
I whipped through Amy Bloom's collection of short stories,
Come to Me last night. Very good stuff. Then this morning started my first Anita Shreve book,
Light on Snow. I was pulled in immediately.
Today I started a book called
To see every bird on earth : a father, a son, and a lifelong obsession which I found in my library. I thought it would be interesting because of having once been a novice 'birder" myself. I got sucked into this book deeply, however, when the author made the comment about how birding is an obssessive hobby with birders liking to count all sorts of things (...including books. Hmm?!). I couldn't stop laughing. Then he talked about stamp collectors collecting bird stamps. I thought back. Oh, yeah! When I was a kid, I collected stamps...and counted them, too! :D
Well, back to my book...
Message edited by its author, Jan 18, 2008, 6:19pm.
About halfway through
The Woman in White and am enjoying it immensely. Very compelling mystery, wonderful writing, and great characters, but oooh, Glyde and the Count and his lady are soooo creepy!
I started
March last night and am enjoying it so far.
Diary by Chuck Palahniuk
And hopefully soon
American Psycho as I can borrow it from the library when I turned 18 (on the 22nd of Jan) YAY!
No really, that's what I'm waiting for. Alcohol! nah! I want American Psycho.
I'm reading one of those been-meaning-to-get-to-it-for-years books.
The Executioner's Song by Norman Mailer. I'm on page 800, only 256 pages to go. *Wipes sweat off brow*
I generally have one non-fiction and one fiction book on the go.
Presently I'm slogging through Hermione Lee's very long yet comprehensive and interesting biography of Virginia Woolf. Fiction-wise, I'm powering through
The Line Of Beauty by Alan Hollinghurst as the mini-series is currently screening on the ABC.
I've just started
Shamela by Henry Fielding, and
Utopia by Thomas More.
I finished
Robert Morgan's beautifully written Boone: A Biography, the life of the legendary American frontiersman Daniel Boone (1734-1820), and though I found it fairly slow-starting, the pace picked up after about 75 pages, and I wound up really enjoying it. Morgan's been primarily a poet and novelist (
Gap Creek), and this richly detailed foray into biography is narrative story-telling at its finest. I especially liked how Morgan went to lengths explaining how Boone's adventures inspired the literary world of his own and of future eras, strongly influencing James Fenimore Cooper, Emerson, Thoreau, and Walt Witman, not to mention the esteemed English Romanticists Wordsworth and Coleridge.
I went straight from Boone to Charlie Huston's Half the Blood of Brooklyn, a gross, absolutely disgusting pulp-noir horror show of a novel, that I couldn't put down and found completely irresistible, even with its huge 'ick' factor.
Right now I'm nearly halfway through
Zachary Lazar's terrific new novel Sway, a fictional retelling of the early days of the Rolling Stones in tandem with the story of Charles Manson and Bobby Beausoleil, with their convergence resulting in the tragedy at Altamont in 1969. Sway is nothing but pure dynamite so far, and I'm already wishing it were a hundred pages longer.
Message edited by its author, Jan 19, 2008, 6:37am.
My pleasure reading has taken a serious back seat lately. I'm enrolled in an online class and it is taking up alot of my time. I currently have three started - Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians by Brandon Sanderson,
The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey by
Candice Millard, and
Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult.
The class I'm taking is "Understanding Adolescents". I think it's really a class about fantasy literature! :)
I finally finished
Baudolino after a concerted plunge towards the end. It was a very odd book, and didn't seem to be sure if it was history or fantasy. It also suffered from too much "telling" and not enough "showing". The beginning of every chapter seemed to be a reminder that the narrator was unreliable. Glad to be shot of it, I'm afraid.
Anyway, for something completely different, I'm now reading
The Pursuit of Love by
Nancy Mitford.
#2: I read
Come to Me when it was published in the early '90s and it has stucke with me ever since. In fact, I know it is hard to compare short stories vs. novel but I like it much better than Amy Bloom's acclaimed
Away.
I mentioned last week that I was reading Geraldine Brooks's The People of the Book, but I set it aside when I picked up Sarah Vowell's The Partly Cloudy Patrtiot, which I thought was terrific.
Going back to the Brooks this weekend, as she will be visiting our bookshop on Tuesday. Looking forward to both the book, which is receiving mostly rave reviews, and the visit.
Touchstones are being touchy this am.
I just started a new book by
Ron Leshem called Beaufort.
(Touchstones are wonky.)
I was interested in this book because I love the little old town of Beaufort in North Carolina. I read a few pages becasue I wanted to see if this book was about North Carolina or South Carolina (which also has a city of Beaufort). Imagine my surprise when I discovered it was about *Israel* and the first town it mentions (Qiryat Shemona) was one in which I lived!
I'm reading Beaufort now with much interest. The story was made into a film by the Israeli director Joseph Cedar (who also directed "Time of Favor").
