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topic: What One Did You Just Start?


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message 1: by Josh (new)

905142 Come here to post what book from the list you recently started, and if you would like to ask for opinions on the book. Also tell people how you liked the book they just cracked open. Please don't post spoilers unless they are asked for, and for those who don't want to know; warn that there is a spoiler please.


message 2: by Josh (new)

905142 I'll start us off.
The Book of Illusions by Paul Auster


message 3: by Incommunicado (new)

919792 Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco is next for me. It's been on my list/shelf forever, long before I picked up 1001...


message 4: by Lianna (new)

Nophoto-f-25x33 Middlesex. I blew through the first chapter. Chapters two and three are a little more sluggish...


message 5: by Logan (new)

70078 Ugh. Foucault's Pendulum. I read this about a week after finishing the Da Vinci Code (double ugh). It is, by far, an improvement on Dan Brown's opus of stupidity but for my money the greatest book on various conspiracies throughout history will always be Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson's Illuminatus Trilogy. For how much I loved Name of the Rose, Foucault's Pendulum was a bit disappointing to me. Maybe I just didn't care for the protagonist.


message 6: by Ivy (new)

928347 I just started Drop City. So far I am totally loving it. Who knew hippie communes where so interesting?


message 7: by Katie (new)

298306 Ugh, I don't know that I'll ever be able to start one of the books on this list, I have so many others that I want to read! I just finished the Golden Compass series and I'm in love with it! But I want to get through the scads of books languishing on my shelves before buying a new one. What to do!!


message 8: by Kim (new)

235134 Well I must be a lunatic or just plain bored...I've just started 3 from this list!

Middlesex (audiobook)
Pilgrims Progress (on my blackberry)
The ground beneath her feet (home/commuting)

Oy.


message 9: by Rachel (new)

66551 I have been reading "The Ground Beneath Her Feet" for the past week.


message 10: by Rysia (new)

872764 Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie- am about 100 pages in and love it. In some ways reminds of Gabriel Garcia Marquez.


message 11: by Yelena (new)

293025 Started An Obedient Father this morning. The writing has been good, the story disturbing. I'll keep you posted.


message 12: by Kathe (new)

894851 Contact by Carl Sagan - I'm only averaging 20pp per day, it seems like this should be a quick read. Maybe I'm spending too much time online?


message 13: by Cathy (new)

590841 I started The Ground Beneath Her Feet yesterday. I found Moor's Last Sigh and Satanic Verses unfinishable, but I'm really enjoying this so far! I finished Maximum City, a nonfiction account of modern Bombay, the same day, so I'm really enjoying all the Bombay stuff in Ground Beneath Her Feet. Wordplay, mythology, and rock and roll -- what's not to like?


message 14: by Logan (new)

70078 Cathy, I had the same trouble with Satanic Verses, it ended up taking me a long time to get through. I enjoyed Midnight's Children and Ground Beneath Her Feet far more. Did you enjoy Maximum City? I've had it on my Amazon Wish List for a while now but haven't picked it up yet. I'm a sucker for books set in Bombay/Mumbai. You should also check out Gregory David Robert's epic Shantaram or Vikram Chandra's Sacred Games- the descriptions of Mumbai in both make it seem that the city itself is the protagonist.


message 15: by Smarti (new)

376535 I'm also currently reading The Ground Beneath Her Feet and I'm really enjoying it. I read the Satanic Verses last year and had a sort of odd experience with it. I don't think that I understood even a fragment of what I read but still I liked reading on. It did not seem unfinishable at all to me... really weird since usually I don't like reading books where I don't know what's going on!!!
Anyway, the ground beneath her feet is really good and I look forward discussing it soon!



message 16: by Cathy (new)

590841 Logan, I did like Maximum City, although parts were so grim that it was difficult to read. I loved how much detail he went into about the workings of the city, although he relies a lot on these first-person relationships he formed with whores, murderers, and filmmakers, so it's more of a snapshot of a small group of individuals than it is a comprehensive portrait of Bombay.

