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What are you reading now? Finished recently? 4/5 through 11/6/2009
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JoAnn/QuAppelle
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Apr 05, 2009 06:05AM

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Jan O'Cat




I just got this from the library and am looking forward to it but I've got to read Twelfth Night for my discussion first. I hope it's a fast read. :-)

I also found it very slow in the beginning, but stubbornly stuck with it because I had tickets to see the show and always compulsively read things first. Ended up liking (notloving)the book and loving the show, which was different from the book.



donnajo


Always happy to contribute to anyone's obsession, Leslie. ;-)
Jan O'Cat






a few months ago I read Doris Lessing's book The Grass is Singing. I thought it was wonderful , but almost too dark. It is not a book for everybody.
I just got the book The Reliable Wife in the mail from Amazon, and I think that is going to have to go in front of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and The Bitter and Sweet book. I have read great things about it..lots of twists and turns.
Nancy/nanckopf wrote: "I was notified that [b:The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society|2728527|The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society|Mary Ann Shaffer|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I......"
Oh, Nancy, you are sooo lucky to be just reading this wonderful book. I hope you like it. I am waiting for another that I like as much!
Oh, Nancy, you are sooo lucky to be just reading this wonderful book. I hope you like it. I am waiting for another that I like as much!
Leslie, I just saw "The Reliable Wife" on the front of an Indie Next List that I picked up. Had not heard of it previously.

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I just had to try adding a book cover. Over at Constant Reader, another Goodreads group, they're about to start discussing this Japanese murder mystery by Natsuo Kirino. A housewife strangles her hubby, and then convinces her friends to dispose of the body. It isn't necessarily something I'd choose on my own, since it's quite bloody, but the look at Japanese society is interesting.



I had to try this, too, although this isn't a new book at all. Recently i read Wiggins's THE SHADOW CATCHER, which i liked, despite the fact it wasn't the book i thought it would be. The above has started out nicely, so i'm looking forward to reading more later today.
deborah, who just HAD to see edit to say, "I did it!", although the print is small. Sherry's OUT was nice & big...do you think authors will now start making one titles so the covers stand out? ;-)


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Just a FYI, if you don't want to click on the cover for all the GR info, you can just move your mouse over the cover and get the title and author.

Oh, i didn't even know i could click on the book cover! I thought it was all just decoration.
decoratin' deb ;-)

Cheef

The first one I read was A Superior Death, set in Isle Royal. I imagine you could take yourself to all the national parks in which she sets her murder mysteries, and be busy for years.


Cheef

deborah

I'll be very curious to know if you think it was worth the effort when you've finished it. I'm always worried that I'm missing something when I don't finish a book, and that one had such good reviews I thought surely there must be something to it.



This is a reread from ages ago. It's a strange little book about a reclusive family with a daughter who may or may not have poisoned the parents and brother.

This is a humorous and cynical little book by the author of The Life and Loves of a She Devil and my favorite, Letters to Alice, on First Reading Jane Austen.




I also Read The Shadow Catcher fairly recently, and liked it very much. I also enjoyed her novel Evidence of Things Unseen. In fact, I need to write a little review for that one.

deborah


This is a reread from ages ago. It's ..."
Sherry, I am a major Shirley Jackson fan and have read all her books. I love how she leaves questions unanswered and you can fill in the blanks. To this day I consider The Haunting of Hill House the most terrifying book I have ever read.
Cheef

I'm rereading this great Edith Wharton book. I am curious to see how I react to these characters and their dilemmas at my more-advanced age. Still early in the book, but there's something about it that gets me--her clarity, but also the amount of meaning that is packed in between the lines. An amount that is probably open to debate--how much irony, how much attitude lie behind those crystal-clear descriptions of hers? I can see more, this time, than I did at my first reading when I was probably 25 or 30. Wondering if I am reading into it.... also wondering if the social nuances were quite as severe as Wharton presents them. Or was she projecting more of her own anxieties onto her subject?
Michael wrote: Wondering if I am reading into it.... also wondering if the social nuances were quite as severe as Wharton presents them. Or was she projecting more of her own anxieties onto her subject?
I wondered something along the same line when I recently read Wharton's "House of Mirth". The "social nuances" in that book were fairly cruel, I thought.
Keep us posted....
I wondered something along the same line when I recently read Wharton's "House of Mirth". The "social nuances" in that book were fairly cruel, I thought.
Keep us posted....

Deb in ATL
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