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2129572/I just finished
Roberto Bolano's
The Savage Detectives. It is a remarkable book, and becomes more compelling as it goes along (thanks to all those who encouraged me to continue), but I have to confess I feel I really didn't understand what it was all about!
I just read this year's Caldecott winner the 522 page
The Invention of Hugo Cabret and all I can say is WOW!!! The story is about a boy who fixes machines and clocks and discovers a local toymaker's connection to an automaton his father found. While this is definitely the longest Caldecott winner it is great how the author intermixes story and illustration, and how the illustration moves the story sometimes more so than the words on the page.
I just finished this book and am so excited about it I just couldn't resist writing a great review and telling others to check it out.
I finished
Schrödinger's Ball by Adam Felber, which I thought was hilarious and really enjoyed. I've picked up Gifted by Nikita Lalawani, which I didn't get through the Early Reviewers program, but found an ARC in the Friends of the Library bookstore about a month later!
I've been listening to
Last Town on Earth by Thomas Mullen, which so far is okay, not great, but it's gone on the back-burner for a few days so I can listen to
Beowulf while I've got it out from the library.
I just finished
The Subtle Knife. Very good, although obviously a transition book as the second of three in the series - lots of stuff being set up for book three. I'm on to
The Amber Spyglass.
I'm planning on finishing off
On Chesil Beach this week - need to find an hour or two where I can just sit down and blitz it. It's so short and it's not really a picking up and putting down again type book.
Also reading Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in the
Simon Armitage translation, which I'm enjoying muchly.
And I've just started
Kim by
Rudyard Kipling for Go Review That Book! I'm finding it fun and interesting but slightly bewildering. I don't know whether it's the language (lots of thees and thous) or the character labels or totally intentional on the part of the author, but it's slightly frustrating at times. I seem to end up reading each page twice...!
I'm within about 50 pages of finishing Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's
Good Wives.
This week i finished the
historian, wasn't really satisfying. And I started yesterday a little book called
Clemencia by a mexican author called Ignacio Manuel Altamirano, I'm reading it for school and I've been told it's really good.
Broken Prey by John Sandford. The one just before this was markedly better than the few before that, so I have hope.
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson. My first from this writer. Just decided to try some SF for something different.
Just finished
Deeper by Jeff Long. It's the sequel to
The Descent and I found it just as implausibly compelling to read. More fantasy/horror than thriller and thoroughly enjoyable with a grain of salt on the side.
I finished and enjoyed
On Agate Hill by
Lee Smith and I am continuing my Southern journey with Cross Creek by Marjoie Rawlings.
Finally gave up on
Robinson Crusoe (which I found absolutely dreadful - it was so bad, it made me not want to read!!!), and as a result am making real progress in
Vladimir Nabokov's
Ada, which is far better - entertaining in the extreme :D
I' glad to hear that someone has read this book. I bought it when it first came out,not realizing that it was a YAB. I did find the illustrations interesting. I'm going to start reading it tonight.
I am reading
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger. I am reading this for my discussion group in early February. I must admit I was not looking forward to reading this. I am only a little ways into this and so far it is not too bad.
>33 What book are you talking about, precisely?
I finished The Story of Forgetting last night - one of my early reviewers and absolutely loved it. I started
Firefly Lane, my other early reviewer book, as soon as I was finished with that one. So far, eh ok I guess. I am only about 50 pages in or so but, while I don't hate it, I don't think it is what I thought it was going to be if that makes any sense at all. It seems a bit more like chick lit than I thought it was going to be and that is not a genre that I particularly enjoy but I am willing to finish it and give it a try.
I am reading Gargantua and Pantagruel by François Rabelais.
Finished
Firefly Lane last night and had mixed feelings about it. It's too girly for me, but someone who likes that sort of thing would probably love it.
Today I'll be starting
Foreigner by
C.J. Cherryh for the Green Dragon group read, and after that I'll probably read
The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde.
Message edited by its author, Jan 20, 2008, 12:56pm.
I'm about halfway through
Tithe by
Holly Black. I expect to finish it later on today.
I am reading The Bright Forever, by Lee Martin. I recently completed Pilate's
Wife, A Novel of The Roman Empire. They are booth good.
Just finished
Emma. I have to say that Disney princess movies and Jane Austen books have ruined any sort of reasonable expectations I might have had about dating, love and marriage.
I'm going to start
Steinbeck's The Pearl. I might have to give it up for a while. I should start
The hitchhikers' guide to the galaxy for The Belles' book club soon.
I've started
In the Stacks a collection of short stories about libraries and those involved with them put together by
Michael Cart. Also just cracked open People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks.
