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Igenlode Wordsmith

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Igenlode Wordsmith

Goodreads Author


Born
The United Kingdom
Genre

Member Since
October 2019


Average rating: 5.0 · 2 ratings · 0 reviews · 1 distinct work
Afterwards

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings
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Igenlode’s Recent Updates

Forlorn Hope by Nicholas Carter
"Forlorn Hope (Shadow on the Crown, book 7)
by Nicholas Carter
available from https://www.caliverbooks.com/

Initial impressions of this book are mostly positive.
The Caliver Books edition is a large size paperback with attractive colour cover art by Chri" Read more of this review »
The Man Who Mapped the Arctic by Peter Steele
"An exciting biography of an explorer too little known!

It takes considerable flair and panache to write history in a way that makes it read like a novel and not very many authors have that ability. Canada's Pierre Berton has it! Dava Sobel and Simon W" Read more of this review »
Igenlode Wordsmith rated a book it was amazing
World War Z by Max Brooks
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World War Z by Max Brooks
"Zombies don't feature prominently in my reading life. Why, I'm not sure. You would think that someone who adores vampires would like zombies, too, wouldn't you? I find them creepier for some reason, perhaps because they can't be reasoned with. I mean" Read more of this review »
World War Z by Max Brooks
"
Most people don’t believe something can happen until it already has. That’s not stupidity or weakness, that’s just human nature.
...
Looking back, I still can't believe how unprofessional the news media was. So much spin, so few hard facts. All those
" Read more of this review »
Igenlode Wordsmith rated a book really liked it
Mr Wilder & Me by Jonathan Coe
Mr Wilder & Me
by Jonathan Coe (Goodreads Author)
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The author clearly loves Billy Wilder. And I can entirely engage also with the protagonist's experience of trying to be a traditional composer of melody in the era when 'classical' music disappeared up the blind alley of academic modernism, and all t ...more
Mr Wilder & Me by Jonathan Coe
" I found the young Calista's voice totally convincing (I knew nothing of Coe either, but was surprised to look at the cover after finishing the book - ...more "
Igenlode Wordsmith rated a book really liked it
When True Night Falls by C.S. Friedman
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The first book of this fantasy trilogy was good but not great; this sequel still falls slightly short of 'great', but it is definitely better. I wasn't nearly so conscious of technical issues with the writing, and this volume turns out to focus direc ...more
Igenlode Wordsmith rated a book liked it
Chariot of the Soul by Linda Proud
Chariot of the Soul
by Linda Proud (Goodreads Author)
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This is... pretty good for a self-published book, but it does look and feel indefinably like a self-published book. (After finishing it I looked up "Godstow Press", and it is indeed owned by the author, which confirmed the impression I'd had from the ...more
Recipes for Murder by Karen Pierce
" I believe Christie was a qualified dispensing chemist (a job which she did, if I remember correctly, during the war), so she did indeed know her poiso ...more "
More of Igenlode's books…
“Joshua drives towards the Horn under the light of the stars and the somewhat distant tenderness of the moon. Pearls run off the staysail; you want to hold them in your hand, they are real precious stones that live only in the eyes. The wake spins out very far behind up the slopes of the seas like a tongue of fire and the close-reefed sails stand out against the clear sky, with the moon making the sea on the quarter glisten. White reflection of the southern ice. Broad greenish patches of foam on the water. Pointed tooth-like seas masking the horizon, dull rumbling of the bow struggling and playing with the sea.

The entire sea is white and the sky as well. I no longer know how far I have got, except that we long ago left the borders of too much behind.”
Bernard Moitessier, The Long Way

Katharine Whitehorn
“If meat costs 3s. 6d. a pound, we think it cheap; if vegetables cost 3s. 6d. a pound we think them dear. Moral: eat vegetables.”
Katharine Whitehorn, Cooking in a Bedsitter

“Intent figures stood on trestle ladders peering, with the aid of inspection lamps, at the engines stripped of their cowlings. Everything was in good order and the floor of the hangar was surprisingly clean. The economical lines of the Spitfires looked very beautiful in the half-light, illuminated by the orange splashes of the lamps.”
Ronald Adam, We Rendezvous at Ten

Helen Forrester
“While she was downstairs she could have the illusion that her mother was quietly sleeping in the bedroom; now, faced with the empty bed and the need to clear it, she had to recognise that she was alone. Slowly the tears came, accompanied by great helpless sobs. Instead of having someone to lean on, to advise her, to bully her into staying on her feet when life seemed impossibly hard, she herself would have to be the adviser, the kind helper, the referee of family quarrels; hers would be the knee on to which grandchildren would climb to be comforted, hers would be the shoulder on which the women would weep out their bereavements and all the myriad sorrows of being mams.
"Aye, Mam," she whispered brokenly, "I don't know whether I can do it.”
Helen Forrester, Liverpool Daisy

Margaret Drabble
“I look back now with some anguish to each touch and glance, to every changing conjunction of limbs and heads and hands. I have lived it over every day for so long now that I am in danger of forgetting the true shape of how it was, because each time I go over it I wish that I had given a little more here or there, or at the very least said what was in my heart, so that he could have known how much it meant to me. But I was incapable, even when happy, of exposing myself thus far.”
Margaret Drabble, The Millstone

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