You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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What a coincidence!




That would be creepy.



That is an odd one.


Now I'm reading Mystic River and a child was abducted by men he refers to as wolves and calls himself (in his mind): The Boy Who Escaped From Wolves.
Wolves in back-to-back books. Weird little coinky-dink.


Had no idea that I would encounter this coincidence.


I'm enjoying Perdido Street Station. I found it hard to get into at first, but now I'm cruising right along. Some of the physics stuff drags the story down, because I don't understand that stuff, but otherwise it's quite enjoyable.



Today, I was listening to NOS4A2 and a teenager was described as wearing Scrabble tile earrings!

Today, I ..."
We are litening to the same audiobook Janice!

Great book, too!"
Anytime there's a coincidence with a "King Clan" book, it's cause for the appearance of goose bumps.


I am enjoying the book, but I am not sure I can reconcile the Mr. March and Marmee of the movies with the characters in the book.

I read Little Women as a kid, far before a saw the movie. I couldn't reconcile the book with the characters in the movie (the other way around) but that can also be because I felt somewhat uncomfortable with the women portraits on the whole.

Mr. March is not a major player in LW, so the Mr. March in March is quite fascinating. I think it is really due to Geraldine Brooks's imagination though. She can be quite funny, in an unexpected kind of way. The family history she has made up is interesting. The story is split between his early life and his service in the war in 1862. All I ever remembered about him was that he was hurt, and Marmee had to go to him.

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My current happening is that after just finishing reading The Pumpkin Rollers today, in which a dog was named Ulysses, I'm reading My Family and Other Animals, the boy in the story just named his young Scops owl, Ulysses.

I still notice a lot of reading coincidences, just forget to post them here.

Just after I finished My Family and Other Animals,
the author's name Gerald Durrell was mentioned in The Day of the Dead. If I had read the Frieda Klein book first, I would not have known who the author was unless I had stopped to look it up.


both have men left by their wives and who suffer( personally professionally and socially) as a result...

I am at Book Three, section 1 which is page 71 of 160.
The MC has stolen his former lover's diary/journal and is reading through the entries. The date on the entry on this page in the book is 12 February 1946 .

I am at Book Three, section 1 which is page 71 of 160.
The MC has stolen his former lover's diary/journal and is reading through the entries. The date on the entry on this page in the book is 12 February 1946 ..."
How bizarre is that?!☺☺

I am at Book Three, section 1 which is page..."
Weird coincidence!



I had forgotten about this thread. The author of Vulture: The Private Life of an Unloved Bird is from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. I drove past this town last weekend (about 2 hours from home) and immediately remembered.


Every time Nicole Wargin uses long distance to call someone from the moon, she says the name and number that she wants the operator to call after she specifies the city name.
Every time she says her number, I think about my home phone number from that time. She asks for Kansas City and then says "Elmwood eight-zero-four-zero-three".
My home number from 1963, in Garden Grove, California was "Twinoaks three-one-seven-six-four". Before we had to start using area codes, our number was 648-7698.
I freaked out the other day, because I could not remember my password for my Barnes & Nobel account to reset my library on my tablet. I had to call AmyK and ask her what it was, after I realized that I had changed it and did not write it down. She uses my account, so I always call her and tell her when I have changed it.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Relentless Moon (other topics)Vulture: The Private Life of an Unloved Bird (other topics)
Pippi Longstocking (other topics)
Britt-Marie Was Here (other topics)
The End of the Affair (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gerald Durrell (other topics)Geraldine Brooks (other topics)
Chris Cleave (other topics)
Having finished When She Woke, I began to read Unnatural Fire, a book chosen at random I promise.
Within the first chapter is a reference to Prynne, the protagonist in The Scarlet Letter.
ETA: Having read further, I've decided that the references are not toward Hester Prynne but William Prynne.
"Like many Puritans abhorring decadent celebrations he was strongly opposed to religious feast days, including Christmas, and revelry such as stage plays, and he included in his Histriomastix (1632) a denunciation of actresses which was widely felt to be an attack of Queen Henrietta Maria. This led to the most famous incidents in his life, but the timing was accidental. About 1624 Prynne had begun a book against stage-plays; on 31 May 1630 he obtained a license to print it, and about November 1632 it was published. Histriomastix is a volume of over a thousand pages, showing that plays were unlawful, incentives to immorality, and condemned by the scriptures, the fathers, modern Christian writers, and the wisest of the heathen philosophers. By happenstance, the queen and her ladies, in January 1633, took part in the performance of Walter Montagu's The Shepherd's Paradise: this was an innovation at court. A passage reflecting on the character of female actors in general was construed as an aspersion on the queen; passages which attacked the spectators of plays and magistrates who failed to suppress them, pointed by references to Nero and other tyrants, were taken as attacks on the king, Charles I."]~ Wikipedia