Tithe was just as quick a read as I anticipated, so I've moved on to
The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner. I'm in a children's/YA lit mood right now.
xicanti--I really enjoyed Holly Black's Faerie books...I just read them a few months ago...I am currently reading
Crossroads of Twilight BY:
Robert Jordan I'm almost done with the series..then its on to
1776 BY: David McCullough, that I will be reading with my friend... and then I'll start my 75 Books Challange for 2008....that should keep me busy for a while....
mamachunk
Finished
One Mississippi yesterday, Started I am not Julia Roberts and promptly put it down after three chapters then started The Stupidist Angel and enjoying it very much. Yes, I know it is a little late for Christmas tales but Christopher Moore makes me laugh and right now I could use a little cheer. Any suggestions re: books that have made you laugh out loud?
I'm reading
The Interpretation of Murder. Can't put it down! Great! Not at all what I expected! (actually finished now)
I have
Beasts, Joyce Carol Oats and
The Crime Writer, Gregg Hurwitz, going right now.
Message edited by its author, Jan 21, 2008, 5:28pm.
This message has been deleted by its author.
I'm about 70 pages away from finishing Jane Austen's "
Pride and Prejudice." Not one of my favorites, but the end is getting interesting...
Message edited by its author, Jan 20, 2008, 11:06pm.
I just finished DEFCON-2, a book about the Cuban Missile Crisis that you should only read if you really like a lot of technical detail, names of missiles and acronyms. I started reading Clemente: the Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero about the baseball player Roberto Clemente. It was written by David Maraniss.
# 58: OneMorePage - I LOVED
The interpretation of Murder when I read it last year. It's a great one for reading circles as there is SO much to discuss!
#47 Kell_Smurthwaite - So far I am loving it. If I didn't have to eat or sleep or work or all the other stuff I have to take care of, I probably wouldn't put it down until I was finished. So far it really captures the thoughts of the nine-year-old main character.
#47 Thanks Kell. I'm nearly at the end now and still enjoying it. I absolutely loved BITSP so hope our tastes are similar enough that you will too!
#53 Never, never NEVER give up on Steinbeck for anyone else. The man was a god and The Pearl is only a shorty. You have my permission to go sick for the next two days if necessary, then you can read both!
>66, Don't worry. I have today off, so I'll probably finish it soon.
I just finished
Firefly Lane yesterday and so far the only good thing that I can think of to say about it is that it only took me one day to read. I am still trying to compose my review in my head and am having a difficult time choosing how to word it without insulting people who may actually like this book. I am about to read
Have You Found Her and am hoping that it is much better.
Finished
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins, which I thoroughly enjoyed, though it took me a long time to read. Have begun
Summer Knight, a Harry Dresden fantasy-mystery by Jim Butcher, which is as usual really fun!
I plan on starting
Water for Elephants this week, with
Wonderful Tonight up after that. Also, I'm book shopping on Sat. so I'm sure I'll come up with at least 1 I have to read right away.
Just finished
The Pastures of Heaven by
Steinbeck, a lyrical piece of writing--a collection of short stories organized around a locale, a valley near Monterey with a fictitious name, but which exists.
Starting
To A God Unknown as my next Steinbeck.
I've been kind of slow with my reading due to a cold. I've just started both
Hartsburg, USA and
The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen. Not in to either far enough right now to really have a good feeling.
I'm also listening to a book on CD
Agnes and the Hitman which I have to admit I'm rather enjoying. It isn't the kind of thing I typically listen to but am enjoying the characters thus far.
read
Subtle Knife and now I'm in the middle of
The Amber Spyglass.
I'm in some kind of reading funk, and cannot figure out what the heck I want to read. Everything seems to be the wrong book. Fortunately, His Dark Materials doesn't take a lot of effort to get into, except for the mulefa bits, so it's a good match. No idea what I'm reading next, maybe
Foreigner by C. J. Cherryh or
Contact for group reads, or
Half A Yellow Sun as the author is giving a reading in February. Also, I have 11 other library books lying about...
Just finished
The Amber Spyglass - a good end to the trilogy, although I found this book to be a bit dogmatic in places.
>81 dchaikin - Interestingly, I seem to be in the same place as you - I can't decide what to read next. His Dark Materials kept me occupied for a bit, but now? I also agree with you on the mulefa bits - I could have done with a lot less.
I think on to
The World Without Us by Alan Weisman or
My Life in France by Julia Child.
#81 & 82 - My favorite parts were actually the Mulefa parts. How funny.
I finished
Unless which I found to be very touching and an excellent read. I am now reading
Middlesex and am half way through and am really enjoying it.
I started
Firefly Lane tonight, an early review book. I don't think I can read this. By page 10 I'm already loathing it. Just bad writing. And I held off starting
Anna Karenina for this???
Reading for this week includes:
Cultural Amnesia (which is taking me forever to get through, but is really excellent),
The Conservative Intellectual Movement in America (ditto),
The Intellectual Devotional,
Einstein,
Noah's Choice,
The Founders of the Western World and
Slander. For fiction reading this week, I am reading
Bootlegger's Daughter,
The Fortress of Solitude,
Experiment with Death, and
A Death in Vienna.
