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What Are You Reading

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message 5001: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (bdegar) | 4626 comments I started Go Set a Watchman which is for my book club that meets at the end of the month. I have it on kindle and I think it's going to go quickly.


message 5002: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments I can't wait to read your review, Barbara.


message 5003: by Seraphina (new)

Seraphina I have purposely not read this book as I don't want to ruin TKAM


message 5004: by Margo (new)

Margo Emma wrote: "I'd be pretty much the same. Will be interesting to hear your thoughts on it Barbara."

It is so different to TKAM that I don't think it will impact on fond memories! Look forward to Barbaras review ;)


message 5005: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments Seraphina wrote: "I have purposely not read this book as I don't want to ruin TKAM"

Me too.


message 5006: by Paul (new)

Paul I think with the book it helps to think of it as the book that leads to TKAM rather than the other way around. Its a stage in the development .


message 5007: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (bdegar) | 4626 comments Paul wrote: "I think with the book it helps to think of it as the book that leads to TKAM rather than the other way around. Its a stage in the development ."

Paul, that's definitely the approach I am taking. I read that her editor told her to write a different book focusing on Scout's childhood and sent her back to the drawing board. I will say I'm 35% through and not finding Scout as appealing as she was as a child.


message 5008: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (bdegar) | 4626 comments I finished and am looking forward to my book club at the end of the month. This is not a book to read without reading TKAM first. This book never would have made it at the time it was published. The quietness of TKAM pulls the reader into the story. This book hits the reader over the head with points of view.


message 5009: by Seraphina (new)

Seraphina Did you enjoy it Barbara?


message 5010: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (bdegar) | 4626 comments Seraphina wrote: "Did you enjoy it Barbara?"

I'd say I'm glad I read it....


message 5011: by Sara (last edited Jan 18, 2016 03:04PM) (new)

Sara | 2357 comments Mod
I've had a bit of a recent slow down in my reading due to being under the weather. I have a cold and an absolutely dreadful lingering cough that won't go away! I've been spending lots of time propped up in bed, but I've found that I've been inclined to recuperate with t.v. shows rather than books.

I've found that Kalpa Imperial: The Greatest Empire That Never Was (my book for the South America challenge read) is best digested in small chunks. In contrast I've been speeding through through Lumberjanes, Vol. 1: Beware the Kitten Holy (and the subsequent volumes). Lumberjanes is a lovely graphic novel series about the friendship of 5 girls at a summer camp as they defeat mysterious monsters. After a bit of a hiatus, I'm also back to my listening/e-bookreading of The Complete Sherlock Holmes.


message 5012: by Susan (last edited Jan 22, 2016 11:15PM) (new)

Susan | 4707 comments AJ, I think it is one of those books you had to read at that time. It was very popular when I was in college and really consider sort of daring to be reading it then. It fit with the rebellion at the time and spoke to our distrust of the government. I don't think I'd like it if I went back and read it now similar to my feelings about The Catcher in the Rye.

But I remember the times so well. The students taking over Columbia University, kids getting shot at Kent State and the demonstrations at Berkeley. It's a book of that time.


message 5013: by Margo (new)

Margo Aj wrote: "Catch-22

Just wondering what Irish readers thought of this book? I thought it was awful. Felt like the same thing repeated over and over. The odd funny line but then its forced down ..."


I read it in college in 1986 and still remember it quite vividly. I think that tells a lot! I found it a hard book to get into, but once I was in I was hooked. I think that a lot of what you read in your teens has a profound impact - Catch-22 certainly made a huge impression on me


message 5014: by Barbara (new)

Barbara (bdegar) | 4626 comments I got The Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende at the library. I should be getting more reading done with the blizzard but have been working, cooking and watched a 3 hour film:) Not sure about it yet...


message 5015: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments Does anybody besides me get a little lonely after finishing a really good book? I find this is especially true for characters you're really invested in. I just miss them and wonder what's going on. I know it seems silly but there it is.


message 5016: by Paul (new)

Paul Theres even a term for that Susan. Its a book hangover.
Happens to me if a book has great characters that draw you in. you end up really missing them.


message 5017: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn Yeah that has happened to me a few times. I think the worst was The Bronze Horseman when I was in college. My friend tried to ban me from reading the sequel I was that bad.


message 5018: by Margo (new)

Margo Trelawn wrote: "Yeah that has happened to me a few times. I think the worst was The Bronze Horseman when I was in college. My friend tried to ban me from reading the sequel I was that bad."

That's a great term for it! For me it takes a while to get over. I will discard perfectly good into my DNF pile simply because they don't measure up.


message 5019: by Cathleen (new)

Cathleen | 2409 comments That happens to me, too, Susan. And there are a lot of characters that I think about years later because some situation reminds me of them. For some reason, Casaubon from Middlemarch comes up a lot.


message 5020: by Cathleen (new)

Cathleen | 2409 comments Emma wrote: "A random one to stay with you Cathleen."

Indeed :).


message 5021: by Donna (new)

Donna McCaul Thibodeau (celtic_donna) | 1150 comments I love that term - book hangover. Glad to know I'm not the only one who has them.


message 5022: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments I love that term, Paul. I am an addict and now I know I have a hangover. What could be a better description?


message 5023: by Paul (new)

Paul I'd say it's a common problem here :-)


message 5024: by Sara (new)

Sara | 2357 comments Mod
So here in the U.S., February is Black History Month. I've decided that during the month I'm going to read a linked trilogy of works by African-American author Toni Morrison .

From Goodreads,

"These three novels by Toni Morrison are linked not by shared characters or setting, but by a set of recurring themes, predominantly the exploration of African-American history from the mid-nineteenth to the late twentieth century. Morrison has stated that the books were intended to be read as a trilogy, but has never officially given the series a name."

