

Happy Hallowe'en, all you ghouls and boys! Here are author birthdays for the week. Sorry, no trivia tonight, I've been tending to a very sick puppy (who's on the mend, I'm happy to say!)
Oct 31:
John Evelyn English diarist who also wrote treatises on air pollution, horticulture and architecture (1620; d.1706
John Keats British Romantic poet (1795; d.1821)
Dick Francis jockey and novelist (1920)
Neal Town Stephenson American writer, known for his speculative fiction works, which have been variously categorized science fiction, historical fiction, cyberpunk, and postcyberpunk. He has also written under the pseudonym of Stephen Bury (1959)
Nov 1:
Georg Philipp Harsdörffer, prolific German Baroque poet and translator (1607; d.1658)
Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, French poet and an influential neoclassical critic (1636; d.1711)
John Strype, English historian and biographer (1643; d.1737)
Stephen Crane, novelist, reporter, and poet, author of The Red Badge of Courage (1871; d.1900)
Grantland Rice, American sportswriter (1880; d.1954)
Sholem Asch, Polish-born Yiddish American novelist and playwright (1880; d.1957)
Hermann Broch, Austrian novelist (1886; d.1951)
Henri Troyat nee Lev Aslanovich Tarasov, prolific French author, biographer, historian and novelist of Armenian descent (1911; d. 2007)
Margaret Taylor Burroughs, African-American poet, artist, and art teacher (1917)
James J. Kilpatrick, columnist, newspaper editor and grammarian (1920)
Gordon Rupert Dickson, American science fiction author (1923; d.2001)
A R Gurney American playwright and novelist (1930)
Edward Said,Palestinian/American (born Jerusalem), music critic for The Nation and political essayist (1935 - 2003)
Lee Smith, US Southern writer (1944)
Zenna Chlarson Henderson American elementary school teacher who wrote a series of fantasy novellas and short stories. (1917 – 1983)
Nov 2:
Barbey D'Aurevilly, French drama and literary critic, novelist, and short story writer, whose masterpiece is considered to be Les Diaboliques (The She-Devils) (1808; d.1889)
Daniil Leonidovich Andreyev Russian poet and mystic who wrote The Rose of the World while in a Stalin prison camp (1906; d.1959)
Odysseus Elytis, Greek poet and 1979 Nobel prize winner (1911)
Michelle Cliff Jamaican-born U.S. novelist and poet whose novels are concerned with social and political issues (1946)
Thomas Mallon, American novelist and critic (1951)
Nov 3:
Lucan aka Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, Spanish/Latin poet, author of Bellum Civile (39 A.D.; d.65 A.D.)
Thomas Kyd, English (Elizabethan) dramatist, wrote The Spanish Tragedy (1558; d.1594)
William Cullen Bryant, American romantic poet, editor, and lawyer; he penned the poem 'Thanatopsis' (1794; d.1878)
Karl Baedeker, German publisher of the famous Baedeker travel guidebooks (1801; d.1859)
Gustaf Adolf Tenggren, Swedish illustrator who illustrated Disney movies and Little Golden Books (1896; d.1970)
Andre Malraux, French novelist (1901; d.1976)
James 'Scotty' Barrett Reston, American journalist (born Scotland) (1909; d.1995)
Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Australian aboriginal poet and writer (aka Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska Walker) (1920; d.1993)
Terrence McNally, Florida playwright (1939)
Joe Queenan, American humorist, critic and author wrote a fairly scathing view of Dan Quayle and the American Vice-Presidency. (1950)
Massimo Mongai, Italian science fiction writer (1950)
Nov 4:
Eden Phillpotts, British novelist, poet, and playwright (1862; d.1960)
Alfred Henschke,German novelist, playwright and magazine publisher known by his psuedonym Klabund (1890; d.1928)
Ciro Alegria, Peruvian novelist (1909; d.1967)
C K Williams, New Jersey-born poet (1936)
Rosina Doyle Bulwer-Lytton (née Wheeler) wrote and published fourteen novels, a volume of essays and a volume of letters. (1802 –1882)
William Penn Adair "Will" Rogers was a Cherokee-American cowboy, comedian, humorist, social commentator, vaudeville performer and actor. (1879 – 1935)

Nov 5:
Philippe de Mornay, French writer (1549; d.1623),
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, American writer, poet and positivist (1850; d.1919)
Ida Minerva Tarbell, author and investigative journalist ('muckraker'), nemesis of Standard Oil Company (1857; d.1944)
James Elroy Flecker, London-born poet, dramatist, and translator (1884; d.1915)
Will Durant, Massachusetts-born writer and historian, who with his wife, Ariel, authored the 11-volume Story of Civilization (1885; d.1981)
Charles MacArthur, playwright and screenwriter known particularly for his plays with Ben Hecht, Twentieth Century and The Front Page; he was married to actress Helen Hayes and friends with the Algonquin Round Table group (1895-1956)
Thomas Flanagan, who wrote an acclaimed Irish historical trilogy (1923; d.2002),
Geoffrey Wolff, Los Angeles-born novelist and memoirist (1937)
Tom Phelan, Irish novelist (1940)
Sam Shepard, playwright, screenwriter, short story writer and actor (1943)
Joyce Maynard (1953), writer and novelist.
Nov 6:
Colley Cibber, English dramatist and poet, re-writer of Richard III (1671; d.1757)
Jonas Lauritz Idemil Lie, Norwegian novelist; one of the Four Greats of 19th-century Norwegian literature (1833; d.1908),
Robert Musil, Austrian novelist whose unfinished novel The Man Without Qualities (Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften) is considered an important modernist novel (1880; d.1942)
Harold Ross, New Yorker founder (1892; d.1951)
James Jones, Illinois novelist and author of From Here To Eternity (1921; d.1977)
Diana E. H. Russell, South African feminist researcher, writer and activist (1938)
Michael Cunningham, American writer; author of The Hours, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1999 (1952)
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 12:43am.
Will Shakespeare, "Twelfth Night". In addition to 3 favorite scripts, watched an excellent fairly recent video of "TN".
Dan Brown, "The Lost Symbol".
Rereading a couple by F. Scott Fitzgerald, "Babylon Revisited" and "Flappers and Philosophers".
Philippa Gregory, "The White Queen". Continuation of her historical novels on English history. With this one she begins a jump from the Tudors to the Plantangenets; one rose to another, as it were.
Mark T. Conard, "The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese".
Ann Waldron, "The Princeton Murders".