All other reading has been temporarily placed on hold because I discovered that I cannot renew
Eat, Pray, Love at my local library, so I am having a massive reading marathon on it today. So far, so good, but I am only at page 100.
I have finished Tristram Shandy and am just finishing the criticism about it at the back of the book (norton ed.)
I really can't decide what to read next as I have so many ideas. I may whiz through a local studies book I got from the public library about strange tales in the fens and cambridgeshire.
Then who knows? Perhaps the biographer's tale by a s byatt
Touchstones are working for some reason!
#83 bunagsbooks - I like the mulefas, but those parts of the book have...well, if I'm tired, they aren't keeping me awake.
I've been trying to read the 1st 20 pages or so of various books to see if they catch my attention, trying to find the book that matches my mood. Last night I started
Foreigner to how that would go - a hit so far! I think I'll go there next.
If that one doesn't work, tell us about your mood. I'm sure we'll all have lots of fun making recommendations!
:D
Recommend away, but if I (ever?) understood my moods, I at least wouldn't have any trouble finding books.
Any idea what type of thing you're after? Political, historical, creepy etc?
What are mulefas?
The Smoke Jumper by Nicholas Evans. That's what I'm reading now - not an answer to anyone's questions.
>98 Morphidae - Mulefas are creatures in Philip Pullman's book
The Amber Spyglass. Like otheres here I found that those bits of the book with the muelfas were the hardest to get through. I just found them so pointless much of the time.
Here's a Wikipedia description of them:
The mulefa are sentient beings who evolved in a radically different fashion than humans. An individual is referred to as a zalif. They possess an anatomy based on a diamond-framed skeleton lacking a spine, have hide, short horns and a trunk. Lacking hands, the mulefa make much use of trunk-gestures in communicating - small movements and "flicks" are an integral part of their vocabulary. The creatures simply referred to as "grazers", and appearing to be genetically similar to the Mulefa, are a source of milk, meat, hides and other materials to the mulefa. They form close-knit communities, closer than most human groups met in the novel. One of the reasons for the closeness of their communities is that, lacking two hands, it usually requires two or more mulefa trunks working together to accomplish complex tasks like tying knots.
A notable feature of the mulefa is their use of large circular seed pods from their world's "wheel-pod trees" to travel around their countryside; the disc-shaped pods fit neatly onto a spur on their front and rear legs when each zalif reaches a certain age. They then propel themselves using their two side legs, like a cyclist without pedals. Ancient lava flows (now solidified into smooth rivers of rock running across the land) serve as roads to ease transport. As the book notes, it is the three combined elements of seed-pod, spur, and rock formation which leads to the current mulefa existence.
Message edited by its author, Jan 22, 2008, 8:28am.
I loved the mulefas, though not as much as I loved the angels, who made me cry.
#96 Booksloth - I've had some surprise misses, so I'm honestly not sure. Thinking out loud, my biggest hit since I've tried this *mood* thing has been
Out Stealing Horses which was a nice personal exploration of the narrator in a rather barren landscape. What caught my attention with
Foreigner was the opening paragraph describing the emptiness of deep outer space. And I've been thinking about
Desert Solitaire a lot recently, for whatever reason. So, I guess there is some kind of theme. Does that inspire any suggestions?
Message edited by its author, Jan 22, 2008, 8:57am.
Books I'd recommend are The Rings of Saturn by WG Sebald and
Lights Out for the Territory by Iain Sinclair.
London Orbital is another good Sinclair book.
The Rings of Saturn is a strange, unclassifiable book; not entirely factual nor entirely fictional. It had the effect of lingering in the memory longer than most books I've read.
Although
Lights out for the Territory and
London Orbital are probably of most interest to those who have lived in London, or know the city very well, they are excellent in their own right.
For a fiction choice, I'd recommend
The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien, though I'm aware this is one of those 'love it or loathe it' titles.
Message edited by its author, Jan 22, 2008, 9:06am.
I finished
March last night and really enjoyed it. I am currently listening to an audio version of
Astrid and Veronika, an impulse grab at the library last weekend. Meanwhile, I hope to start
The Leopard tonight, time permiitting.
Just finished
Something Rotten by Jasper Fforde and am now starting
The Dream of Scipio by Iain Pears.
oops! All authors are spelled with the dreaded red letters in touchstones this morning.
Message edited by its author, Jan 23, 2008, 9:11am.
I finally finished
The Agony and the Ecstasy this week -- good, but felt long. I am now reading Sarah Dunant's
Birth of Venus which is a chick - litified version of the former. It is OK but I won't read anything else by this author -- too fluffy.
I finished
Gifted last night - not bad, and the characters felt quite real, but not really an enjoyable reading experience, either.