I bought Shantaram a few months ago, and your endorsement is making me think I should bump it up in my "to read" queue.


message 17: by Kristen (new)

70364 I just started the Life of Pi. It's pretty good so far. I am dying to read Middlesex! Let me know how it is!!!


message 18: by Yelena (new)

293025 Don't Move by Margaret Mazzantini


message 19: by Yelena (new)

293025 The Devil and Miss Prym by Paulo Coehlo. I don't have high hopes from the first 40 or so pages.


message 20: by Yelena (new)

293025 Against my better judgment I started Elizabeth Costello - anyone out there want to tell me it will be alright?


message 21: by Logan (new)

70078 Finally finished my last read, Michael Polan's The Omnivore's Dilemma which has to be the most interesting book I've read in years, and am excited to dive back into the world of Fiction. For this I'm picking up a book that I bought on a bargain table years ago and which has gathered dust on my bookshelf ever since, The Hours by Michael Cunningham.


message 22: by Logan (new)

70078 awww.... it's a troll! how cute, it thinks it's people!


message 23: by Charity (new)

129343 Um...wow.

One might say that it is rather sad (and yes, pathetic) to troll the group threads making inane little comments.

Although...maybe that is the 'life' we should all be striving for....let's all ponder that for a while.


message 24: by Charity (last edited Mar 04, 2008 05:06PM) (new)

129343 Meanwhile, back at the ranch....

I just started Invisible Man by Ellison and it has been quite gripping thus far.


message 25: by Yelena (new)

293025 Started Rousseau's Julie - it's been a while since I've read anything written prior to 1850, so I need to get back into fighting form.


message 26: by Kim (new)

235134 Hi Everyone,

I just deleted a bunch of posts from Squigle who was just plain annoying. However, I was dumb and didn't realize the delete button was below the post...rather than near the title. blah. So I'm sorry I deleted like 4 real posts before I realized my mistake. If you don't see your previous post...please post again! I promise not to do that again!


message 27: by Kristen (new)

70364 I'm just starting the Omnivore's Dilemma if you want someone to discuss it with, Logan ;)


message 28: by Rebecca (last edited Mar 05, 2008 05:47AM) (new)

140130 Logan and Kristen, I loved Omnivore's Dilemma (wrote a review on Goodreads) but more specifically, I talked about it on my reading blog here and here.
I didn't exactly "just start" Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus but it is the one from the list that I'm working through now. I am really enjoying it, but it is a lot of work. I have a PhD in Musicology and I'm finding it a bit arduous, so I can only imagine that someone without musical background might be turned off by the lengthy musical and allegorical discussions.


message 29: by deleted member (new)

I just started All American Girl by Deb Cabot. It's really good.


message 30: by Emma (new)

681602 I'm finally reading Jane Eyre and can't believe I never picked it up sooner. (considering I've had a copy of it for at least 5 years)


message 31: by Logan (new)

70078 Kristen/Rebecca,

I would love to hear your thoughts on Omnivore's Dilemma. I set up a thread for this in the Specific Books folder so that we don't keep hijacking this one.


message 32: by Debbie (new)

377085 I just started The Ground Beneath Her Feet a few days ago. I am only 150 pages in and I have to admit that it is not grabbing me. Though there are some marvelous ideas, it is not a book that is encouraging me to stay up reading past my bedtime.


message 33: by Jen (new)

955458 I just started Brave New World, I probably was suppose to read this at some point in high school but never did. i'm about 100 pages into it and i am not sure whether i like it or not.... I have two other books i want to read this month, but i seem to be spending a lot of time on this one (actually a lot of time not reading it and napping instead)


message 34: by Ivy (new)

36030 I started The Lord of the Rings at lunch today. Does this count for 3 books? No? OK, didn't think so. It's 1008 pages, plus appendices A to F and my goal is to finish by Easter. Wish me luck!


message 35: by Logan (new)

70078 I just started Hermann Hesse's Glass Bead Game. I think it's the last book of his that I haven't read and I am really glad that I've saved it until the end because by page 60 he's referenced obscure happenings from at least three different books. It's dense, but I can already tell it will stack up well against Steppenwolf.


message 36: by Smarti (new)

376535 Ivy: I don't think you'll need luck or encouragement: Lord of the rings is awesome :-)


message 37: by Logan (new)

70078 After the last book I picked off the list disappointed me so much, I think it's time to go for an author I know and love. I'll be picking up Graham Greene's The Power and the Glory and The Honorary Consul next. As soon as I finish these midterms that is...


message 38: by Meghan (new)

199350 Incommunicado - I am currently reading Foucault's Pendulum and I have to say it's really hard for me to finish. I'm only a third of the way done, and normally even long books, only take me a month at most to finish. I've been working on this one for half a year! I'm enjoying the basic concepts of the book, but I feel that the substories get me really bogged down. It's a lot of history and tangent storylines. I'd love to hear what other people have to say about it.