Also involved in some fairly heavy-duty remodeling. Mostly plans and suggestions from various sources; and mostly short reference, since the actual planning was done long ago. Bringing this to fruition gives us a feeling similar to others from the past: finish writing a book, poem or article; a musical score; a language; a major successful recipe; a lab project; a season.
I finally managed to get throug ,
The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters in the end i just struggled to get through, wasn't really catchy. in it's shifing point of view it was very interessting and it forced the reader to be attentive, but it was a bit to much concentrated an sexuality and the rescue of the protagonist was very unlikely at some points
now I'm reading
Die Wahlverwandschaften (Elective Affinities) by Goethe and I'm going to start
The Canterbury Tales today.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 5:13am.
Telgee - just sending love and best wishes to that sick puppy. Hope all's well again by now.
Reading my first ever Harlan Coben (
Promise Me) and, so far, a little bored and disappointed. I don't often read this type of book but picked it up fancying a bit of a change and hoping for a fairly quick page-turner. So far (136 pages in) nothing much seems to be happening .
I'm also still browsing a couple of essays a day from
The Atheist's Guide to Christmas as well, though, and that is much more fun. I'd really recommend this funny and thoughtful book to everyone who doesn't plan to spend Dec 25th in church. And a large chunk of the profits go to the Terence Higgns Trust and if that isn't a good cause I don't know what is.
In pursuit of a full picture of the man Byron, just finished 'Augusta Leigh' by Michael & Melissa Bakewell. Far better than expected as Augusta really comes out as a strong character beset by Georgian social codes and her crazy half brother, rather than the hopeless 'candle in the wind' of the Byron biogs.
Also reading Mark Billingham's 'Scaredy Cat', my first of his. Got in the mood seeing him and Val McDermid at the Manchester Lit Festival last week. They were both funny about readers having no qualms about intricate gory details of murders and path lab but taking up their protest pen at the slightest hint of a sex scene. See the point. This book has a scene with two kids playing cricket with live frogs - erggghhhh! - any need for that? No sex scenes yet theough... apparently complainers have always used green ink, even though they now have infinite choice with e-mail fonts - strange that...
I'm reading
The Sea by John Banville, recommended to me because one of my favourite books is
The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney. Only on page 10 but I love it already.
ah that picture takes me back!
im just starting to read Sookie Stackhouse's Book 7 and i can't wait to finish it to read all the remaining books!
Read all of
The Prophecy of the Sisters this *ahem* morning as I started it after i got back home at 2ish in the morning and invariably i only got up an hour ago ;) Pretty interesting and somewhat creepy book that is *obviously* gonna turn into a trilogy or something of a similar ilk. But as long as i get paperbacks methinks i'll be alright with that.
Been in a reading slump for a few weeks. But should finish
Jackass Frigate by Alaric Bond and looking forward to starting
The White Rhino Hotel: A Novel by Bartle Bull.
The Adams Family are the best!!! But they should have left Thing in the box!
I finally finished
Madame Bovary last week, and
Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder last night. I actually preferred the novella at the back, a little festive heart-warmer about a young runaway who turns up at The Cookie Jar just before Christmas...
So now I'm in the middle of three books. My main read is
Marley and Me (the joys of dog ownership without the mess!). I also dipping into the
New Moon Illustrated Movie Companion and
What it Feels Like by A.J. Jacobs. It's a collection of mini-essays about all kinds of experiences most people will never have - being bitten by a shark, having Ebola, being hit by lightning, walking on the moon... Sadly some of the stories fall completely flat in their conciseness. Hmmm...
Oh, and of course, I'll be joining Mark and Belva starting People of the Book tomorrow!
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 9:55am.
#14, usnmm2, Bartle Bull's
The White Rhino Hotel is just terrific, have read all Bull's books and there's not a bad one in the lot. I notice you're also reading Guy Vanderhaeghe's
The Englishman's Boy, a book I'm still extremely fond of.
I finished Margaret Atwood's
The Year of the Flood and was fairly disappointed with it. I've admired so many of her novels over the years, including
Oryx and Crake, but this new one just didn't connect and I was glad to be done with it.
I just finished Philip Caputo's new book
Crossers and while it was reasonable entertaining, its ending turned rather lame, and
Crossers wasn't nearly as good as Caputo's last book, the 2005 novel
Acts of Faith, which was simply a superior piece of work.
I hadn't decided whether or not I was gonna read John Irving's
Last Night in Twisted River, but I noticed this morning that Amazon had dropped the price on the Kindle edition from $15.40 to 12.38, so I downloaded it, and so far so good after roughly 50 pages.
Finished and almost finished with two disappointing ones:
Little Brother by
Cory Doctorow, a techno-thriller centered around hacking that looked like fun but wasn't my cup of tea at all, and
The Silver Pigs by
Lindsey Davis, the first of a series of mysteries set in ancient Rome that looked promising but just hasn't grabbed me.
Luckily I picked up the fourth in
Louise Penny's
Inspector Gamache series and am thoroughly enjoying that.
#14 usnmm2 and #16 LouisBranning - I loved
A Cafe on the Nile. It never occurred to me that it was part of a series, so now I'm desperate for all
Bartle Bull's other books. I've got them all wishlisted on BookMooch (darned finances - can't just buy what I want right now!)
>18 Ohh you've just given me the craving to read
Jamaica Inn since it's just as creepy and it's sitting up on my shelf just asking to be read!
>Louis- Nice to have you back sir! I've heard good things about the latest Irving, I hope you enjoy it. The Bartle Bull books sounds very interesting. Which one should you start with?
Ellie- Yes, the Group Read for
People of the Book will start tomorrow. Here's the link:http://www.librarything.com/topic/73347
Still reading
The Lost Symbol. It's gotten to the "cant put this down" point so I'll probably finish it soon.
#21, Hey Mark, I think you might like the Bartle Bull novels, and by all means start with
The White Rhino Hotel because that's where Bull presents his original cast of characters that appear and re-appear in the following books, and is a natural lead-in to the wonderful
A Cafe on the Nile.
Mysteries are not my thing but the first two books of Larsson's trilogy totally captivated me. As I started
The Girl Who Played with Fire, I was skeptical. It seemed so like the previous that I feared that it was one of those situations where once was spectacular, but unrepeatable. Then somewhere a third of the way through, I found myself completely caught up once again. I find Lisbeth a totally intriguing character and it was fascinating to put together her amazing past. While the fleshing out of the Lisbeth character was the focus of the book, each of the other characters were drawn clearly enough to add to the depth of the novel.
I can not begin to imagine where a third book will go, but I'll be checking it out.