I, too, am starting
Birth of Venus today... but I'm absolutely in the mood for a little bit of fluffy reading, so that'll be fine. :)
#105 I've read your profile and see you are something of a scientist with geological leanings (not my field, to say the least) but how about widening out a bit into other scientific areas with something like A Fish Caught in Time,
Almost Like a Whale by
Steve Jones or something by Darwin? I know these are all non-fiction and I'm racking my brains for some fiction to go along with them. Not being a scientist myself I've no idea how good the research for this one was but a book that I found quite fascinating many years ago was
The Experiment by
Richard Setlowe, though it was a very long time ago and when I finally get round to rereading it I might not be so impressed.
I also see that you've recently read (and, I hope, enjoyed)
A Thousand Splendid Suns. A few more along these lines (and I'm assuming you've read
The Kite Runner, which is also brilliant) are
The Hungry Tide,
The Alchemy of Desire,
The Bookseller of Kabul and
Do They Hear You When You Cry?, though this last one is also non-fiction.
Then again, I also have a little collection of books that are sufficiently different from anything else to sometimes make a great change when you're a little bit jaded from your normal reading. Amongst these I would include Sea Otters Swimming in the Wild, Wild Surf, by John Bennett,
Girlfriend in a Coma,
South of the Border, West of the Sun and
Cloud Atlas.
Hope something here might be a help or at least inspire someone else to come up with some good suggestions.
Message edited by its author, Jan 22, 2008, 10:14am.
>101 & 102 Oh yes, I remember now. Wow, I usually remember books I read, but His Dark Materials left so little impression on me that I've forgotten a lot.
#113 we'll let it go this time ;)
#106 joehutcheon & #111 Booksloth
Thanks, that is a lot of suggestions...
The Bookseller of Kabul and
Cloud Atlas are on my TBR (er, along with ~ 600 other books). I'm intrigued by the London books. I'll poke around about the others.
#103 rebeccanyc
Can't wait to hear what you think about
The Boys in the Trees, as it is on my TBR pile. The cover sold me!
The cover sold me too, plus the rave cover quote from
Alice Munro.
Took a detour from the four books I've been on and breezed through
Travels With a Donkey. An extremely pleasant, surprisingly fresh, travelogue.
Am about 100 pages away from finishing Lords of the White Castle by
Elizabeth Chadwick - most of it over the past 3 days. Its good, but just. Not sure why I'm not liking it as much as Chadwick's other ones that I've read. She may be getting a little predictable for me.
I've been officially blown away by
Zachary Lazar's new novel
Sway, a dark and decadent take on the 60s that will be the very first book on my Favorites' list for 2008.
I've just begun The Reader by Bernard Schlink. So far it seems like it will be a very quick read.
Just finished
The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman and I really enjoyed it. Looking forward to seeing the movie now..and then read the 2nd book soon!! Now on to my ER book,
Firefly Lane by
Kristin Hannah. So far,it seems, a lot of people haven't liked it, but I shall soon find out myself!!
I finished
The Thief on my afternoon break. The beginning was rather slow, but I enjoyed it from about the halfway point onwards. I'm still very much in a children's lit mood, so I plan to tackle
The Ruins of Gorlan by
John Flanagan next. I've heard a lot of good things about this Australian fantasy series, so I'm looking forward to it.
Currently reading
The Queen of the South by Arturo Perez-Reverte and will probably be reading it for a good month or so considering my schedule. I wish I had more time because I really am enjoying the book.
#1123: Arturo Perez-Reverte is one of my favorite authors, and I think
Queen of the South is one of his best works. Hope you continue to enjoy it!
My favorite book by him so far is
Territorio Comanche but it still has not been translated into English so I haven't had the opportunity to recommend it. (I read this book about 5 years ago so I would have thought it'd be in English by now.)
But if you do see it, I highly recommend it.
For the Queen, I'm trying to read at least a chapter a day. I've been greatly encouraged by others who find it to be his best novel as well. :)
I'll check for
Territorio Comanche because I have decided to start reading him in Spanish. There are some other books of his that have yet to be translated. Can you recommend any others? I have all of his works that are translated into English.
I wish I could say I've read more but I've only read
Territorio Comanche. I tried reading
Limpieza de Sangre, the 2nd tome of his Alatriste series but put it down after 70 pages or so. But I think I just wasn't in the mood for more sword-fighting stories since I had just read Isabel Allende's
Zorro and
Ines del alma mia. Perhaps I'll try again. There is however a recent thread in the "Reading Globally: Ficton" group about Perez-Reverte so you could look for recommendations there. Sorry though that I can't recommend personally anything else by him.
Looked at your bio. Retired chemist, eh?
I'm currently a graduate student in organic chemistry. :)
Asterix and Cleopatra by René Goscinny - the Turkish translation.
Lazarillo De Tormes – just started – haven't gotten through the edition's Introduction yet. But I'm finding Spanish to be a very lovable language these days, and only partly because it's so much easier than Turkish.
Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran – very depressing - should finish it this week.
Moby Dick – ETC (Estimated Time of Completion): late February. I hate reading about whales getting killed.
