You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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What Are You Reading and Why? 2015 second half
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Bella
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Sep 04, 2015 10:50AM

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I absolutely love this series! The books are a quick and easy read. The crime fighting is great and I love all the characters (minus the perps of course ;) ).
If you haven't read The Women's Murder Club books by James Patterson and love cop type books that are fiction, you should give the series a chance. The first book in the series is


I bought this book as well because I love the Hollows series. I have not started it though. I am a little worried now.

Yes, I love audiobooks. Especially since I spend the better part of two hours every workday in a car! I should try more NF in audio format, maybe I'll have better luck.


I'm not alone. That happened to me today. I said to my friend, "Did I tell you about...?" and then couldn't remember what it was I wanted to tell her.


I just started The Man Who Ate Everything by Jeffrey Steingarten- surprisingly funny. Disgusting fact from the book: Watermelon is not a fruit. It's not the ovary of the plant; it's a flesh-filled uterus speckled with seeds. No watermelon in my house until I get that image out of my head. Yuck.
I also started A Crack in the Edge of the World by Simon Winchester, about the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and Isaac's Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History by Erik Larson. I'm finishing up Something Must Be Done About Prince Edward County: A Family, a Virginia Town, a Civil Rights Battle by Kristen Green, which got better after a bad, boring, repetitive start.
I just got The Penny Heart by Martine Bailey. She wrote An Appetite for Violets, which I really liked. The Penny Heart doesn't have an American release until 2016, but used copies are showing up at Amazon, which is where I got mine.


So far, it's really good. I just read The Storm of the Century: Tragedy, Heroism, Survival, and the Epic True Story of America's Deadliest Natural Disaster: The Great Gulf Hurricane of 1900 by A.L. Roker, which is also about the Galveston hurricane. Both are good, but for some reason, Al Roker's book read faster.


I downloaded The Shift (Second book in The Silo series - sorry no linking I'm on my cell). Read Vol 2 & 3 in Birds of Prey last night when I couldn't sleep.

We read Mudbound a while back for a group read. The thread is still there if you want to check out our thoughts on it. It generated some interesting discussion if I remember rightly.




We read Mudbound a while back for..."
Thanks Sarah! I love reading & piping in on any discussion threads, no matter how old, by the time I get to them. :)

And then I'll start The Last Juror / The Broker for the challenge :D




It wasn't a specific part, but when it was finished, I just felt overall confusion. It's not very clear what was going on and how all events were related, at least not to me. The book doesn't give you any answers or make all pieces of the puzzle fit in the end. I did have a look at the discussion thread yesterday and it cleared things up a bit :)

That happened to me recently. I finally found it, tucked away in a weird spot so I blamed the ghost in this place for playing yet another trick on me. Hehehehe!

I quite enjoyed re-reading the first three books since I didn't remember most of the details from my first read a couple of years ago... it was almost like reading them for the first time again.
I excitedly started on Fourth Grave Beneath My Feet almost as soon as I finished Third Grave.



I found out where one of them went - Amy has it, but I still cannot find the other. I swear that I bought it. I have #11, #12, #13 and #15. I cannot find #14.


@Peggy - I just read all of the spoilers from the Buddy read of The Angel's Game. (A little confusing going back and forth but I felt like I got some answers). There were some very good observations and on page 3 of the thread there is a video link where the author talks about the difference between The Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game.

The thing I most enjoyed about the book was the four different POV's. Each character took turns telling part of the story and giving insight about themselves and the other characters. I especially loved having three different narrators reading the four different POV's on the audiobook. Simon Vance's voice was perfect for Martin; Kate Reading did great as Maureen and Jess; Scott Brick, though a fantastic narrator, didn't sound like I imagined JJ would sound. I think I've listened to Scott Brick narrate too many suspense/mystery books, he didn't fit for a depressed 30 year old wannabe rocker.


Dreams is narrated by Luke Daniels and I couldn't shake his voice from Atticus. I kept shifting back to The Iron Druid. This book has an Oberon too, but isn't nearly as much fun as the Irish Hound.

On my last day's drive, I started listening to A Canticle for Leibowitz. A very different book, but an interesting story, made it about half way through before I arrived home. My only issue is that one of the voices used sounds an awful lot like Donny Pfaster from the XFiles. Much like Scully, there is something about him that chilled me to the bone.

I started The Monkey's Raincoat which is just ok so far. I'm only at chapter 6 so it is still a bit too early to judge on how the story is going to go :)


Early Crais are a bit dated but still fairly entertaining butnot as well written as his later novels as he evolves as a writer



My Review: www.goodreads.com/review/show/1388112553



I may be wrong about what Shakespear plays the Star Wars books are based on but I love reading the Engliish prose in the stories. The characters are true to the movies and more.
There is a wonderful chorus of lines when the minions called Ugnaughts are preparing the carbon freeze chamber to try it out on Han that I cannot type all out on my tablet. It is so great!
There is an awsome scene in the beginning with Vader saying "Hath not a Sith such feelings, heart, and soul,
As any Jedi Knight did e'ere possess?
If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you
Blast us, shall we not injur'd be?"
Alas, the next I cannot read until my new level starteth.

I started listening to Fireblood by Jeff Wheeler a couple of days ago. I'm about 35% in and I'm not overly impressed yet. I loved Wheeler's Muirwood series (The Wretched of Muirwood) and had very high hopes for the Mirrowen series. I'm going to give Fireblood a little more time to grab my interest then I'll probably give up. I'm so sleepy lately I need a book that can keep my interest on my commute and keep me alert!
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