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  • #61
    ...no...
    I have read Ronnie's but I remember very little of it, and I want to read The Great WT's.
    1994 a good year
    The Masters a great event
    The Final a marvellous match
    The Winner a snooker genius
    Alan McManus The Winner
    Stephen Hendry The Loser

    1994 a good year....

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    • #62
      I can summarise Jimmy's for you.

      I drank a bunch of alcohol.

      The End.

      :-)
      "I'll be back next year." --Jimmy White

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      • #63
        Originally Posted by elvaago
        I can summarise Jimmy's for you.

        I drank a bunch of alcohol.

        The End.

        :-)
        I guess that wasn't a recommendation then?

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        • #64
          Unless your an alcoholic...
          1994 a good year
          The Masters a great event
          The Final a marvellous match
          The Winner a snooker genius
          Alan McManus The Winner
          Stephen Hendry The Loser

          1994 a good year....

          Comment


          • #65
            It's a fun read, admittedly. Jimmy was a wild boy alright.
            "I'll be back next year." --Jimmy White

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            • #66
              It's not just about drinking.
              Gambling is also mentioned.

              But as elvaago put it, it's actually a fun read. Sometimes a bit dramatic in style but nevertheless a nice diversion from nowadays 'at least ten hours pactise a day is the absolute necessity in a professional player's life' image. And according to the usual practice of snooker biographies, there are nice anecdotes about some other players.

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              • #67
                Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck is a truly great book that touched me deeply. Amazingly enough, it manages not to be smothered by it's own fame. On the contrary it is full of life and character and is powerful enough to profoundly touch a reader not aware of the book's illustriousness. Highly recommended to anyone!

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                • #68
                  I'm currently reading, Teach yourself Linux

                  Not the most interesting book for some I'd guess
                  You play a long slow deadweight red to a corner pocket. As it approaches the pocket, a kamikaze woodlouse crawls out from under the cushion and makes its way across the table, conflicting with the path of the red precisely at the point the red gets there. The red, needless to say, veers off course, and the future of the woodlouse is uncertain. - The Statman

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                  • #69
                    Another book to recommend - only for German speaking people though - is Ein dickes Fell by Heinrich Steinfest.
                    It's about a one-armed detective of Chinese origin in Vienna finding out about a secret concerning the composition of 4711...
                    As far as I know it hasn't been translated, I doubt if that's possible anyway...powerful and funny language

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                    • #70
                      ooooohhhh 4711 aus Koeln! Getting homesick while typing. Will get it next time over there!

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                      • #71
                        Any Sven Hassel fans here?

                        And if so, do you know of any books in a simlar vein to his?

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                        • #72
                          I just finished "A star called Henry" by Roddy Doyle, and rather enjoyed it. I am still a bit confused, I must admit, but it was through and through a good book about the Easter Rising and the poorer people of Dublin at that time. It doesn't really leave Michael Collins much honour, but he's had enough

                          So it's back to "Stufen zum Galgen. Lebenswege vor den Nürnberger Prozessen" a book with biographies on the nazis who were executed after the Nürnberger processes. Quite thorough, though it annoys me that it has been poorly proofread.

                          Another German book I'd recommend is "Dreizehn" by Wolfgang and Heike Hohlbein. It's fantasy, which I am not too fond of, but I find the bat totally cute. (Though if you've read one Hohlbein book, you have read them all.)

                          For those who read Norwegian I would recommend Gert Nygårdshaug. I adore most of his books, but "Mengele Zoo", "Himmelblomsttreets muligheter" and "Afrodites basseng" are just brilliant (and should be read in that order too). I can't understand why his books haven't been translated!

                          Last Swedish book I read was "Arvet efter Arn" by Jan Guillou, the last book in a four-book trilogy on the Knight Templar Arn Magnusson. It might not be high literature, but very good entertainment. These books are all translated into English and German at least. I just read that the books will be filmatised. Hm... never worked out well with Hamilton.

                          (Yes. I like reading.) (A lot.)
                          Das war ein FLUKE! Ein Glückstreffer!

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                          • #73
                            One of my favourite books is The Outsider by Camus, I thought it was excellent and easier to follow that some of Satrte's work. I'm on the first of Sarte's Roads to Freedom trilogy at the moment though, it may take me a while
                            I think I made you up inside my head

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                            • #74
                              Originally Posted by snookersfun
                              ooooohhhh 4711 aus Koeln! Getting homesick while typing. Will get it next time over there!
                              While you're at it...buy Steinfest, Heinrich: Cheng Sein erster Fall as well. It's hilarious...

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                              • #75
                                " A cat, who...."

                                A very interesting series of books, about very clever cat! U have to read it!
                                2007 TSF Pot Black prediction contest winner
                                2010 TSF Welsh Open Predict the qualifiers winner

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