#26,snash, I got totally wound up in Stieg Larsson's novels too, and as purely exciting as
The Girl Who Played With Fire turned out to be, I didn't think it nearly as good a story per se as The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.
#27 Louis, as for the story, I would agree with you. However, since what makes people tick is what interests me the very most, I found
The Girl Who Played with Fire equally as interesting.
Have you read the third? If so, does it keep up the quality and suspense?
Just past the halfway point in
Johnny Tremain and enjoying it a lot. I didn't recall from my junior high English class reading of this book what an unpleasant fellow young Johnny could be. A very believable character, in fact.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 1:27pm.
I am finishing up with
Wildwood Dancing by Juliet Marillier which I am really enjoying. Will be starting on
People Of The Book later today for the group read and I have
Jim The Boy by Tony Earley waiting in the wings.
I am also a big fan of Bartle Bull as well. This is an author I would probably never have heard of except for LT.
#28, snash, the third book of Larsson's Millenium trilogy
The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest is scheduled to be published in the US on 10/10, and it should be worth the wait.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 2:26pm.
I finished
Make Room! Make Room by Harry Harrison last Sunday. A surprisingly good read. It was much better than I expected for a science fiction novel written in 1966. Taken out of its context it is a dated diatribe on population growth. The teaming, over-crowded city it imagines is portrayed compellingly, but the future it describes arrives earlier than it really should. 1999 to be specific. The chapter long jeremiad on the need for freely available birth control is the most jarring anachronism. However, the story and characters (which include a decaying New York) are more than interesting enough to make you overlook the outdated parts.
Followed that up with
The Shockwave Rider, another ancient science fiction novel from when I was a wee lad. This time circa 1975. The author sets up a world of straw men for his hero to knock over and defeat. The reward the reader reaps from the hero's accomplishments is concomitant with his achievement. Nothing. The less said about the excreable book the better.
Now I'm starting
The Year of the Flood. The thought occurs to me that I should probably start one of those fifty book challenges next year.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, okt 31, 2009, 2:26pm.
I have not been posting or reading the threads much lately. Hope to fix that. I have been reading and tied up with work/read/sleep.
I am just starting
Veil of Roses by Laura Fitzgerald, about a young woman from Iran coming to the US.
Presently reading
Soulless by
Gail Carriger which has so far been an interesting amalgamation of cozy mystery, steampunk novel and paranormal romance. I've never read anything quite like it before and am really enjoying it.
Letter from New York by Helene Hanff. Interesting compilation of her BBC Woman's Hour Broadcasts from 1978-1984. Most interesting to me because I lived in NYC then.
I just finished The Shakespeare Secret today, and was a bit disappointed. I have always been fascinated with Shakespeare, and was looking forward to reading this book, but I do not think it was well written. The good thing about it though, was that it made me want to revisit my Shakespeare works, so I've spent the day reading sonnets and also started on
Romeo and Juliet, which I have read so many times that I know portions of it by heart.
In addition I have started reading
Phantoms by Dean Koontz.
In honor of Halloween, I'm reading
Dracula. I'm also reading one coming out next spring: THE HERETIC'S WIFE by Brenda Rickman Vantrease - it's wonderful!
I've been wanting to read Dracula, and Frankenstein, since I haven't read either of them, but I didn't think to grab them this month for Halloween. Maybe I'll wait a couple months and read them for Christmas. =P
#12 ~ kidzdoc.......enjoy
The Haunting of Hill House....my favorite scary book (and movie) of all time. I read it last year for Halloween, and it still sends shivers up & down my spine like it did when I was a young girl. The old, original movie (not the remake) was outrageously scary!
This year I am reading a collection of short ghost stories ~
Classic Ghost Stories edited by Bob Bowers.....very creepy, perfect!!
In honor of Halloween, I'm reading two zombie novels.
Brian Keene's The Rising is quite funny. It reminds me of the
Evil Dead movies.
Joe McKinney's Dead CIty is more of a straight horror novel. The writing is a bit pedestrian, but there are some nice moments of tension.
Was able to get the movie
84 Charing Cross Road. Watched it this afternoon. Anyone who has enjoyed the book,will surely enjoy the movie. by Helene Hanff
I just finished Jar City by Arnaldur Indridason, and it's a great book.
I'm in the middle of
Blood From a Stone by Donna Leon now, about my favorite Venetian police commissioner, and I'm starting
Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder
Happy Halloween!
Started volume one of the three volume Penguin edition of the unabridged,
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon today. So amazing I have to share the first two sentences:
"In the second century of the Christian era, the empire of Rome comprehended the fairest part of the earth, and the most civilized portion of mankind. The frontiers of that extensive monarchy were guarded by ancient renown and disciplined valour."
The work just rolls on like that page after page, chapter after chapter. In the 60+ pages of introduction editor
David Womersley makes the point that Gibbon's style has overshadowed the historical tour de force that Gibbon accomplished with Decline and Fall.
jonesli -- Archie; New York City
Cameling -- Brunetti; Venice
When I was young I thought Archie Goodwin was the perfect man. Now I'm older and I lean more toward Guido Brunetti. So much of what I know of their two cities (neither of which I've visited) comes from the two of them. I think that well-written detective stories tell you as much about a place and time as any other type of writing -- the attention to detail, the outlook and demeanor of the guy doing the legwork, his ability to use the resources of his city to solve a crime, the way -- deep down -- he feels about the city and its people, the extent to which he is (and isn't) the quintessential New Yorker or Venetian, his own particular combination of vulnerability and courage, intelligence and instinct. Plus, with Archie you get Nero and that wonderful house (and the incredible food), and with Guido you get Paola and that labyrinth of a city (and the incredible food). Either way, you're going to gain a few pounds -- but it's a small price to pay for spending time with a man you love.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 1, 2009, 3:22am.
Finished a 'bit on the side' book this morning,
What it Feels Like, edited by A.J. Jacobs. Bottom line: should have been a fantastic bunch of essays on amazing experiences - was actually a patchy, cobbled-together collection with one or two exceptions. Don't bother.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 1, 2009, 8:29am.
Since I am not doing too much - or trying not to anyway, I read the entire
Bluestar's Prophecy yesterday - all 516 pages. I like this series - it has cats.
Next I think I will finish that latest Star Wars trilogy by reading
Star Wars Abyss.
Too many choices - I want to read them all!
>51 My son has been reading the
Warriors manga series and is now interested in the regular novels as well. I've been able to mooch most of the series in hardcover from BookMooch but still have to pick up the first and third books. I'm going to give them to him for Christmas.
