
I set aside West of Kabul, East of New York in order to read
Sexing the Cherry that was given to me by a friend. So, far it is very strange. But, I like it very much. And there are some very funny parts having to do with mens' "members."
I am still reading
The plot against America. I am about half way in and finding it a little eery and scary - because you can see how this situation could have happened -
I'm reading Raise High the Roofbeam, Carpenters and Seymour by
J.D. Salinger. I love it. I love everything J.D. Salinger does.
Still working on
Jane Austen's
Emma. I've gotten about two-thirds of the way through in two weeks, so I should be done sometime this week.
I just finished
Purple Hibiscus. I very much enjoyed it. Thanks to all who recommended it. I have
Half a Yellow Sun from the library also and I think I might read that one next.
I finished
Ghostwritten this evening. It was quite a wild ride. Reading the reviews here, it seems to be a real love or hate book. I appreciated it by the end, but can see why others didn't care for it.
Now I'm reading
The Girls, a novel about conjoined twins by
Lori Lansens. Hopefully it will get better, but Lansens seems to have missed show-don't-tell day in her creative writing class...
#14--thanks for the warning, cestovatela. Writers who can't follow the show-don't-tell rule make me crazy!
>14, 15: can you explain the "show don't tell rule please? I'm not sure I know what you mean.
Thanks!
Message edited by its author, Jun 30, 2007, 12:20pm.
Well, in
The Girls, the narrator always tells you everything directly. For example, "children spoke to us at school and on the bus, but no one ever came to our home" or "as adults, we had a few disasterous dinners with our co-workers and then we stopped trying." I would much rather read a scene that shows those things happening. Reading "I feel lonely" is not nearly as moving as a scene where you can see and feel a character's loneliness.
Yes, GeorgiaDawn, it's all I can do to keep from running to pick it up, but if I don't get farther along in S&S, I'm afraid I won't get back to it once I start reading "Suns." I think I'm showing remarkable restraint!
I understand!
Sense and Sensibility is very good. Suns was a very fast read for me. I hope you enjoy both books. I admire your self-control. :)
Reading
To Ride Hell's Chasm by
Janny Wurts for a group read (like others above). I expected modern fantasy to be completely about the story, not the writing. But, what do I know? The writing is carefully crafted, making this a nice read.
Also finished
Theories of Childhood: An Introduction to Dewey, Montessori, Erikson, Piaget & Vygotsky by
Carol Garhart Mooney. An attempt to put child development theories in plain language for teacher's use, it fairly successful; and at 100 pages it's painless.
I was pleasantly surprised by
The Widow's War by
Sally Gunning. I hadn't heard much about it when I picked it up off the free shelf at work, but it's an absorbing read about an 18th-century woman who refuses to surrender all of her rights to her son-in-law after her husband's death. It gets a little soapy at the end, but it's definitely worth picking up.
I have books that I need to read for work, but I'd much rather pick out something new. I think it's time to read The Road by
Cormac McCarthy.
Have just started
Cold Moon by Jeffery Deaver. If the rest of the book is as good as the first chapter, then it's a winner!
I finally finished
Guerrillas and Generals: The Dirty War in Argentina after three weeks. Supremely interesting! Parts of it are more readable than others.
Now I've been reading
Labyrinths by Borges. I feel like I'm not connected to his stories at times, but by the end I am completely wrapped up in them and my mind bursting with ideas.
I've also been reading the graphic novel
Jimmy Corrigan : the smartest kid on earth on the side, which offers such deep and lonely characters I can't help but get deeply invested in the story each time I pick it up.
>20: teelgee, persist ...
Sense and Sensibility is good! I read it a couple months ago. Although I love Jane Austen so I'm on a quest to read all of her work. Anyway, having finally finished
Vanity Fair I am now an evangelist for persistence when it comes to classic literature.
Later today I will start
Alice Sebold's
Lucky.
>31: teelgee, I have not read
Austenland yet but really enjoyed the NPR story! Thanks for sharing ...
