paper books you have to find the bookmark and it might go missing or lose your place. Also i can read my kindle in the dark without extra light so I don't disturb people even when reading on bed late at night.
 

Pattree

Full Member
Jul 19, 2023
2,167
1,162
77
UK
The only downside to a Kindle that I’ve found is that you can’t really wazz it at the wall when you read something seriously irritating.
I use mine daily. It’s not a book, it’s a library. I’ll be reading “Boney” books on mine for a while.
 

hughtrimble

Full Member
Jan 23, 2012
674
177
UK/France
Paper books you have to find the bookmark and it might go missing or lose your place.
A few years back I was given some stainless steel line markers - they're very small metal arrows that clip onto the page and can also be used to mark the line you were reading up to. They very much stay put, no risk of them falling out at all. Recommended.
 

matarius777

Nomad
Aug 29, 2019
358
137
59
Lancaster
A few years back I was given some stainless steel line markers - they're very small metal arrows that clip onto the page and can also be used to mark the line you were reading up to. They very much stay put, no risk of them falling out at all. Recommended.
Like these?

I have a rather nice old silver bookmark of my grandfather’s that clips on the page in the same way, but there is a lot more protruding out of the page, which is fine if you just put the book down on a table after reading, but my book goes everywhere with me in my back pack and the bookmark ends up twisting and chewing the page, unfortunately. These look like they would be a lot better in that respect, especially in a hardback, where the covers protrude beyond the pages.
 

hughtrimble

Full Member
Jan 23, 2012
674
177
UK/France
Like these?

I have a rather nice old silver bookmark of my grandfather’s that clips on the page in the same way, but there is a lot more protruding out of the page, which is fine if you just put the book down on a table after reading, but my book goes everywhere with me in my back pack and the bookmark ends up twisting and chewing the page, unfortunately. These look like they would be a lot better in that respect, especially in a hardback, where the covers protrude beyond the pages.
Same idea as your link, but the only part protruding is maybe 1mm where the steel folds over. I'll try and find a link when I'm back home.
 
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hughtrimble

Full Member
Jan 23, 2012
674
177
UK/France
Same idea as your link, but the only part protruding is maybe 1mm where the steel folds over. I'll try and find a link when I'm back home.
@matarius777 They seem to be called 'book darts' - quite a few different sellers have them: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/22502866...Vm8AsQ-QMa&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY

I often carry a book in my pocket, almost always soft back, and they have on occasion had a page cut into slightly by one of these depending on how tightly packed the book is. Changing where you place the marker, such as on the top edge of the page (so removing the line marking benefit) can reduce the risk of damage depending on how you're carrying the book.

I would of course prefer not to damage the books, but it's a balance for me between having the damn bookmark fall out, or have one of these really rather unobtrusive things in there. Plus I'm also carrying the (almost always second hand) books so they're not exactly staying pristine anyway.
 
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grainweevil

Forager
Feb 18, 2023
221
259
Cornwall
Someone gave me some of those book darts once, and I found them such horrible page maimers that I actually threw them away* sooner than see another innocent book get scarred by one.

In my extreme youth, the "in" thing was to use the corner of an envelope. Cut off the corner (as large or small as you desire) and simply slip it over the corner of the page you wished to mark. Added bonus of space to make notes or whathaveyou on it. Then Post-It notes came in, which were even better.

*This not a thing I do. I have the piles of junk to prove it.
 
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