diff --git a/src/_data/books.yml b/src/_data/books.yml index eb072e6f4..6676196ad 100644 --- a/src/_data/books.yml +++ b/src/_data/books.yml @@ -571,6 +571,7 @@ slug: the-legacy-of-spies author: John le Carré finished: true + location: Stockholm, Sweden finishedAt: 2023-05-17T22:56:00 notes: >- I'm deep into espionage fiction now. Or, I'm deep into John le Carré… This novel was both a prequel and sequel to the @@ -582,6 +583,7 @@ slug: brev-fran-nollpunkten author: Peter Englund finished: true + location: Stockholm, Sweden finishedAt: 2023-06-15T20:00:00 notes: >- I liked this one very much. The book is a collection of essays spanning from World War I, throughout the 1920s-30s @@ -593,6 +595,7 @@ slug: the-spy-who-came-in-from-the-cold author: John le Carré finished: true + location: Stockholm, Sweden finishedAt: 2023-06-27T23:00:00 notes: >- Damn. I should've read this one after ["The Legacy of Spies"](#the-legacy-of-spies). The latter one — also @@ -605,6 +608,7 @@ slug: tinker-tailor-solder-spy author: John le Carré finished: true + location: Stockholm, Sweden finishedAt: 2023-07-14T21:00:00 notes: >- If I had read the book before the movie, I would've been more surprised by the climax than what I was for @@ -621,6 +625,7 @@ - title: Berlin slug: berlin author: Antony Beevor + location: Stockholm, Sweden notes: >- Continuing my journey towards being a fully fledged dad. 150% detailed account of the Allied invasion of Germany in 1945. So much stuff I didn't know. Lots of stories about the conditions of the soldiers, civilians, @@ -638,6 +643,7 @@ author: Helena Merriman slug: tunnel-29 finished: true + location: Stockholm, Sweden finishedAt: 2024-01-04T19:00:00+01:00 notes: >- This is kind of a "dramatised" documentary of actual events. Tons of historical metadata along the way. It's @@ -648,6 +654,7 @@ author: Karl Ove Knausgård slug: det-tredje-riket finished: true + location: Bangkok, Thailand finishedAt: 2024-01-14T21:00:00+01:00 notes: >- I loved it just as much as the first one in the series (I loved the second one less). It's something in Knausgård's