Okay, yesterday morning I started
Cold Moon by Deaver, which is really good so far (3d chapter). Then in the afternoon I went to a bookstore and picked up a couple of books and last night was seduced by one of them. So I'm now almost halfway through
Kissing Sin, the second book in the Riley series by Keri Arthur. It's a good read, but so far I think I liked
Full Moon Rising, the first in the series, more.
I am still reading
The Eyre Affair by
Jasper Fforde - I really enjoy it but am reading rather slowly with school being out. Also, my husband was away for about 3 weeks so I was really busy with the kids. I hope to finish it today but am not sure what I am going to start next. Besides my huge TBR pile (bookcases actually), I also have a very large pile of books from the library - about 8 I think. Much too choose from, yeah!
Catapult by
Jim Paul was a waste of time. After 53 pages and five chapters I found the author to be irritating and more informative about himself than building a catapult. Way to much "I" and not enough narrative. I'll take this back to the thrift store where I found it.
I'm 25 pages into
Cab at the Door and Midnight Oil by
V.S. Pritchett Charming and full of life. I devour Pritchett's short stories and these two memiors in a single volume promise to be just as much a treat.
Message edited by its author, Jul 1, 2007, 4:20pm.
I finished
The Woman in White -- good; but it rankled my feminist sensibilites and as inundated as my modern gimlet eye is by mysteries and crime fiction -- I was underwhelmed by 'the Secret' and I thought for sure there would be at least one more twist regarding the identity of the 'real' Lady Glyde.
I think I will take a break from the classics and the 1001 list and go ahead and start
A Thousand Splendid Suns to see what all the fuss is about, especially as I did really enjoy
The Kite Runner.
Just finished
The One From the Other by
Philip Kerr, the 4th book featuring Bernie Gunther. The 4th book was a long while after the 3rd one. Hope there will be more and not so long in between. Just started
The Eyre Affair by
Jasper Fforde. Like it so far. Taking my time reading Hard Times, an Oral History of the Great Depression by
Studs Terkel. Once I pick it up I can hardly put it down so I leave it at home to read in the evening.
I just finished
The Eyre Affair - spent a lovely afternoon out on the back porch reading - perfect temperature, a beautiful day. I am now about to start
A Cold Day for Murder by
Dana Stabenow -my fiction selection for Alaska in my 50 State challenge. I have never read anything by this author so I am interested to see if I enjoy it.
Three-hyphened to One-hyphened, and the chosen book is:
The one-eyed man by
Larry L. King.
Drat, not in top 250 touchstones.
I've always got about four or five books on the go. But I've finally sunk my teeth into
By The Time You Read This by
Giles Blunt.
If you like mystery books, TV shows like CSI and Law and Order, you'll like all four of this writer's books.
I am reading
Celebrity by
Thomas Thompson. I picked it up a couple weeks ago off of the $0.10 shelf at the local thrift store. I kind of randomly chose this book. A way to surprise myself. I am enjoying the author's style of writing.
As of my post in
Message 8 of this thread, I was still reading
Emma, and predicted that I'd finish it soon. "Soon", as it turned out, was sooner than I'd thought -- something's wrong with our cable modem at home, and I spent a lot of time curled up with a book instead of curled up with my laptop.
In other words, I finished
Emma and started
Nethaniel Philbrick's
Mayflower.
# 22 & 23--teelgee & georgiadawn, I absolutely loved
A Thousand Splendid Suns probably one of the best books I have ever read. ALso loved
The Kite Runner. I had a hard time finding a good read after Suns. I admire your reading Sense & Sensibility--its in my TBR pile but haven't tried to read it.
#52 momom248 - I have a dearth of classics in my reading history, so this year I'm reading a bunch of them for the first time, filling in some gaps in my lit education. Now that I'm 100+ pages into S&S, I'm getting Suns from the library today and may interrupt Jane Austen for a detour to Afghanistan. I am obligated to get back to S&S though, I have a support group cheering me on!