I've just finished volume one of a new to me manga series,
Descendants of Darkness and since I finished
Soulless (from post 34) last night I pulled
The Crystal Throne by
Kathryn Sullivan out of my tbr pile to start today.
Hopefully I will finish
Nightmares and Dreamscapes by Stephen King this week.
I really like his short stories but I'm really getting tired of them (plus, the book is heavy and hard to carry around). Only 250 pages to go. Wohoo!
I think I will start
The light fantastic by Terry Pratchett after that ^^
Finished
Medicine Balls by Dr Phil Hammond. If you've ever worked for the NHS it's worth a read - not much has changed since the book was written. I could identify with many of the situations and it had me howling with laughter at times.
Still reading Terry Pratchett's
Making Money which has now become my shop read. Bedtime read is going to be Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow by Peter Hoeg and my day off read will be Stephenie Meyer's
Breaking Dawn.
I meandered into Boarders last Friday and walked out with
Bicycle Diaries by David Byrne. I've just started it and I can tell it'll be interesting. I've also just started
Library at Night.
Just started Peculiar, MO by Robert Williams. Looks like a good book, and at .99 on Kindle, hard to pass up.
I am currently reading
The Little Stranger after having seen that several other LTers read and enjoyed it. I am loving it so far even though I don't think that I have gotten to the "meat" of the story yet.
> libraryrobin- I have not read your upstairs book, I do plan on it but I did read your downstairs book,
The Tender Bar and thought it was wonderful! Hope you enjoy it!
I finished
The Witness Tree last night - An easy to read, fast paced fictitious account of the American diplomatic dynasty, the Dulles family, with a focus on Foster, Eleanor and Allen Dulles, during the period 1911 to 1947. While written as an espionage thriller, it is fact based and peppered with interesting people and events of the time period.
Next up is
People of the Book for the group read and
Zeitoun.
I'm excited to be among the group now reading
People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks. Very good so far.
>Dracula...Maybe I'll wait a couple months and read them for Christmas. =P
LOL!
I haven't been able to find all the Agatha Christie books in the stores near me, so I finally ordered them from Amazon. And now they're not shipping them in the order I want to read them. Well, such is life.
So, while on night shift and not being able to cook and eat like a normal person, I started
My life in France by Julia Child. I'm very impressed by the clear voice presented in the book.
I gave up on
Promise Me. I just didn't care what happened. So now I'm on to one in which I care very much,
Antigona and Me. I'm still less than 50 pages in and I so want good things to happen to this instantly lovable woman.
Reading
My Life in France by Julia Child. also enjoying the photos that her husband took.
I'm in the home stretch of
The Hemingses of Monticello - I don't want to leave that world quite yet, so I'm looking for a good Jefferson biography. Maybe
American Sphinx?
I'm also about 1/3 through Script & Scribble - a book about writing and penmanship. It's pretty good so far.
I took a detour in my planned reading this afternoon to read
When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead.... what a fantastic YA book! It is set in 1978-79 New York City with an intriguing puzzle the narrator, 12 year old Miranda, is trying to fathom out. That is all I am going to say about the puzzle, or I should say puzzles... With interesting neighborhood residents, great characters and a plot that kept me captivated, this is a brilliant, quick afternoon read I thoroughly enjoyed and highly recommend.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 1, 2009, 7:25pm.
Just finished
The Comfort of Strangers by Ian McEwan. The book had found its way into this thread a few weeks back--sorry, I don't remember who mentioned it. It seemed the perfect book for Halloween reading.
I did find it very frightening, mostly for a sense of nightmare you get from it--the feeling that the characters are trapped, cannot get away from the danger that confronts them.
It was well-written and a good read. Thanks to whoever mentioned the book in the first place!
Karen
I finished 5 books on vacation:
The HelpSouth of BroadMothers and Sons"The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest"
Married to a BedouinI have nothing new to add to the various reviews on first 2 books.
I loved
Mothers and Sons. The way
Toibin describes Ireland is captivating. These stories ring true for any parent-child relationship. Highly recommend.
"The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest:" It finishes the trilogy and does not disappoint.
Married to a Bedouin: I met this author (and bought the book) in Petra, Jordan. It's a fascinating story about how a woman from New Zealand met, married and lives with a Bedouin man and his culture. Not to mention she lived in one of the 7 Wonders of the World. I highly recommend this book for people who plan to visit Jordan or the Middle East.
Right now, I'm reading
Trans-Sister Radio and thinking about reading
Gone with the Wind for the first time.
Finished
Across the Endless River by Thad Charhart late last night. I enjoyed it, although it has its flaws. I'm not sure what's next. Maybe
Cave Art by Jean Clottes, which I just picked up from the library. It's a beautiful book...
Finished
Jane Eyre last night and loved it. Just started
Leviathan by Philip Hoare this morning, about mankind's fascination with whales, and I am loving it so far.
I've started reading
Der Name der Rose by
Umberto Eco. I didn't manage to get far, so I'm just at 20 pages, but it promises to be good, so I will see how it goes on.
I'm reading
The Somnabulist - I should be done by Wednesday at latest - possibly sooner since it's good enough that I'll probably finish at home rather than wait for the next day's commute.
Just read
Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader by Anne Fadiman, as recommended by WholeHouseLibrary in another thread. It was a very fun read. The first essay, on marrying libraries (I'm engaged), was my favorite but I could really relate to several others. She's definitely more intellectual than I, and some reviewers describe her as snobby, but it didn't bother me. Similar style to Hanff in many respects.
Next up is David Ramsey's
Total Money Makeover, recommended by several friends. In preparation for setting up a joint budget, etc. I ordered several through the library and this one is due first.
Just started
Faith by
Peter James. I was hooked after the first couple of pages, so much so that I ended up reading over half of the whole book in bed last night. Just as well I didn't have work today!
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 2, 2009, 11:24am.
Just started my 1010 challenge (running Nov '09 thru Oct '10), and just started
Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child.
Last night I got through all of
A Walk to Remember and it reaffirmed to me that Nicholas Sparks is a master at what he does and i adore his books even though i'm unable to see by the time I finish them as i'm crying so much.
Not sure what i'm going to read tonight- I may just be good and read some stuff for uni that i need to do for tomorrow.
#3 Tullah Rose
I don't know how
Glass Books of the Dream Eaters is in german, but I found it to be very surreal in English. I couldn't decide if it was truly a dream or not. It seems to be a cross between a Victorian penny novel, a modern romance novel, and spy thriller. I just am not sure what category it should be in. However, I found it interesting enough that I read the second installment in the series -
The Dark Volume. I even want to read the ending volume when it comes out. I want to know if the Cardinal and Miss Temple get together.