It's also good to note that this was published in 1989...well before Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code. I liked DVC for a fun, light read, not so much for the theories he presented, which I agree with Logan, there are better books for that.

I think I would enjoy Eco's Baudolino or Name of the Rose better though.


message 39: by Meghan (new)

199350 Rachael - Have you finished Drop City? Did you get to Alaska yet? We read this one in my other book club and people were sort of disappointed by the ending.


message 40: by Logan (new)

70078 For what it's worth, Name of the Rose is A LOT better than Foucault's Pendulum. A LOT better.


message 41: by Judith (last edited Aug 26, 2009 02:28PM) (new)

324723 I put aside "The Song of the Lark" by Willa Cather (not resonating with me right now) to start "You Can't Go Home Again" by Thomas Wolfe.
Neither of these books made the list, but other titles by the authors did.

I also read a few pages of "Group Portrait With Lady" last night. Anyone else read this one? It apparently was quite the experimental novel for its time....


message 42: by Elizabeth (new)

609878 I just got married on March 5th so I have been a little distracted, but I am ready to get back to my daily reading time. I am currently reading two books including the Bible. One of the books is from the list and it is by a Russian author named Mikail Bulgakov titled The Master and Margarita. It is an excellent novel so far and I encourage everyone to check it out! It is a metaphor of what happened during the leadership of Stalin. I am not much of a history fan, but it is actually very interesting and a fantastic, wild, humorous story full of twists and turns.


message 43: by Russ (new)

Nophoto-m-25x33 Elizabeth, I'm a big fan of The Master and Margarita. Great book!

I just started reading Malloy by Samuel Beckett. I don't know that I'll read the whole trilogy (Malone Dies and The Unnameable being the next two), at least all at once.


message 44: by Charity (new)

129343 I am halfway through Atonement and I'm really impressed. The story took a chapter or two to really get going, but now it is becoming increasingly harder to put down. Damn those cliff-hangers at the end of each chapter!! I actually had to force myself to go to bed last night. I always hate letting go of that momentum.


message 45: by Rebecca (new)

140130 I'm not done with Doctor Faustus yet, but I started Doris Lessing's The Golden Notebook today.


message 46: by Cathy (new)

590841 I've just starting Eva Trout, by Elizabeth Bowen. So far, it's compelling, but all the characters communicate in a very oblique way. It's extremely ENGLISH.

I'd never read Bowen before and she writes beautifully. there's a short passage describing what one character, who married a fruit farmer (who has now failed horribly at that career), imagined life in the orchards would be like, and it's just so swoony and gorgeous.


message 47: by Marina (new)

993802 I finished War and Peace, and was at Borders yesterday where I bought "The Love Poems of John Donne". Since I read Donne's poems I cannot put the book down.


message 48: by Charity (new)

129343 Wow. War and Peace. That is like my Everest. What did you think of it??


message 49: by Logan (new)

70078 I picked up Haruki Murakami's Wind-Up Bird Chronicles at the airport last night and then spent an entire flight when I should have been sleeping sucked into the pages. One of the review snippets on the back cover compared his writing to Thomas Pynchon's and after about 200 pages I am finding the comparison very apt. Definitely a good recommendation by way of the 1001 must-read list.


message 50: by Marina (new)

993802 I believe that War and Peace truly is a great novel due to three factors: the richness of the characters, the historical drama between Napoleon and the burning of Moscow, and the difficult essays on philosophy, psychology, history, and war scattered throughout the book. Yet I was sorry to let the epic go, because all the characters had captured my interest a lot. It's a wonderful reading experience.


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Authors mentioned in this topic

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