I'm almost done with The Taking, which I have to read for work. Then I'm going to read Seize The Night, which is also for work.
Dean Koontz books are fast reads, so I may be done with both by Wednesday.
My job is awesome.
#52 momom248 - I'm glad you enjoyed
A Thousand Splendid Suns. I agree with you that it was difficult to find something to read after finishing. The emotion from both Hosseini books certainly stayed with me. I hope we see more from
Khaled Hosseini.
I'm reading "The Great Influenza" by John M. Barry but need to start on "The Photograph" for my book club. The husband is slowly but surely making his way through "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy.
I finished
Sexing the Cherry. A good read. Very different and interesting.
So I'm back to
West of Kabul, East of New York but it's getting slower. It's not as interesting in this particular section as I thought it would be. But, I'm keeping with it.
I need to start
The House on Mango Street soon for a class I'm taking. I hear it's very good. Also, it's on the curriculum for high schoolers so it will be good to see if I want to use it in my classroom.
Enjoy your week everyone!
Finally finished
The Cantebury Tales and already picked out another brick to read: the French translation of
Anna Karenina, published by Folio (I figured out that since learning Russian is out of question (for now), I could try reading in an idiom which the Russian writers of the day liked... :)
At some point today I'll be starting Black Glass which is an anthology of short stories by
Karen Joy Fowler. I'm reading this in preparation of attending ReaderCon this coming Saturday.
#50 mrsradcliffe
I've read and liked
The Jane Austen book club but it wasn't what I thought it was going to be. I kept wondering if I was reading what's on the surface and was supposed to be looking further into the plot or themes etc and was missing something.
Don't you think it's just a diluted, popular version of One Hundred Years of Solitude?
I finally finished
The God of Small Things. It was a long time reading--but encouragement here pushed me through. When I got to the end, I felt like re-reading it. Much of what unfolds in the latter part of the book is supported by seemingly arcane details in the early chapters. All in all, I'm glad I read it.
A Thousand Splendid Suns was next--a quick and wonderful read. I did, however, like
Kite Runner more. Now, I'm thinking about reading
A Million Little Pieces before my two book club reads.
I finally finished
The plot against America by
Philip RothThe book dragged and never really held my attention. I did enjoy the history at the end and I think the concept was fascinating - I felt it was realistic - but the story never really picked up.
My fave part of the book was the event that happens on my birthday - October 7 - :) Must be a sign lol
Not sure what I will read next - maybe the
glass bead gameCEP, I loved
The God of Small Things - read it some time ago but still remember the beautiful prose and the way the author played with words, making new words and new meanings.
I recently read
A Million Little Pieces and although it has been considered favourably by most, I found it to be very self-indulgent and ended up skipping whole pages. Hope you have a better experience with it!
>71 judylou
I keep wondering if
James Frey deserves to be read after all the brouhaha about the made up portions of the book. However, it feels like just what I want at this point and I am curiious about it.
As for
The God of Small Things, I did enjoy the prose, particularly where a phrase repeats or is reused and envelopes the reader.
#68 sisaruus: Can you tell more about
The Anthropology of Turquoise? An interesting title, five ratings all fives stars, plus your comment...I'm very curious now.
Message edited by its author, Jul 3, 2007, 10:22am.
I have to read Jane Eyre so I can understand Wide Sargasso Sea when I study it at school, and I'm enjoying it, but I want to finish it so I can read
The Man With The Golden Gun by
Ian Fleming (A James Bond book), all while waiting for Harry Potter 7!
I thought I would read the perfect summer read over the holiday -Barefoot by
Erin Hilderbrand. Looks a little light - but fun!
I am 34% through
The Sea by
John Banville. There doesn't seem to be much of a plot, more a reminiscence of a childhood holiday getting told in fragments.