You are right about the sexuality in it. I couldn't decide if it needed to be there or not. It was also puzzling in that the sex wasn't blatant, but it was erotic and clearly there to set the mood about a society that is sexually repressed and give the story some sexual tension.
I started Marley ane Me this morning
#92. I loved the book - luckily I read it before seeing the movie since the movie was lacking.
#74-I'm still waiting to get my hands on
When You Reach Me from the library-I really want to read it!
I'm about to start
Handle With Care by Jodi Picoult-I always love her books, even though some are far better than others. I hadn't even known this one was out, so I'm very excited to start it around all the homework I have to do for graduate school.
#81-Tallulah_Rose,
You might want to find a copy of
Key to the Name of the Rose by
Adele J. Haft. It translates all the Latin passages in the book and clarifies most of the major issues of medieval thought that surround the action of the novel.
#94, DeltaQueen50, I love Tony Earley's
Jim the Boy, and the sequel to it
The Blue Star is wonderful too. The 3rd book in Jim's trilogy comes out in 2010.
I am definitely going to read the sequel soon, and now, I will be looking for the third one as well. Thanks.
I finished
Dracula one day before Halloween, and thoroughly enjoyed it. I'm still reading
Jane Eyre but I'm having a hard time with it. I guess I need some time to recover from the 2nd part of the book. . .
Now though I am reading
The Flanders Panel for the The Europe Endless Challenge. Leave it to me to get a book about something I know nothing about: chess and art. Oh well. Time to learn something, eh?
I just finished
Wuthering Heights, which is, I think, a book best read for the first time in one's teenage years (or early 20's, at the latest). The
review was fun to write, though.
Next up,
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz, probably followed by Elizabeth von Armin's
The Enchanted April.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 2, 2009, 5:08pm.
Whoops, double post.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 2, 2009, 5:08pm.
I gave up on
John Banville's
The Sea. Just couldn't get into it. maybe it was the time or my mood, but for a Booker Prize winner it just failed to grab me. I guess it is an example of not all books are for everyone. I also finished the YA book
Mimus and started listening to the second volume of
Octavian Nothing - Vol. 2. The language in this book is outstanding. M. T. Anderson manages to capture the use of the English language of the 1770's so well. However, I can't imagine that YA's would read it. Maybe I'm wrong because it is a good story.
I started the YA novel
Great and Terrible Beauty and just can't put it down. This one is great!
I ve just finished reading' 1909 Armenian event's in Maras ' and am still reading Virnia Woolf's FLUSH ....
I finished up
The Lost Symbol last night. It takes a little bit to get going but once it did I couldn't put it down. I did end up guessing two of the "surprises" at the end, though I still enjoyed.
Now I've started
Memoirs of a Geisha.
I'm finally reading
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle in anticipation of attending a book signing/talk by the author that is scheduled for tomorrow evening. So far, I'm enjoying the book.
i wish i could read all the entries. they're fascinating. thanks everybody and special thanks to fredbacon for using the word 'jeremiad.' made me smile.
lessee. i'm still moving along with
brideshead revisited by Evelyn Waugh and am so enraptured by the narration that i can't pay attention to much else. Jeremy irons' continues to amaze. he simply woos the listener into character and scene. swoonly.
on tape two of
she walks these hills by Sharyn McCrumb, a compelling book set in east TN where i live.
have started
Ross Thomas'
briarpatch. thus far i don't like it as well as the Artie Wu/Quincy Durant/'Otherguy' Overby/Georgia Blue ensemble books, but it's Ross Thomas narrated by Frank Muller, so it's good.
noodling along in
the man of property by
John Galsworthy for the silly book game. i've read it so many times i almost know it by heart.
about 2/3 through Agatha Christie's
sad cypress my first ever Christie. David Suchet's narration is excellent.
and rereading Nevada Barr's
Firestorm because Barr, park ranger Anna Pigeon and narrator Suzanne Toren are an unbeatable combination.
stalled out on
heat wave by
Penelope Lively after enthusing wildly over the first tape last week. i expect i'll get back to it after i finish brideshead.
Tho Book of Unholy Mischief by Elle Newmark - starts out well.
I am slowly, for some unknown reason, reading
Star Wars Abyss. Just can't get into reading.
>111: koalamom: It's pretty weird, isn't it, how sometimes we inveterate readers can't get into reading? Those dry patches are dull, dull, dull, but we are so glad when they are over.
I'm about 3/4 through Dennis Lehane's
The Given Day. It's my first Lehane and I have to say it wasn't thrilling me until just about now. Not sure what will be next.
#93- I'm about 55 pages into Marley and Me and so far I am loving it
I am almost finish reading
The Outlander by Gil Adamson. I plan to finish it tonight. I don't know what I will be reading next.
#113 - I did get a lump in my throat at one point reading the book. In my defense, I had a dog growing up. My wife teased me about it... I walked in when she was reading the book a week later and she was crying and she never even had a dog, so I feel a little vindicated.
>111 and 112 You are so right. Why does that happen? I'm just finishing up the third book in a row that didn't do anything for me and I KNOW if I had read them at another time they would have been 4-5 star reads. Crazy.
I just finished reading
Nightlight: A Parody, and loved it. Surprisingly funny and not the usual take on Twilight satire.
Next I'm going to start reading
Possession, because I've been carting an old copy around with me for the last three moves. It's time.
#116. I find personally, there's a number of reasons:
Events in your life at the time - if you're readily relating to something in the book, you're probably more attached to the message.
What you've read recently, or previously - for instance, something groundbreaking to you can make another otherwise groundbreaking work mundane since the theme was similar.
Seasons - I think in general, moving from summer to fall or especially fall to winter tends to make reading a little less enjoyable for me. Part of it is just the change in daylight. But, once winter is in full swing, reading can be enjoyable again, especially when you get to stay indoors on a cold day with a good book.
#117. I'm kicking around the idea of reading Possession...I've read two other Byatt works and have two out from the library right now that I should read before month's end. I guess however I'm left after reading them will decide if I read further. So far, I've loved Byatt's short stories
Little Black Book but was a little let down by
Angels and Insects.
I finished Lehane's
Shutter Island and found it to be a good, fast-moving thriller/mystery with a good twist at the end. Now I can see the movie (whenever it comes out. I saw the trailer for it about 4 months ago).
I'll be starting an ARC-
Ambrose Bierce's Write It Right.
