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What I'm Reading JUNE 2015
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I'll be reading that one too, Kat. I like his style.

I have had Plainsong on my TBR since it came out, but somehow just never got to it. So glad I finally read it. Am eager now to get to Eventide and Benediction.

This sounds delightful.


The novel follows a deaf couple – Abel and Janice – through their lives from shortly after WWI to the mid 1960s. When their daughter is born Hearing, they begin to rely on her to be their ears and voice in a world they barely understand. Margaret struggles to find her own life in the face of the duty she feels to help her parents. Poignant and thought-provoking.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I've had a brief dip into celebrity books, reading The Book of Joan: Tales of Mirth, Mischief, and Manipulation, then Robin Williams: When the Laughter Stops 1951 - 2014. I respected both of them very much as comedians, and along with much of the rest of the world, had felt it personally when someone of such intelligence, warmth, and humanity as Robin Williams took his own life.
I enjoyed reading more about Joan Rivers and hearing a few more of her jokes; she was such a unique woman and comic.
It was almost painful reading about Robin Williams, only because I still feel so sad about his ending, but I'm glad I did. I need to now again watch "Moscow on the Hudson" (not one of his remarkable films, but the one wherein I remember noticing that Williams was an attractive man) and "Aladdin," for the genie parts which are simply classic Williams standup.
Next up: A Little Life. Looking forward to some good fiction again.


The novel follows a deaf couple – Abel and Janice – through their lives from shortly after WWI to the mid 1960s. When the..."
I read this novel at the time that my son's deafness was diagnosed, now a couple decades ago! I learned a lot from it.


The novel follows a deaf couple – Abel and Janice – through their lives from shortly after WWI to t..."
Many years ago, my in person book club read Of Such Small Differences, by Greenberg, which is another book with valuable lessons for the reader.



Over the past week we were traveling and had the opportunity to have dinner at Barbara Kingsolver's restaurant, HARVEST TABLE, in rural Southwestern Virginia. Good food, with a very strong focus on local sourcing. A thoroughly enjoyable experience.


I've always loved it--as well as The Waves another marvelous book by Woolf.


I read it some years ago. Very interesting.


The novel follows a deaf couple – Abel and Janice – through their lives from shortly after WWI to t..."
It really is a good book, and I've heard from several people who know someone who is deaf who have commented on how accurately Greenberg writes of the experiences in that age. As I mentioned in my full review, this is a re-read for me - I first read it back in the early 1970s. Also, there's a made-for-TV movie starring Mare Winningham as Margaret - titled "Love is Never Silent"

Thanks for reminding me of this book. I’ve wanted to read this for a long time but I have never got round to is. I’ve put it on my to-read list now.


I read it quite a while ago also. She is also the author of I Never Promised You a Rose Garden, which she originally published under the pen name Hannah Green.


I'm very much enjoying it, too, Barb. Haven't read her before, so thanks!

I enjoyed it also. I am reading Captain Corelli’s Mandolin, which has been on my 2015 challenge.

Well, I'm mortified. I love Edith Wharton and had never read this. I'm 200 pages in and can't bear it. I somewhere read that it was considered her greatest novel, so you can imagine my chagrin that I'm not drawn to it at all. I'm putting it aside, and making a public confession.
Just finished

So now I'm having a grand old time and laughing through

I deserve a break. And then back to some of the half-dozen books I'm into. Work is just so demanding lately that I find my concentration isn't there, but that doesn't explain my Wharton-phobia. It just seems like such a dated book, and I'm listening to The Golden Bowl at night as I drift off to sleep, which I love, of course, and I think the Wharton just suffers by comparison. And it doesn't seem to have the compassion she always had for her characters. Does anyone know it? Or does anyone have any interest, whether you know The Custom of the Country or not, to tell me that whoever thinks it's her greatest book must have been disturbed? I don't care about anyone in it! Imagine!
I put it on my "threw it against the wall" shelf, because GR doesn't seem to have a category between "Read" and "Want to Read" to signify that one chose not to finish it.