#72 I read
A Million Little Pieces before all the drama and BS started, and I followed the whole thing very closely. My opinion? The book is wonderful, and really affected me personally. Beyond that, I don't care. He shouldn't have lied, of course, but he did, and that doesn't take away from the book, at least for me.
That being said, I can understand why a lot of people were very upset. However, I was not one of them, and thoroughly enjoyed both of his works -
My Friend Leonard is really quite good.
Oddly enough, the whole situation made me despise Oprah. Go figure.
Anyway, I finished
The Taking last night, and decided to treat myself and read
A Long Way Down before reading
Seize The Night. I started it, but so far I'm not adoring it. We'll see.
And when I say 'I started it,' I was referring to
Seize The Night, NOT
A Long Way Down. The former is mildly entertaining so far. The second is really good. As you were.
Message edited by its author, Jul 3, 2007, 2:45pm.
i read both of those books and he's a really good writer- i just feel betrayed that someone with that kind of talent needed to fabricate a good deal of his story
I've finally finished
Crown of Lights which was rather good, it's taken me ages though because there were so many scary parts I wouldn't read it in bed! lol!
Also this afternoon I read
Vampire Rites Trilogy: The Saga of Darren Shan which is three books in one. It was...well it was passable but not as good as I might have hoped- I was glad to have the three books in one though because the seperate 'books' to me seem to lack any sort of oomph. If I'd just have had the first one I'd have finished it and been completely disappointed as it was more of a prequel than an entire book in itself.
# 81 - Reportedly (who knows how true this is), he originally wanted to publish
A Million Little Pieces as a novel, but his publisher/agent/editor insisted it would sell better as a memoir.
Could all be a load of excrement. But I think getting publicly chewed out by Ms. Winfrey is certainly punishment enough for his 'crimes.'
>34: Kell_Smurthwaite
I recently read
The Black Dahlia and I really didn't like it. It seemed to just drag on and indulge some very far fetched story lines. I wasn't a fan.
On a happy note I'm at the end of
The Other Boleyn Girl which I've really enjoyed.
I'm also reading
American Gods on audio book. It's my first
Neil Gaiman and it's very different so far, but I've got a long way to go.
I'm at the end of
Down and Out in Paris and London which has been really funny.
I also just finished The Aspern Papers by
Henry James. Great novella and made me appreciate the scene that references it in
The City of Angels much more.
I'm making my way very slowly through A.C. Cawley's edition of the
Canterbury Tales, in the midst of the Knight's Tale right now. I'm really glad that I read a history of the 14th century (
Tuchman's
A Distant Mirror) before finally picking this one up-- it really helped set the context.
I'm looking for a fun book to offset the Canterbury Tales (though it's more interesting than I thought it would be, the Middle English makes it quite a slog). I may fall back on the Hitchhiker's Guide or a
Terry Pratchett book.
I finished
The Girls,
Lori Lansen's novel about conjoined twins. The premise sounded intriguing, but it wasn't very engagingly written.
Now I'm dividing my time between fiction and non. For fiction, I'm reading
In Her Shoes by
Jennifer Weiner -- nothing outstanding, but it looks to be good poolside reading. For nonfiction, I'm reading
The Good Women of China by
Xinran, which is as heavy as
In Her Shoes is light.
Message edited by its author, Jul 4, 2007, 4:37am.
Last night I started reading
The Devil's Novice which I finished this morning and am now continuing the
Ellis Peters theme by reading
The Pilgrim of Hate. The Devil's Novice surprised me as I didn't actually recall the ending which, owing to my mum always watching the TV series (and reading the books) when I was a young child, rarely happens. The one I'm currently reading I can't remember the whole plot but I certainly remember enough to know who the 'baddie' is! :P
Jane Eyre has turned into a slog, reading it in bursts while also reading
The Man With The Golden Gun when I can.
This has produced bizzare notions of James Bond turning up to Hawthorne Manor to investigate Mr. Rorchester, with a LICENSE TO KILL... my mind is wierd indeed, mental note, never read two incongruous books at the same time again...