I finished Margaret Drabble's
The Pattern in the Carpet: A Personal History with Jigsaws this morning. What an extraordinary book. I'm going to be thinking about it for a long time -- I may need to read it again soon. It's not a book for everyone -- and I felt at times as though I wasn't smart enough (or perhaps reading intensely enough) to take in all she was offering. I kept thinking that if I could somehow map the book -- find some way to see it as a mosaic or jigaw -- it might reveal so much more to me. It seemed to meander, and yet I always felt (hoped?) there was a method to the madness -- a pattern in the carpet -- even if I didn't quite grasp it. Drabble uses jigsaws as metaphor -- she looks at her family history and tries to impose order, but recognizes that, unlike the jigsaw puzzle, life is not so orderly, will not stay within the frame. There are missing pieces and pieces left over, pieces that trouble us because they do not fit.
I'm so tempted to read this book again immediately, but I know from past history that isn't good for me, so I'll go on to something else. But I'll keep it close by -- and I'll get back to it soon.
The 'something else' I'll be reading next is a book recommended by Drabble in a recent interview . . . English author Julia Blackburn's
The Three of Us: A Family Story.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 3, 2009, 12:59pm.
After reading the first two Roy Tucker books recently,
The Kid From Tomkinsville and
World Series, I couldn't resist and went right after the third of the series, The Kid Comes Back. These are YA books that tell the story of Tucker, a young player on the Brooklyn Dodgers. The first two books were written in the early 40s. The third was written in 1946. Where the Kid comes back from is dangerous combat service in World War Two. These books were fascinating to me as a young boy in the early 60s. They're still good today, too.
I've got more than my usual number of books going on right now.
On my Ipod: I'm finishing up
Where Men Win Glory by Jon Krakauer. I love Krakauer, but I don't think a book about the Army and football was really for me, whenever he described battle or ball games I would sort of blank out.
In print: I've been reading essays from
Shelf Discovery for the past few days for a reading challenge I'm participating in, it is a great book to stick in the diaper bag and read while I'm feeding the baby.
I finished
The Seance by
John Harwood last night and picked up one of my Early Reviewer books,
The Private Papers of the Eastern Jewel by
Maureen Lindley. I think this one is going to be a bit of a chore, I'm not really enjoying the main character or the writing.
This morning I temporarily put down
The Private Papers of the Eastern Jewel in favor of
Liar by
Justine Larbalestier because I'm going to her signing tomorrow night.
I finished
Leviathan by Philip Hoare which wasn't what I expected, but which I still loved. Now a short read for me,
De brug (The Bridge) by Geert Mak about the bridge in Istanbul...
Last night I finished The House of Rothschild by
Niall Ferguson. It was fascinating. Today I had to google the family to catch up with them this decade. We get, in the book, to see the workings of a tight-knit powerful family. We get to see what power bankers actually have in government, or the basis of it anyway. I stumbled across this work, and I was very lucky.
After that I turned to
Melville's Clarel and the Intersympathy of Creeds by
William Potter. This is a lightweight academic overview of
Melville's long poem. I am reading it in preparation for reading the poem itself. The importance of religion and what it might mean in a person's life is a continuing theme in my reading. It is, presumably, literature too.
Robert
#123. "The House of Rothschild" sounds interesting. It's going on the Mountain.
Sean191: do read
Possession its one of my favorite books of all time. It is really an experience, the feel of the period, the poetry, the love story. ahh I have to read it again...
Meanwhile
We finally started the group read for
People of the Book loving it so far.
#76, Bridget770, I bought
Married to a Bedouin last week. I've visited Jordan (and of course Petra) a few weeks ago and found it a pity that I didn't find this book before going. I plan to write it soon.
I read two mysteries recently
Fractured by Karin Slaughter and
Shoot/ Don't Shoot by J.A. Jance
I am now reading
Prairie Tales by
Melissa Gilbert (This title does not come up on touchstones.) It seems to be an easy read. If you loved the TV series Little House on the Prairie, this is a book you may not want to miss.
I've read just enough of
The Crazed by
Ha Jin to know that it will be a good airport/airplane book. I haven't been disappointed by one of his books yet.
Finished
Zeitoun - found the non-fiction account of hurricane Katrina and the aftermath a very quick read.
I am pacing my reading of
People of the Book to keep in line with the reading pace of the group... 58 pages in so far, but it is my evening book so there will be further progress this evening.
In the meantime, I have picked up
leaving tangier by Tahar Ben Jelloun as my current backup/commute to work book.
Finished
De Brug, it was a short book, and ok. Now reading Dodenboek (Book of the dead) by Preston & Child, the third in the Pendergast trilogy (and my first), but I think I can manage without having read the other Pendergast novels...
# 96 Smiley
Thank you for the tip. Fortunately I have a version with explanatory notes to the Latin passages, unfortunately there are not all latin passages translated. For the main medieval thoughts I am in the lucky situation that I study German and English and have medieval studies in it, so I know pretty much about the medieval time.
But I will go have a look i there is a german version (I'm reading in german), I think with the Latin passages it will help me.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 4, 2009, 4:49am.
#127 Viviane, have you read Angels and Insects? If so, how did it compare to Possession?
There are a lot of active posters in this thread, so I thought I'd try to get support going for an idea I posted in the "Recommend Site Improvements" forum (thread is
http://www.librarything.com/topic/76354 ). Here's the post:
"I post in a lot of groups, by my standards, and sometimes I want to go back to threads I've started in different groups. Presently I have squads of stuff starred, so that search is tedious; I won't even go into the size of the "Your Posts" choice.
Would it be a royal pain to introduce a "Threads You've Started" choice in the "Your World" bar? It would make my personal life easier, and I can imagine that of others as well."
If it sounds like a good idea to you, please go over there and post a response. It makes the request more popular, and so more likely to be granted.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 4, 2009, 11:40am.
#139 Just thought I should let you know that link only takes me to a blank page.
I read
Wildthorn last night and enjoyed it quite a lot - it's like a shortened PG-version of
Fingersmith with less of the malicious plots .
#139: I clicked on your link in the post and I just get a blank page. I will see if I can find your post in the group.
#139 Richard
http://www.librarything.com/topic/76354hope this takes people to your thread. Neat idea even if I don't start many threads - Useful in the challenge groups;)
Edit to say checked the link and it works for me.
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 4, 2009, 11:43am.
Thanks to Booksloth and crazy4, I fixed the link. My bad, sorry!
ETA and calm too!
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 4, 2009, 11:46am.
Thanks for fixing the link calm and richardderus. I did find the thread and posted a reply.
Monic'a
My Husband's Affair Became the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me...please, please go read the searingly honest, fearless, and soul-searching review member booksfallapart wrote of this book. It's...I don't know...it's rare to read a person's inner pain on a screen and, instead of wanting to turn away, wanting to thank them for telling about it publicly.
