One of my last updates for 2019, maybe the last since I don't know if I'll be able to finish many other books until Year's end ! Well, 43 books is not so bad after all, it's not a competition to see who will read the most, right? Still I'm happy I still can read so many books, even if most of them are now on epub format, since I don't have enough space in my apartment in Japan for all my "real" books...
La Sirène rouge - Maurice G. Dantec
A rerererereread. Yeah, I love this writer. He sadly passed away recently. "The Red Siren" in English, a somewhat "classic" thriller but the one that finally is the corner stone of Dantec's following books, on the topics of serial killers, power over people and the future of Mankind. Certainly his most classic book. The topic: an anti-serbian militia activist back home will have to protect a young girl in her quest to find her father and escape her mother. To say more would be ruining the book!
Permaculture: A Beginner's Guide - Graham Burnett
Non-fiction book on permaculture. I'm interested in permaculture but didn't know much about it and this book was a very good introduction not on how to do it practically but why do it and how do it on a more philosophical/social/ecological point of view. Definitely got me hooked and the extended bibliography at the end of the book will certainly be the source of numerous reads in a very near future!
La loi des mâles - La louve de France - Le lis et le lion - Quand un roi perd la France - Maurice Druon
The remaining volumes of Maurice Druon's "Cursed Kings" series, where we go until John II "The Good" who will be captured at the battle of Nouaille-Maupertuis against king Edward's son. Gripping style, very interesting reads with lots of characters. The last volume is a bit different since it has ben written 20 years after the last one, as an epilogue of sorts. Everything is told by a cardinal trying to preserve peace between England and France, and, well, it doesn't "taste the same". Still a very good read and the whole series is really nice !
So far in 2019:
https://www.gog.com/forum/general/books_finished_in_2019/post10