Further thrilling details can be found on my profile.
Finally finished David McCullough's
John Adams. Great biography, good American history and long overdue. Don't know if it changed my opinion of Adams historically, but it gave me greater respect for the man.
I'm at a dead standstill with Mommsen's
A History of Rome Way too dry. I may put it up for a year or two and try again. That's the only way I got through Melville's
The Whale, on the third attempt. Also reading
Christopher Hibbert's
Rome the Biography of a City for a class.
I think I'll start
The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig next.
After reading some good things about
ella minnow pea by
Mark Dunn on LT, I have just borrowed it from the library but am only up to page 3.
Just finished Death and the Penguin by Andrey Kurkov. It was a great read, somehow humourous with an underlying sense of menace and "forces beyond your control". Left me thinking of Ismail Kadare. I will be seeking out its sequel,
Penguin Lost.
Next up: War and Peace...
I went to look at Firefly Lane after reading teelgee's post here.
I read through all of the reviews and the response seems very mixed.
I am one of those people who looks at ratings when a new book pops up on the screen.
This one scored a 5 - of course only one person had put the stars under the ratings. Most people had just included them in their reviews.
I suppose I need to go to another thread to encourage those who put stars in their reviews to also put them in the ratings field so their opinions get reflected there too.
Am I right about this? I have never inlcuded starts in my reviews, so I want to make sure I am not misunderstanding.
I've been completely absorbed in
Peter Duffy’s The Killing of Major Denis Mahon: A Mystery of Old Ireland, a true and engaging story of an Anglo-Irish landowner’s emigration scheme that went tragically wrong during the Great Famine. Not only does Duffy tell a tale that reads like a novel, but his exploration of the famine years in one community is a notable achievement in the use of local history to illuminate An Gorta Mor. Mahon’s murder made big headlines in England, prompting Queen Victoria to complain in her diary that the Irish “really ... are a terrible people,” while her anti-landlord prime minister declared the murders of landlords no more “atrocious” than the evictions that led up to them.
Message edited by its author, Jan 23, 2008, 8:28am.
#133 I think when you mark the stars in your review, they also show up in your library and are calculated into the book's average. If what you mean is that certain reviewers didn't mark stars at all, you can leave them a suggestion on their profile page--much more likely to reach them that way.
>133 That just looks like a glitch in calculating the average star rating. The people with stars by their reviews have rated it, but for some reason the average isn't taking it into account.
If you look
here you can see who has rated it what.
>131 judilou - I really enjoyed
Ella Minnow Pea and I'm interested to see what you think of it. Towards the end I often found myself having to read the book aloud to get around all the missing letters. The book made me laugh when I first read through and gave me some serious thoughts to ponder when I finished and stopped to think about it on a grander scale.
Thanks fyrefly98. There is so much information on this site! I see now if I just click "members" for any book, it will give me lots more info.
I'm reading
A Farewell to Arms, my Hemingway for the year.
Also I'm almost done with
Travels with Charley, which I'm in love with. I'd never read any non-fiction by John Steinbeck and I've found myself enjoying it more than his fiction. I'm a sucker for travel memoirs anyway, but I really love this one.
I'm about 3/4 through
Straight Man and I like this one too.
Richard Russo is endlessly witty.
A chapter into
The Brief History of the Dead. Will be interested to see how the premise-when you die you go to a city full of other dead people acting like living people- will play out.
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#134 SeanLong - If you like Peter Duffy's writing style, you might check out his book
The Bielski Brothers. I read it recently and it was very good.
#134 alcottacre, Thanks for the reminder for
The Bielski Brothers. That was on my wish list and I meant to look for it at the library. I'll check their catalog now.
#129, let me know what you think of Imperial City--I have it on Mt. TBR.
Message edited by its author, Jan 23, 2008, 5:07pm.
I feel like a bit of a change, so I've chosen
The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler as my next read. I enjoyed the movie, so it'll be interesting to see how the book differs.
Samuel Johnson Is Indignant, a wonderful collection of short short stories by
Lydia Davis. Also reading
Fancies and Goodnights by
John Collier and The Complete
Saki.
The nice thing about reading short story collections is you feel you can hop around from one book to another without worrying that you suffer from ADD...especially after just finishing Pynchon's Against the Day (brilliant!)
I'm just 50 pages into
War and Peace, which I'm reading in conjunction with some of the online reading guides (so hopefully I won't miss anything major).
abealy, I just read
Against the Day last month and couldn't agree more. I love great story collections as well, but don't skip around much, usually read them straight through. I have to recommend
Jim Shepard's Like You'd Understand, Anyway, which was a surprise NBA nominee last year and definitely the best bunch of stories I've found in a long while.
> 138 Irisheyz I am about 3/4 through
ella minnow pea and am finding it a lot of fun. But at the same time it really does present the reader with some unpleasant things to think about!
