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Reply to: CUK Book Club: Currently reading...
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Previously on "CUK Book Club: Currently reading..."
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Just finished How to run an indie label by Alan McGhee which i really enjoyed.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. Very enjoyable if you're a boomer.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Life & times of the Thunderbolt Kid" by Bill Bryson.
. Twas a different age.
Next: TBD.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. It seemed long. The reference to the poor sod who was on leave from the Navy & was killed in a rowing boat on Regents Park Lake was ironic in a very ironic way: apparently Sub-Lt John "Jack" David Pook, his fiance escaping with her life though seriously injured.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Doodlebugs: the dramatic story of the flying bombs of WWII" by Norman Longmate.
Next: "SOE: 1940-46" by M.R.D. Foot (1984, BBC), purchased in April 2013 from the Scope charity shoppe which is now the Greyhounds charity shoppe: plainly it's matured well on the bookshelf since then.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 5 January 2026, 14:53.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. Rather an inneresting book all in all.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Bruneval Raid: stealing Adolph's Radar" by George Millar. As is usual their engineering was a good deal more impressive than ours*, but there you go, it's probably down to using metric fittings or something.
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Next: "The Doodlebugs: the dramatic story of the flying bombs of WWII" by Norman Longmate. (1981).Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 5 January 2026, 13:31.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it, having previously graced the Carmarthen free books centre and the Llys Nini greyhound rescue in Swansea. Rather good in its way. Ms YoungHusband is acknowledged in the post script.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "V2" by Robert Harris. The fictional version of a week or so in November 1944.
Next: TBD.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. No mention of Nicholas Elliot but I suppose he was still an anonymous bureaucrat in 1969.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "Philby: the spy who betrayed a generation" by Bruce Page, David Leitch, Phillip Knightley, 2nd ed 1969.
Gosh. Don't have to read many pages before encountering such familiar names as Blunt (still looking after Liz's paintings at the time), Roger Hollis, Dick White, Guy Liddell.
Much too early (1969) for any mention of SpyCatching of course.
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Next: "V2" by Robert Harris. The fictional version of a week or so in November 1944.
Goodness me: a lady who actually did it:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-...%2C%20the%20V2.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-...wales-37265964
Unrecognised? I've never seen it referred to anywhere. Shocking.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 27 December 2025, 15:36.
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Done, thank feck: off to Oxfam with it: a rereading after 40 years reveals how vacuous the 3rd & 4th books were. It would have been better if he hadn't bothered because they're not worth reading, they read exactly as if he'd been imprisoned in a room & compelled to write.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "So long and thanks for all the fish" by D. Adams (1984). Talk about flogging a dead donkey.
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Next: but it will have nothing to do with H2G2. I'd get rid of the VHS cassettes of the tv series* but no one has a player any more.
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Next: "The Life & times of the Thunderbolt Kid" by Bill Bryson.
Larf out loud funny at times.
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And mentions:
https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=DS195604...t-txIN--------
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Dunno why but the chemistry set tale was really really funny: I remember doing dumb things like that back in the day.
*The tv series is much better than the books, though not quite as good as the radio series, whilst being infinitely better than the truly dire film.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 6 January 2026, 16:45.
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Meh. Off to Oxfam with it.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "Life, The Universe, and Everything" by D. Adams. This being the 2nd radio series IIRC.
Next: "So long and thanks for all the fish" by D. Adams (1984). Talk about flogging a dead donkey.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. I remember it seeming better 40 odd years ago.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Restaurant at the End of the Universe" by D. Adams. 1980. The last book that had any relation to the first radio series.
. Adams chopped out & rewrote all the stuff that John Lloyd contributed to E5 & E6.
Next: "Life, The Universe, and Everything" by D. Adams. This being the 2nd radio series IIRC.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 18 December 2025, 16:45.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. Can't say I enjoyed it all that much.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" by D. Adams, 1979.
Next: "The Restaurant at the End of the Universe" by D. Adams. 1980. The last book that had any relation to the first radio series.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 18 December 2025, 16:42.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it: this one had a little sticky badge thing about tea with DNA's mum. Or something.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "The Long dark teatime of the soul" by D. Adams. More of the same.
Next: "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" by D. Adams, 1979.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 14 December 2025, 23:03.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. I remember it being much more inneresting in 1988 or whenever.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency" by D. Adams. Well it's not H2G2. Mildly amusing in parts.
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Next: "The Long dark teatime of the soul" by D. Adams. More of the same.
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Done: off to Oxfam with it. Print could have been a bit bigger.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "Wish you were here: the official biog of DNA" by Nick Webb.
Well it was there & once read can join the rest.
Next: but it won't be H2G2 despite my desire to get shot of all five of the books
Stone me:
https://johnatkinsonbooks.co.uk/book...3ZyunoPgHv53Gm
My copy still has the leaflet for ordering the LPs.
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Feck me:
https://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/S...entlyadded=all
Next: "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency" by D. Adams. Well it's not H2G2. Mildly amusing in parts.Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; 10 December 2025, 09:45.
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Done & free of any reference to the Orange Mother****er: off to Oxfam with it. Inneresting enough in its way & easier to read than many.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostNext: "James May's Magnificent Machines: how men in sheds changed our lives". Dunno who wrote it.
Next: "The Bruneval Raid: stealing Adolph's Radar" by George Millar. As is usual their engineering was a good deal more impressive than ours*, but there you go, it's probably down to using metric fittings or something.
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*500MHz for the Bruneval dish vs our 30 to 40MHz for Chain Home.
Flt Sgt C. W. H. Cox, the radar technician:
https://wisbech.ccan.co.uk/content/tag/charlie-cox-mm
And another brave man:
https://ethw.org/Hans_Ferdinand_Mayer
Source of "The Oslo Report" November 1939.
https://www.militaryintelligencemuse...he-oslo-reportLast edited by DoctorStrangelove; 6 December 2025, 16:34.
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I read that. She's obviously got an axe to grind, but it does sort of explain some of his behaviour. Some pretty shocking stuff in there, like the banks giving him an allowance to keep up the pretence everything is going OK.Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View Post
"Too much and never enough"
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