It's a hard subject to deal with, and booksfallapart does it beautifully.
I finished up the zombie novels
Dead City and
The Rising a couple of days ago. Though I initially thought
The Rising was pretty funny, it turned out that it was just badly written. The moments where Keene is actually trying to be funny were really the only thing that worked for me. Too bad he didn't write a comedy.
Dead City, on the other hand, was pretty enjoyable. Not transcendent, but a solid treatment of one man's day-long struggle to survive and find his family as a zombie plague rages across his city.
I've now left zombies behind, for the subtler darkness of Terrence Holt's
In the Valley of the Kings. Intriguing so far. The stories have a certain Kafka/Poe/Borges feel, which is both a benefit and handicap. Benefit because I love those authors and their stories. Handicap because I think Holt's own voice hasn't yet broken through the sense of homage/pastiche.
I'm enjoying Charles Pierce's
Idiot America. It's highly readable and fun, for the most part, unless I think about it too much.
I finished
The Wet Nurse's Tale yesterday and found it to be an entertaining bit of historical fiction.
I finished
Handle With Care this afternoon, and it was another amazing Jodi Piccoult book-difficult read because of the subject matter, but well worth the journey.
I'm now starting the latest in the Three Pines series (my new favorite series!),
The Brutal Telling.
I read P.G. Wodehouse's
Ring for Jeeves last night and was highly amused by it - wonderfully English and very witty.
#146. >>> That's the first time a book review made me cry. Beautiful. Thanks Richard for pointing us to it.
Just popping in to catch up on what I've been reading lately before going back to the library books mountain...
Taking a break from my longer read,
The Woman in White, I read
Fire by Kristin Cashore and
When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead, taking about a day each earlier this week. Now I'm back to my classic, which is getting more interesting, and listening to
13 Things That Don't Make Sense. I'm making an effort to keep pushing on in
The Woman in White before starting another book, but we'll see how long that resolution lasts.
Thanks for the link Richard to that review. Now I think I may want to read the book because it really hits home.
Currently I am reading
Act Like a Gentleman, Think Like a Woman and I am really enjoying it.
Booksloth.....just wanted to let you know, I think you're right about Jodi Picoult's
Change of Heart. I'm about 2/3rds the way through it, and it is just plain weird. So unlike her other books, which I've found to be thought-provoking, heart wrenching & powerful. This one is really odd, and I'll be glad once I finish it. Of course, her writing is very good, which is why I've decided to finish it. It's just the story that is off the wall. Looking forward to something else.
i am now reading Veiled sentiments for my
anthropology class it is a long book but sounds very interesting so far. it could a little confusing on how they decribe the Veiles. has anyone read it>?
Finished and reviewed
The Housekeeper and the Professor. From my review:
In The Housekeeper and the Professor, Yoko Ogawa uses mathematics and baseball as metaphors for life and, in so doing, has written a very imaginative and charming novel. The housekeeper is a single mother, living in Japan in the early 1990’s, when she is assigned to the brilliant mathematics professor. She is his tenth housekeeper, the previous nine having been unable to deal with his special requirements. Ever since the Professor suffered a head injury in a car accident many years previously, his memory ends in 1975 and his short term memory only lasts eighty minutes.
Read more here:
http://www.librarything.com/profile_revi...And started
The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway.
#159 brenzi - I'm happy to hear you enjoyed
Housekeeper. I thought it was a little gem.
#157 For me it was at least partly because the whole premise was so weird. If someone had killed the rest of my family and my remaining child could only survive by having that person's heart (overlooking for the moment the unlikelihood of successfully transplanting an adult's heart into a child) would I accept it? I think the only moral question here is, would I wait until he died?
Still reading
Star Wars Abyss. I find it so strange to being having this problem with a book of this nature/genre. Guess I am not into reading this week. I did read two large books on the weekend, both the kind you want to read in one sitting anyway so maybe the 800 pages I read over the weekend made me not want to read the next so fast!
I finished
Great and Terrible Beauty and started on
The Welsh Girl.
Great and Terrible Beauty was really good. There are many people who think that YA novels aren't as meaty and full bodied as adult novels, but this one was an exception. It was very well written with lots of food for thought. I enjoyed it and recommend it. Now it is off to the library to get the second book in the series.
I was out most of yesterday and didn't feel like hard reading at bedtime. I had brought home from Borders
Alphabet Juice by Roy Blount, Jr., so I read a chunk of it. It is not as good as I had hoped, but he has chosen Western Massachusetts over Georgia so he gets some bonus points.
I hope to have a book of similar weight in today's mail. They may vie with one another for tonight's reading.
Robert
Finished David Byrne's
Bicycle Diaries today. I thought the book would give more of a picture of various cities around the world. That's there but for the most part each city was used as a springboard to a variety of musings about the nature of people, society, art etc.
His views on a livable city were particularly interesting.
Hi All, I am new here but thought I'd add my current reads. I am half way through A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry for my Tuesdays at Ten book club. I also am about half way through True Compass, Ted Kennedy's memoir. I'll get back to it as soon as I finish my book club selection.
>justmejo- Welcome aboard! You are in a very special place! It looks like you are reading some very good books!
Hi justmejo - another welcome! I'm waiting for my turn at the library with
True Compass. How is it going?
Thanks for the welcome msf59 and coppers. I'm excited to have found the Library thing. Coppers I am enjoying
True Compass. Most of the Kennedy's public years. I was a young teenager for John Kennedy's presidency. I think that makes it even more enjoyable.
#161.....well, I finally finished
Change of Heart. The whole book was very strange. Not her best work, that's for sure. I think the author is so well known for writing incredibly thought provoking stories.... but went just a little (okay, alot) overboard on this one.....trying too hard, maybe, and still not achieving what she had hoped. The writing was good, of course.....she's a good writer for sure. But the story was just, well, crazy.
I just finished
The Little Stranger and I absolutely loved it!!!! Thank you to my fellow LTers for mentioning it. I don't think I would have found this book on my own. I have looked at Sarah Waters other books and will be checking some of those from the library in the future.
I started
Mennonite in a Black Dress last night which I received recently as an ER book. I am only about 5 or so pages in but it looks interesting and entertaining so I hope to enjoy it.
After I finish that, I have the new Jodi Picoult as well as an Ian McEwan that was recommended here recently. Not sure which one I will read first.
I am reading
The Last Jet-Engine Laugh by Ruchir Joshi for the Reading Globally India theme read. It was recommended here on LT.
