Hi, ....while searching google for my research I found this article on reading on public transprt...it is quite an interesting read!
We've got a ticket to read
For some, having a book to read is the only way to endure our public transport system. But what do people choose? To get a snapshot of our reading habits we asked a selection of people on trains and tubes across the UK to share their reading habits. And this is what we found.
Alex Clark
Sunday February 4, 2007
The Observer
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30, charity support worker, Hackney Heat and The Guardian I've just finished the highbrow Mark Lawson analysis of the Big Brother debacle; now I've convinced myself I want the pictures and I hate myself for it. Heat is actually my girlfriend's magazine, but she normally buys Grazia. Peter Feild
47, roofing contractor, Sunderland Blackout by Chris Ryan It's an SAS soldier series. I've read his stuff before. It's about al-Qaeda, about trying to catch the main men after 9/11. I've enjoyed them all. It's the same sort of thing as Andy McNab, who I also like. Wahib Diwan
36, London Underground ticket officer, Walthamstow The Dark Tower by Stephen King It's the first Stephen King I've read and it's very good. A friend recommended it. It's not a typical horror book, it's more science fiction. Emma Giles
22, PhD student, Durham Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen I saw the BBC version and liked it, so I thought I'd read it as well. I've a couple of other Jane Austen novels, but I haven't got round to reading them yet. I'll read anything if I get the time. Rachel Huke-Danter
16, student, York Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen and Kimberley Kirberger I was in Waterstone's yesterday with my stepmum, and she's doing a talk about sex education, so we were in that section. It looked like a good book. Simon Kidman
42, civil servant, Essex, now Dundee Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell I think I heard about it on Richard & Judy - God that's embarrassing - and it was three for 10 . It's a strange start, quite peculiar. I wasn't prepared for the old-fashioned language. Buddy Davis
45, business developer, Washington DC Memorial Day by Vince Flynn It's kind of a techno thriller. I've read all of his books so far. He's kind of like Tom Clancy, who wrote about Russian wars, but this is more modern. It's about terrorism. Christine Fitch
57, secretary/admin assistant, Bedfordshire The Lighthouse by PD James It's a murder mystery. My husband bought it for Christmas, so I've got to read it. I don't think he was trying to tell me something. It's worrying for him because I might find a devious plan. Amy Sadler
19, student, east London Wonderful Life by Stephen Jay Gould It's a geological book about the Burgess Shale. I need to read it for my interview tomorrow for Durham University. It's about the founders and history of a geological site and focuses on fossils. Jenny Graham and Sarah Burn
Both 22, marketing assistant/ finance assistant, Newcastle Heat Jenny: I just wanted something trashy and light. I never liked Jade anyway. Sarah: I read Heat every week and I think it's great. Brad and Angelina are who I most like to see on the cover. Martin Longstaff
19, student, Sunderland And it's Goodnight From Him by Ronnie Corbett The bit you caught me laughing at is where they're doing a Greek play about women who withhold sex from men (Lysistrata) and they're going to call it 'No sex please, we're brutish'. Ursula Haselden
58, unemployed/author, St Andrews The Devil Wears Prada by Lauren Weisberger I thought it would be a fun read on the train. I've just finished one by Umberto Eco and it nearly killed me, so this is light relief. I've just finished the first chapter and it looks sort of Bridget Jonesy. Ted Franklin
69, retired social worker, Islington Tensions of Empire by Frederick Cooper and Ann Laura Stoler It's written by an American professor of anthropology. She's concerned about the way notions of womanhood are shaped in relation to imperial expansion. I'm still grappling with it. Jack Waddell
2, Folkestone The Story of Railways Dad Darren Waddell, 37, says: 'It's from his great-grandmother. We've just been to stay with her in Newcastle. I'm a train driver for Southeastern, so all the family are train mad. Jack's really into Thomas the Tank Engine, too.' Martin O'Connell
21, student, Glasgow The Economist I'm a subscriber, so I read it every week. It's very informative. I'm studying economics and going for a job interview tomorrow. The piece I'm reading is about globalisation and people who've lost their jobs as a result of the changes. Linda Mallaby
54, print company worker, Sunderland A Song at Twilight by Lilian Harry It's a romance set during the Second World War about a pilot who flies a Spitfire. I like Catherine Cookson, I've read quite a lot of her books. I try to read a variety of books, really. Josie Banks
20, student, Newbury Mastering Fashion Buying and Merchandising Management by Tim Jackson and David Shaw I'm applying for graduate training schemes so I'm just reading up on it. I'm in my final year of an economics degree. I'm looking to be a buyer. Raffaello Degruttola
34, actor, Hendon, north London Directing Actors by Judith Weston I'm getting a director's perspective on how actors work and how they subtly manipulate them to get what they want. I've been in film since I was 13 and this is one of the best books I've read for actors. Mandy McCabe
38, nurse (now full-time mother), Harrogate Red I'm catching up on styles and gossip. I usually pick up a few magazines on my way down and a few on my way up. I'm checking out what people were wearing at the Golden Globes. Giovanni Porfido
40, sociology lecturer, Brixton Affinity by Sarah Waters She's a great lesbian writer and gives voice to women's stories, which is very important. Being a queer person myself, I think it's important to read stories that are about lives other than straight people's. Joseph Agholor
52, senior lecturer in international finance, Westminster, London Daily Mail This is for my wife. I read the Financial Times. There's nothing interesting in here except for a story about how banks have been made to reduce or refund excess charges on mortgages. Kennedy Rodrigues
41, financial manager, Watford Pele: The Autobiography Pele is someone I admire. He was the first footballer to score 1,000 goals. He is the greatest footballer of all time. This book details the poverty he came from. The football he had was made out of rags, so it truly is a rags-to-riches story. Janet Newell
32, telecoms regulator, Finsbury Park We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver It's terrifying. It really puts me off having children. My mum gave it to me, but she won't read it herself. Natalie Douglas
31, hair stylist, Jamaica, now Dundee Black Beauty I'm a hair stylist, but I'm reading this for myself just to see what's going on. If you're black, this is definitely the one to buy. There are tips not only for black people but on everything - beauty, health, makeup, celebrities, even surgery. Mary Nairn
25, gardener, Aberdeen Lonely Planet South East Asia I'm going to Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos for six weeks tomorrow. It's my first time out of Europe and I'm going on my own, but I'm sure I'll meet people there. I really want to see Angkor Wat and all the wildlife and rainforests. Graham Roberts
29, GP, North Shields Lonely Planet Canada My wife Ellie and I are going to Canada in the summer. Ellie's going to be a bridesmaid, so we're going to combine that with our summer holiday. It's somewhere I've always wanted to go because I like the outdoors. Kirstin Shepherd
20, student, Edinburgh The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton She's one of my favourite authors. This book is about New York society at the end of the 19th century, about woman as a commodity. She has to get married to have any sort of value, and she doesn't. Stuart Robertson
34, teacher, Aberdeen Kursus Bahasa Melayu by Askar Melayu DiRaja Brunei It's a Malayan language course. I'm using mind maps to try and learn it by linking all the vocabulary together. I'm learning Spanish as well and I teach Latin. I've also some ancient Greek and German.
Interviews by Katie Toms
https://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,2005287,00.ht ml

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