> kfl1227 I loved
A Brief History of the Dead. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Re
Against the Day, I have to enter a note of dissent. I got this for Christmas last year, and read the whole thing, but it was hard-going. To me (and I count myself a Pynchon fan) it was over-long, dull in long stretches, and generally unconvincing. Some brilliant passages, but these were like oases in a desert of dullness.
Maybe you have to be American to 'get' the book.
Message edited by its author, Jan 24, 2008, 5:54am.
That's a great idea for another thread - books you have to be American (or British, or pick-your-nationality) to 'get'. My suggestion would be American Pastoral by
Philip Roth.
>150, Funny you should mention it, I recently picked up a copy of
Icefields by Thomas Wharton - it's the only one of his I didn't have.
The Logogryph was one of my favorite books of last year.
Pretty much finished
The Eyre Affair this morning on the commute in (only 10 pgs left which I plan on reading during lunch). Will be starting on
Cursor's Fury by
Jim Butcher on my way home.
@154 judylou - I think that is what I really enjoyed about the book.
Mark Dunn takes a weighty topic and makes his point in a humorous way. On the surface
Ella Minnow Pea is this lighted hearted tale but the deeper meaning is something that has stayed with me in the years since I read the book. One of these days I'm going to look into some of the other things that Dunn has written to see if they are just as good.
#160: amanaceerdh: that's encouraging, because it just came into the house Tuesday--going to be a while, but am looking forward to reading it.
#160 - amanaceerdh - that was my favourite historical novel ever - I now have my own copy to reread some day.
I am reading
The Nine Tailors by Dorothy L. Sayers - I like the British murder mysteries;this is my first by Sayers. Am enjoying it a lot. I will probably try one of Antonia Fraser's next - from her Jemima Shore series.
Am still working on
The Fight for English by
David Crystal. It's interesting - I like anything about the English language.
#160 and #161 If you liked this book, you'll like
Sarum which is similar and came out before
Pillars of the Earth. I read
Sarum first before Pillars and thought
Sarum was a much better book, and Pillars was only a pale comparison to it. Give it a try!
#160, 161 and 164 - I haven't read
Pillars of the Earth yet but I do second ktleyed's endorsement of
Sarum. I read this a few years ago and thought that it was an excellent read.
#166 How do you do that? I can cope with a fiction and a non-fiction in tandem but surely more than one fiction (assuming these are fiction, 'cos I'm not familiar with any of them except CO) requires more than one brain? Is there some kind of surgery I can get?
And I've just started A Quiet Belief in Angels (R J Ellory). Looks fascinating so far and I loved
Candlemoth so I'm quite hopeful.
Hey, hey, #164, #165: thanks for the recommendation--will follow it up!
#163:
I especially enjoyed
The Nine Tailors. The information on change ringing is interesting by itself and a friend tells me his in-laws thought Sayers' description of the fen country accurate. I like Dorothy L. Sayers mysteries because she generally sticks to the resolution of a single murder and doesn't just let the bodies pile up to keep the action moving forward. You will also learn something about cryptography if you keep reading Sayers. I think
Strong Poison is one of her weakest books. Her nonfiction can be interesting too.
I just received an arc of Augusten Burrough's new memoir A Wolf at the Table, subtitled: A Memoir of my Father. I have gotten to know Augusten some over the years from my work at the bookshop, and look forward to reading it.
Message edited by its author, Jan 24, 2008, 5:48pm.
#134 alcottacre - Thanks for the Duffy recommendation. Duly noted.
And echoing #153, Louis Branning's highly recommended book of short stories by
Jim Shepard, Like You'd Understand Anyway. Grand stuff, that. Louis and I have such similar tastes that sometimes I believe we were separated at birth.
Message edited by its author, Jan 24, 2008, 7:26pm.
#108 & # 159 - Thursday Next in any of Jasper Fforde books is a pleasure!
Message edited by its author, Jan 24, 2008, 8:42pm.
Re
Pillars of the Earth. I just had to chime in to say that, if you want to read a brilliant novel about building cathedrals in the 12th/13th centuries,
The Heaven Tree trilogy by Edith Pargeter (better known for her Brother Cadfael mysteries) is wonderful. I enjoyed
London by Edward Rutherfurd but haven't yet read his
Sarum, though I plan to in '08.
I put Harry Dresden (
Summer Knight) aside for awhile to finish Augustus by Everitt (touchstones not working for this one), which I got about halfway through in 2007. I'm also reading bits of
Julius Caesar's
Commentaries (unsure which translation).
Earlier this week I read The Stranger by Albert Camus, and now I'm reading
The Red Tent by Anita Diamant.
#157 avaland: I have no idea why I ordered
Icefields instead of
The Logogryph by Thomas Wharton. It was the latter book I went looking for because of a mention here on LT regarding it. But, at about half done, I'm really enjoying
Icefields. I've added
The Logogryph to my wish list and I will order it when my tax refund arrives. Buying books with the refund is the only fun thing about tax return time.
