My Away Reading List
I’m going away to UK for about 4 months. One of the things that I hope to do is of course catch up on reading my Unread, aside from checking off my current reading list (on the right).
What to bring to keep me company for those four months has been bugging me. At first, I’d wanted to bring books which I’d been so looking forward to read. But then I realise I’d have to lug them back home as I cannot bear to leave them in England.
That narrowed the field considerably. I therefore have decided to bring only novels which I won’t mind leaving behind (they’d have to make room for the new books I’m planning to bring back anyway, muahaha).
Here, in no specific order, are the lucky (or unlucky) ones:
Historical Novels
1. Exodus by Leon Uris
I've heard a lot about this famous epic tale from Leon Uris, and am interested to see how he portrays the birth of Israel.
2. Sarum by Edward Rutherford
The history of England - quite apt, I think.
3. The Source by James Michener
Another Middle-eastern historical novel but a different take as the story encompasses the whole Arab psyche, rather than just Israel. My copy of The Source was bought from a junk store in Sydney. Its pages have yellowed and are coming apart so I need to read it before it goes to papyrus heaven.
Fantasy
4. Northern Lights by Philip Pullman
5. The Subtle Knife by Philip Pullman
Pullman's Dark Materials trilogy came out in 1995, a good two years before Harry Potter. While I've completed all five of HP, I have yet to start on Dark Materials. Hope to start with these two.
6. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
7. Lost In A Good Book by Jasper Fforde
I like the premise of Fforde's Tuesday Next series, where characters from classics novels live and breathe in the real world while getting tangled in murder and mystery. The series is in its third book so I have to catch up quick!
8. Dead Until Dark by Charlain Harris
A relatively new acquisition.
Drama
9. The Last Samurai by Helen DeWitt
I'm determined to read this after all the drama.
10. Bread Alone by Judi Hendricks
Er, actually I know nothing about this author nor the book. Just thought the title was interesting. Good enough for me.
Light11. Feeling Sorry For Celia by Jaclyn Moriarty
12. High Maintenance by Jennifer Belle
13. Mr Commitment by Mike Gayle
Chick-and-lad lit for those heavy moments.
Thrillers14. Sons Of Fortune by Jeffrey Archer
15. A Prison Diary II by Jeffrey Archer
A friend gave me these books because he got them for free and well, he doesn't read much. Haha. More for me! Reading Archer in my teens got me hooked on thrillers. Hope his prison stint hasn't made him gone the Sidney Sheldon way.
16. My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk
Some years ago, a friend who owns a bookstore urged me to read this book, and then proceeded to shove it into my hand while shooing me away from his shop because he said I "always browse for hours yet never buy anything!". Have since read many good things about this Turkish author and can't wait to dip my brain into his first novel.
17. Fatal Voyage by Kathy Reichs
18. Deja Dead by Kathy Reichs
Read an article comparing Reichs to Patricia Cornwell and then kept a lookout for her books. Picked this up as a four-books-for-$10 at a flea market in Adelaide (together with High Maintenance and Mr Commitment, above).

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