To celebrate the Fourth, this apathetic American is going to read all day:
I'll finish
A Long Way Down, which I'm loving, then read
Seize The Night,
and read the last few volumes of
Transmetropolitan.
If I still have any hours left in the day (which I might, because I read freakishly fast), I'll start
A Thousand Splendid Suns.
So that shall be my day: sitting on the roof, drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, and reading.
#97 -- I am with you ellevee. My job doesn't allow for patriotism -- I have many babies expected to be 'born on the fourth of July' which should give me enough time to finish
A Thousand Splendid Suns.
I am enjoying it, but it seems a little storybookish and not as emotionally devastating as it should be. I think I will finally finish the Outlander series when I am through and read
A Breath of Snow and Ashes.
>97, ellevee - Your night sounds like Paradise. After all, isn't one of our rights "the pursuit of happiness"?
i am now reading The Chronicles of Narnia:The Last Battle by C.S.Lewis.
i am sure that u all are familiar with it.
Message edited by its author, Jul 4, 2007, 1:23pm.
#99 fannyprice - Well, my pursuit of happiness has been mildly ruined by a cloudy, overcast day and a truly insane roommate.
However, I did finish one book. So the day was not a total slosh.
I agree, it's hard to read the next book after you have read Khaled Hosseini's book.
I suggest The Book Seller of Kabul. It's a non-fiction that reads like fiction.
>107 lindsacl: what did you think of Lucky? I have it on my shelf but haven't read it. I liked
Lovely Bones a lot.
Message edited by its author, Jul 4, 2007, 10:53pm.
>108: teelgee, the subject matter in
Lucky makes it hard for me to say I
enjoyed the book, but I did, in the way you can enjoy a well-written memoir about a tragic incident. I was particularly struck by this book because at the start I learned that the author and I are the same age. That shouldn't matter, but I could remember being at university in the early 1980s, and I'm familiar with the area where her family lived. So it made the situations even more real. Alice Sebold is a survivor and writing the book was clearly part of her journey to recovery. I've posted a full
review on my blog ...
P.S. I really liked
Lovely Bones, too, and I think that's the main reason I decided to read
Lucky.
Finished The Pilgrim of Hate by
Ellis Peters and am continuing on to
An Excellent Mystery. The 'Pilgrim...' suprised me because I was so sure I remembered what was going to happen in it- I certainly remembered one of the main characters. I'm now wondering whether the TV series took more dramatic liberties on this tale, but then again I was about 6 or 7 when I watched it so it's probably just my brain being fuzzy.
#109 I HATED
The Lovely Bones. I was willing to go along with it for most of the story, but at one point towards the end (which I will not discuss, for those who want to read it), I actually put it down and stared at the cover in disbelief.
That being said, I am in a distinct minority. Most people loved the book.
My grandiose reading plans for yesterday got ruined, and I am still sulky. So now I'm reading
Hope Was Here for work. So far, I like it. Reading
Joan Bauer really takes me back to middle school/high school days at the library.
>112: ellevee, it's difference of opinion that makes these groups so fun!! Thanks for throwing in your comments.
#112 ellevee, I thought I was one of the few, but I did not like The Lovely Bones either. I thought it was extremely depessing and had a hard time finishing it. Same thing w/
The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Everyone loved it but I hated it--again depressing and actually pretty boring.
Depressing doesn't really bother me, if there's a point. But, as I mentioned before, there was a point in
The Lovely Bones where I just stopped buying it. I can suspend disbelief with the best of them, but this was just too much for me.
Now that I think about it, I didn't find the book to be that depressing. More frustrating. And creepy. Not good creepy either.
Am juggling Grotesque by Natsuo Kirino, Oryx & Crake by Margaret Atwood, The Game by Laurie R. King and
Desperation by Stephen King. No wonder I can't seem to finish anything!