Change of plans for a post I made earlier....due to my early reviewer book (
Sephardi Entrepreneurs) arriving today I'm going to put aside Butcher's
Cursor's Fury to read it. The first bit that I read of
Cursor's was really good though. =)
#175 et al Chiming in on the recommendation of
Sarum. I read it many years ago, and it was fast moving and fascinating.
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Just finished
Ex libris by Anne Fadiman, which I enjoyed tremendously. I only regret that the book was too short.
In the Miso Soup by
Ryu Murakami is next (my first crack at Japanese fiction).
#183 omphaloskepsis - If you enjoyed
Ex Libris, which is one of my favorite books, you might like to know that she has a new book of essays out called
At Large and At Small.
Just finished
ella minnow pea and
>159 irisheyz I agree wholeheartedly with all you have said
Now I am starting
Something Rotten, Jasper Ffordes third Thursday Next book.
#181
I loved
Leaving Microsoft to Change to World as well.
I am purging my library (just a little) to send books off to Better World. You can choose John Wood's Room to Read as your beneficiary if you want to.
#186 Kell_Smurthwaite: Yeah! I'm always somewhat wickedly pleased to find a fellow non-lover of
Heart of Darkness - I too felt very blah about it (can one really be 'very' blah? hm, I wonder...) and I just don't see the appeal.
#186 & 188 Hooray! I'm not completely alone in the world! I studied HofD as part of my BA. Usually, unlike a lot of people who just get cheesed off with books they have to study, I find that, given enough effort, I can get to like almost any book but this one defeated me (as did Germinal, but that's another story - well, obviously). However, everyone else I have ever discussed it with seems to have thought it was pure genius. So glad to know there are others out there who also didn't get it.
Reading
On the Road by Jack Kerouac. I'm surprised at how sad the ending is. Poor Moriarty, he didn't mean to be irresponsible, but he should have known better than to wife-swap...
Finished
Beowulf: An Updated Translation the other day. It was really powerful how they celebrated the life of a legendary hero in an epic poem that reads like a eulogy at the end. Also finished
Anil's Ghost which I hated for its pretension and over-written minor details. Beowulf handles the notion of war so much better, even though it supports battle, it shows the grief of lost battle-brothers without grim political unrest angst like Anil's Ghost does.
188 & 189 - i am SO glad I'm not the only one who thought HoD was rubbish! It just felt so very poibntless. Perhaps missed something (obviously I did, as it's held to be a classic), but it really didn't gel with me at all and I couldn't see the point in any of it even being written. I was especially non-plussed by the end, which seemd drawn-out, yet somehow abrupt (I'm not sure if I'm even making sense now, but I hope you'll understand what I mean). I'm not sure if it was the style of writing or the story, but I'm not much bothered about reaading anything else by Conrad, at least, not in a hurry.
#191 Actually, I think the bit about being drawn out yet somehow abrupt makes perfect sense. Took a long time getting nowhere.
186, 188, 189 I had to read
Heart of Darkness TWICE in high school and resented every minute of it. Now that I am an English prof, I see some value in it--but I still can't stand it and will never teach it.
"Mistah Kurtz--he dead."
My first post, hoping it works. Reading Nick Hornby's
How to Be Good. Laughed out loud for a solid five minutes during one passage.
Worked just fine, bosie. Welcome to the group!
I'm a newbie so this is my first post. I tend to read lots of books at one time. So far this month I've finished reading
Johnny Got His Gun and
The Naked and the Dead. I'm not normally a "war" kind of person but these were both really good books. I also finished Found on the Street by Patricia Highsmith. I'm very very slowly reading
Oliver Twist and expect to be doing that for awhile. Finally, I am reading the non-fiction book Pulitzer Prize winner Legacy of Ashes.
welcome suzeqinsm! I used to read three or four books at a time (all different) but these days the most I read at a time is two.
You might want to consider one of the "Challenge groups". See the thread in this group called "Looking for a Challenge in 2008" (or something like that) for additional information.
#193 Cariola: Well, it's official then: I definitely don't feel guilty for not liking HoD now that I know an English Prof. feels the same way! I do recall not hating
The Secret Agent, but it wasn't one of my favorites either...
Has anyone seen the made for TV movie of
Nostromo? It was't too bad. I had to read it for a college class several years earlier & I said in my essay on it that it had all the ingredients for a soap opera. The movie version trimmed it down quite a bit which helped to make it better than the book.
I watched a couple of episodes of a BBC serial adaptation (with Colin Firth in it as I recall), but found it almost as confusing as the book!
Just started
A History of God by Karen Armstrong. Is there any evidence for whether atheists or believers read more books about god? One for the Happy Heathens maybe?
#204 I got lucky--did not have to read
The Secret Agent. I did, however, get stuck with
Lord Jim.
Another bad class experience was having to read a series of Melville's short stories. I learned more than I ever wanted to know about guano.
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