#172 bookaholicgirl - I've got
The Little Stranger moving closer to the top of my tbr pile. I read my first Sarah Waters book,
The Night Watch, very recently and absolutely loved it!
Almost done with "Abyss" and hope to finish it soon - can't wait to see if Luke gets back to Coruscant!
I am heading over to the library for a couple of book on my wall list. Hope they don't take as long to read!
I finished off
Fairy Tale last night and started Guilty Pleasures by Laurell K. Hamilton.
I have just finished the last book (
Silver on the Tree) in my omnibus edition of
The Dark is Rising Sequence ready for the group discussion (75 book challenge).
I am one third of the way through
People of the Book and am going to try to pace the next third to fit in with that group read (50 book challenge).
About half way through Black Venus a collection of short stories by Angela Carter and have just started the third chapter of
Out Of Eden: The Peopling of the World by Stephen Oppenheimer.
Now all I need to do is decide what should be added to the currently reading pile. The book to get lost in ... thinking ... back later!
I stopped reading
Father Brown because it became too repetitive. Now I'm well into
The Night Watch by Sarah Waters. Some pages are very disturbing, but the story and the writing is gripping. A very striking book, for the moment.
Did it - finally - finished
Star Wars Abyss. It turned out not to be as long as I thought - they put in an excerpt from the next volume - and I thought this was a trilogy - guess not - again!
Not sure what I'll read next - didn't get to the library yet either - maybe I'll go after lunch?
Alternating with
The Book of Unholy Mischief is
The Criminal Mind, which I hadn't actually meant to read yet but when it arrived through the post I picked it up, flicked through a few pages and the next thing I knew I was hooked.
I finished reading
A Far Better Rest a day or two ago. I highly recommend this book, my first by author
Susanne Alleyn. It serves with elan as the back-story to
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens and IMHO, out classes it by many a rustique kilometer.
If interested in reading the review I posted it here:
http://www.librarything.com/profile_revi...or at the Main page for the work:
http://www.librarything.com/work/123508Interesting to me how this worked out, but, I am well underway on
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies for my RL/Face to Face book club coming up on Sunday afternoon. (I would NOT have chosen this one as my number seventy-five, nor would I have purposefully sought out another book based on a Classic work of literature). However, it IS my number sevety-five and it is another book spun on the skeleton, so to speak, of a classic, Jane Austen's
Pride and Prejudice.
It is amusing to read, as was the original work on which this book of Zombie lives and times in merry ol' England is based, and sometimes the humor reaches far, far beyond good taste and into the gross category ... very gory ... both actually. Do you laugh when you are uncomfortable? This one's for you. It is sort of a
Jane Austen guests writes for Saturday Night Live .
Seth Grahame-Smith, the second author of this creation, is quite clever and must have a semi-permanent pouch in his cheek from fitting his tongue in that place so often whilst writing this work.
Though I can predict much more zombie mayhem, I still plan to finish the reading of it, out of respect for my friends in the book club.
We are having Zombie wine (not kidding) with our cheese and crackers. I will admit that I am somewhat hooked at this point in the story I know so well, and I do want to see what happens to Dear Darcy and our s'hero, the intrepid Jane Bennet.Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 6, 2009, 12:48pm.
#172 - I just picked up
The Night Watch this morning while I was at the library. I had looked at our county library system and saw that all of her books were available from many of the libraries. I thought I would just check the section while at the local library picking up my reserves.
The Night Watch was the only one they had other than
The Little Stranger. I can't wait to read it.
Uh-oh. Looks like the italics got clicked on again somehow. Anyone know how to turn them off?
Did that do it?
Yes - thank you!
Thanks to you theaelizabet for turning off the italics. I have tried more times than I can say to close the HTMLX command, however, no luck. You did it! Thank you.
Ruth/womansheart
You're very welcome!
#189 Well, I don’t know why everyone else is reading them but I know that I won't. For those who are reading them, it's their own choice. To each his/her own. For me the original
Pride and Prejudice and
Sense and Sensibility are good enough, thank you very much!
I'm home today with nothing to do but sit with an ice pack and read (not so bad actually) and so I've gottten about half way through
Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon. I was confused and frustrated with it early on especially since I didn't really like any of the characters. Some are growing on me now so I'm enjoying it a lot more. It's kind of fun trying to work out exactly what's going on.
#189 benitastrnad - Of the three books you mentioned reading, I have only read
The Night Watch and loved it. I can't believe I let it sit on my bookshelf for so long!
Denne meddelelse er blevet slettet af dens forfatter.
>189 & 190 -
I did not want to read
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies but I like the member of my book club that selected it and she was going after something light and a little scary in the spirit of Halloween.
I resisted and postponed reading it until finally, I had to pick it up after being notified that it was being held on reserve for me at the main library.
I will have fun with my book club friends discussing the book and drinking wine and socializing. Not a book I would have chosen, but, it is clever, not blasphemous, just fun. I am going to learn to lighten up and stick with something new and have some good laughs at no one's expense. I felt the same way about Twilight when another person chose that one for our club read. Borrow/don't buy it.
Good friends are worth reading a so-so book once in a while, IMHO. And, a good laugh is worth a bunch, too.
Just saying.
#193 Yeah, this is exactly why I'm not a part of any book club. I'm afraid that I'd be forced to read something I don't want to. Another thing is that I don't drink. Maybe that is another reason of my not joining a book club. Just kidding! :-)
I'm currently reading
Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters and enjoying it. I read
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies earlier this year and thought that was also fun, and I'm a Jane Austen fan who dislikes the all fan fiction books using her characters. I see these Austen/monster books as being so over the top and outrageous that it's hard not to laugh.
Reading two
The Beach by
Alex Garland and
Christmas Promise by
Anne Perry I don't usually read two mysteries at once, but totally different from each other.
Edited to correct touchtones
Meddelelse redigeret af dens forfatter, nov 6, 2009, 7:21pm.
Welcome justmejo! I hope you love Library Thing as much as we all do--it is a special place--wonderful people!
I am reading
Brooklyn by
Colm Toibin. So far so good.
Just this very minute finished Dennis Lehane's
The Given Day. It was my first Lehane and I'm not sure yet what I think of it. On the one hand, I always like historical fiction, but on the other, I couldn't get too wrapped up in the characters or action. I'll give it a few days to soak in.
Next up is
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz for my RL book club. I know almost nothing about this book, but it doesn't seem the sort of thing I usually enjoy. I guess that's why I'm in the book club, to be exposed to books I wouldn't normally pick up. That and the camaraderie. And the chocolate.
(til toppen)