I started a thriller two days ago. It's Assassination Day by Oliver Jacks. It was published in 1976 and is a bit dated so I've hardly made any progress. So I picked up Sherston's Progress by Siegfried Sassoon. This is the third volume of a fictionalised memoir by the poet about his life before and during the First World War. This volume is about his time in Craiglockhart Hospital. Pat Barker's Regenaration partly covers the same subject (featuring the poet and soldier Wilfred Owen) so unfortunately the whole thing seemed too similar to that work and I got fed up reading it. After that confession I must try again, particularly as Sassoon's book came first (Regeneration wasn't written until the 1990s)!
So I have no completed books to report at all. Now I'm in the middle of The Hothouse by the East River by Muriel Spark, and after an unpromising start this has really drawn me in. What is reality here and what is fantasy? Who is insane and who isn't? Is the character from the past really who he seems?
Calico kitten adopts dog-loving couple on 1500 mile road trip, immediately
pounces in to join the family cuddle puddle: ‘I can’t get over how she just
instantly blended in’
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Some new cat introductions are difficult - but not this one.
Road trips are the most underrated form of vacation. You can literally go *anywhere.
*Just pac...
3 hours ago
I haven't read Assasination Day, but if you're going to read a thriller, especially one from the 1970s, may I suggest Frederick Forsyth's The Day of the Jackal? It is, in my humble opinion, the yardstick all thrillers should be measured by.
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