Well, I'm mortified. I love Edith Wharton and had never read this. I'm 200 pages in and can't bear it. I somewhere read that it was considered her gr..."
I agree that Custom of the Country isn't up to Wharton's usual standard. It's been a long time since I read it, but I remember the characters being one-dimensional in comparison to the usually complex beings Wharton explores in Age of Innocence and House of Mirth.
Kat wrote: "Ellen wrote: "
Well, I'm mortified. I love Edith Wharton and had never read this. I'm 200 pages in and can't bear it. I somewhere read that it was con..."
Oh, thanks. I feel so much better! You know, it struck me, that book may have had a sensational quality in 1913 (?) that it doesn't have now? Not that the clash of cultures (Apex v. Washington Square) isn't interesting, but "one-dimensional" is an excellent way to describe it!

Well, I'm mortified. I love Edith Wharton and had never read this. I'm 200 pages in and can't bear it. I somewhere read that it was con..."
Oh, thanks. I feel so much better! You know, it struck me, that book may have had a sensational quality in 1913 (?) that it doesn't have now? Not that the clash of cultures (Apex v. Washington Square) isn't interesting, but "one-dimensional" is an excellent way to describe it!
I like Ralph enough. I can't warm to Undine. (Like the old lime about coming home from a cocktail party, "Loved him, hated her." Funny.) The details are wonderful, Undine's dad is a great character. I just cannot pull it together. I'm sure it's me. Maybe a glass of wine tonight, some cheese, a Shih Tsu at my feet... There you go. Oh, also one of the villains of the piece is the portraitist, I don't know if you remember. Pop-something, Poppery? I think I've unconsciously identified him in my mind with John Singer Sargent, whose work I just love. (I love portraits, anyway, but his are so so so, you know?)


Well, I'm mortified. I love Edith Wharton and had never read this. I'm 200 pages in and can't bear it. I somewhere read that it was considered her gr..."
Custom of the country is my very favorite Wharton. Wow, could she ever slip in the knife.
Well, I certainly respect your opinion. I'll get back to it!

Oh, and I think it's Popple, for the portrait painter.
Oh, Nicole, what an interesting way to look at Undine; I never would have thought of it, that she stands outside and sees clearly. I thought she stood outside and was blind. Seriously. I have to say, I was brought up by people with pretentions, and taught what one does and what is simply not done, and on and on and on (let me make clear: there were no basis for the pretensions). And I hear my mother's voice (does anyone know when this stops?) every time Undine does fails to understand what's going on around her saying, "Who are her people?"
Undine. Now look at what Wiki says:
What undines lack, compared to humans, is a soul. Marriage with a human shortens their lives on Earth, but earns them an immortal human soul.[11]
Hmm. I don't know what's wrong with me. Well, I'll polish off the Nick Hornsby, and back to Ms. Wharton.
Undine. Now look at what Wiki says:
What undines lack, compared to humans, is a soul. Marriage with a human shortens their lives on Earth, but earns them an immortal human soul.[11]
Hmm. I don't know what's wrong with me. Well, I'll polish off the Nick Hornsby, and back to Ms. Wharton.


In this sequel to The Sparrow , Emilio Sandoz returns to Rakhat to face the consequences of that initial human contact. Once again, Russell gives us a morality play wrapped in science fiction. It’s a fascinating story, deeply spiritual (as the title suggests), but which lacks the impact of her first book. Anna fields does a marvelous job performing the audio version.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I will always prefer things seen from the inside. Illuminating moral complexity is for me the greatest fictional achievement possible. But of course there's value in that outside thing too. :)


In this sequel to
The Sparrow
, Emilio Sandoz returns to Rakhat to face the consequences of that initial human ... It’s a fascinating story, deeply spiritual (as the title suggests), but which lacks the impact of her first book. "
BC, you are so right. It's a very good book, but it "lacks the impact of her first book."
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Books mentioned in this topic
Children of God (other topics)Children of God (other topics)
The Custom of the Country (other topics)
The Custom of the Country (other topics)
The Custom of the Country (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
John Williams (other topics)Wilkie Collins (other topics)
Christina Stead (other topics)
John Williams (other topics)
Wilkie Collins (other topics)
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I read this a few years ago and really enjoyed it. Quit different from his novel Beautiful Ruins, which got so much more attention. I liked that one too.