(touchstones not connecting today)
The Wayward Muse by
Elizabeth Hickey. It's pretty lightweight, even for a historical novel. It's the fictionalized story of Jane Burden, who modelled for Dante Gabriel Rossetti and later became his wife.
My walking audiobook:
Raj by
Gita Mehta. So far, all I can say is that I've read better novels based on Indian history.
#117 - ellevee - I am so sure I know exactly what part you are talking about in
The Lovely Bones. Horrible. For me it ruined what I thought was a good (not great) book.
#114 brewergirl -- How is
The Six Wives of Henry VIII by Alison Weir? It is on my TBR shelf, but I am a little nervous about it because I don't typically read non-fiction.
I am currently reading
A Breath of Snow and Ashes by
Diana Gabaldon. guilty pleasure; need a break from the classics. I just finished
A Thousand Splendid Suns (in two days). An easy, emotional read -- I did tear up; which is rare for me.
Message edited by its author, Jul 5, 2007, 1:27pm.
>112 elevee - I've found most people either loved it or hated it. It's one of those kinds of splits generally.
I finished
Picnic on paradise by
Joanna Russ, an old-school scifi novel that was very different and fascinating in its way. Now I'm almost through with
Freedom's Gate by
Naomi Kritzer which is the first of a trilogy, and judging by how close I am to the end and how much plot is happening, I'm guessing it's going to end on a cliffhanger and I'll have to chase down a copy of the sequel.
Next up,
Life of Pi for my book club.
Message edited by its author, Jul 5, 2007, 3:16pm.
If you would like to discuss The House of the Spirits, come to the Del Rio group on the Oprah Boards. It is our current selection.
I just can't seem to get through
West of Kabul, East of New York. I don't know if it's because I am so tired or if the certain redundant histories about Islam is just getting to me. I'm not finding it as interesting as I first did...and I'm about halfway through.
I think I'm gonna put it down for now and pick up
The House on Mango Street which I need to read for a class I'm taking. After that, we'll see...
I am currently reading
Robert Tressell The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists and am quite cross with myself for never having read it before now, even though the author is buried near where I grew up, and I've always wanted to read it. This is a fantastic book which will make you laugh and cry in equal measure.
I have been unable to make any headway with
Middlesex so I think I'll put it away for now and come back to it at a later date.
I'm enjoying reading
Le Malédiction du Rubis, i.e.
The Ruby in the Smoke by
Philip Pullman. It's slow going in French, but it's good for me and the fact that the story is so good keeps me going ;-)
Am getting into
Mansfield Park as well - reading that as an episodical thing on livejournal. It's kind of book group-esque with discussions about each chapter as it's posted, which is good fun!
My bit of total fluff at the moment is
The Devil in Amber by
Mark Gatiss - totally self-indulgent but really good fun.
And my final current book is an audio one -
Wolf Brother (Chronicles of Ancient Darkness) by
Michelle Paver, which was free on audible. It's read by Ian McKellen, who is fantastic. It's a YA novel set when people were hunter-gatherers, really interesting and it's keeping me going as I do very boring stuff in the lab!
#119, Killeymoon, I am making good progress with
The Magic Mountain because I started it on a cross-country airplane. I am very pleased because I tried to read it several times when I was younger and never got very far, but this time I am enjoying it.
Finished the audio version of
Oryx and Crake - phenomenal novel, loved it, and started the audio version of
Drop City.
> 125: teelgee
So far it's fascinating. Who knew cadavers could be both hilarious and interesting.
I just picked up
Forever in Blue from the library. I've been waiting for it and it's a perfect relaxing summer read, so I hope to start that this weekend.
I also started
Dress your family in cordoroy and denium which, like all of
David Sedaris's work, is hilarious.
I agree. Honestly, I wasn't expecting much. I picked the book up at a thrift store for $1 and thought I might read it some day. While perusing my "unread" book collection I chose it because it seemed light and fluffy, what I was in the mood for. It wasn't as light hearted as I expected but not thought provoking, either. I, too, felt like I was missing something.
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