First up is Beloved which intimidates me a bit because it's supposed to be her great masterpiece.


message 5025: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn I tried to read Beloved in college and just couldn't get into it. Whether that was my fault or the book or timing I don't know


message 5026: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn I had to read Beloved, Mansfield Park and Great Expectations but only answer questions on two of them. I'll let you figure out which two I chose to study in depth :-)


message 5027: by Sara (new)

Sara | 2357 comments Mod
It's possible that Morrison's work resonates more with American audiences than with international ones, but that's just a guess. We read The Bluest Eye by her in my 11th grade Humanities class, and it ranks in my top 20 reads of all time. Beloved is supposed to be more complicated structurally though, so I'll see how I get in with it.


message 5028: by Kevin (new)

Kevin I'll be reading Morrison's Song of Solomon for one of my courses this semester coincidentally. This particular lecturer is fond of her and usually I am quite trusting of his book choices.

I'm taking an American lit module (post 1890 era) and there are seven books in all on the course. First off is The Great Gatsby which I will be starting this weekend. I'm not sure whether to look forward to it or not.


message 5029: by Seraphina (new)

Seraphina Great gatsby is one I haven't read either Kevin, not sure why but be interesting to see what you make of it


message 5030: by Kevin (new)

Kevin I should also mention that I started Wuthering Heights and I've enjoyed the 20 pages I've read so far. I haven't been fully introduce to the characters yet but I like the mixture of real and supernatural so far, very unexpected. I love the setting most of all.

Something tells me I will like it, Seraphina, but I'm trying my best to not have too many expectations.


message 5031: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn The Great Gatsby is an odd one. I love the world depicted while despising many of the characters. I enjoyed but didn't love it.


message 5032: by Cathleen (new)

Cathleen | 2409 comments Trelawn wrote: "The Great Gatsby is an odd one. I love the world depicted while despising many of the characters. I enjoyed but didn't love it."

I found it one of those novels that I appreciated more than I loved.


message 5033: by Cathleen (new)

Cathleen | 2409 comments I'm rereading The Scarlet Letter. I read it as a high school student and enjoyed it, but then, I was really interested in interpreting all of the Biblical allusions, imagery, and the like. I had an excellent teacher who modeled how to read for symbols, not just for plot. All these years later, I have to say I'm completely bowled over by Hawthorne's insight into people's interior and emotional lives, and as much as I enjoyed it as a teenager--this reading is worlds away richer and more enjoyable.


message 5034: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments On the other hand, I loved Great Gatsby but hated the movie.
What are the other books on your list, Kevin?


message 5035: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn @ Emma I was only saying to Paul thay maybe I should reread Wuthering Heights. It's more than ten years since I read it and I'm wondering if my distaste for it is real or imagined after years of giving out about it. My need to see if my perspective has changed


message 5036: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn Sounds good. I'd be more inclined to do it as a buddy read than on my own


message 5037: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn Cool well we'll arrange a time to do that then. I'll have to pick up a copy as I disposed of my old one years ago :-)


message 5038: by Kevin (last edited Jan 31, 2016 10:47AM) (new)

Kevin Susan wrote: "On the other hand, I loved Great Gatsby but hated the movie.
What are the other books on your list, Kevin?"


So far I know I will be reading or rereading the following in the next few weeks.
For American Lit:
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
White Noise by DeLillo, Don.
The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts. by Kingston, Maxine Hong.
Song of Solomon. by Morrison, Toni.
Shortcomings by Tomine, Adrian.
Terrorist. by Updike, John.

For Victorian Lit:
Emily Bronte Wuthering Heights
Charles Dickens Great Expectations
Robert Louis Stevenson Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Oscar Wilde The Picture of Dorian Gray

There's another half dozen of Middle Irish poetry and proses but I am far too unmotivated to list them :).


message 5039: by Sara (new)

Sara | 2357 comments Mod
Oh I really dislike John Updike Kevin. I'll be interested to see how you get on with him. The rest of the list looks interesting...in particular the inclusion of Shortcomings since it's a graphic novel.


message 5040: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn That's a dark selection for the Victorian Lit. But you have some of them read already don't you?


message 5041: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Wuthering Heights is the only Victorian novel there that I haven't read. It pissed me off a bit as I studied Dorian Gray already a year ago with the same lecturer. I know it's a different focus but still, you need something fresh.

Sara, the course leader, who happens to be my favourite lecturer, is a major fan of graphic novels so it's no wonder he would sneak one in. Supposedly everyone who is helping to teach the course each chose a book for it. Questions of race being a major theme.


message 5042: by Margo (new)

Margo I'm possibly the only person in the world who dislikes Wuthering Heights. Maybe you will take my side Kevin ;-)


message 5043: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn No Emma and I are with you Margo. We were just discussing doing a reread to see if our perspectives have changed. It's been quite a few years since the initial read. I hate Heathcliff and many of the other characters with a passion most charitably described as "unhealthy".


message 5044: by Margo (new)

Margo Trelawn wrote: "No Emma and I are with you Margo. We were just discussing doing a reread to see if our perspectives have changed. It's been quite a few years since the initial read. I hate Heathcliff and many of t..."

Oh that pleases me trelawn! People are always calling him "a great romantic hero" and I think he's a psychopath - Kevin, make up your own mind!


message 5045: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn There is nothing heroic about Heathcliff IMO but I am willing to try it again and see if I can appreciate the story more this time. I don't know if you have ever read Jasper Fforde's Thursday Next series Margo, but in one of the books they have Heathcliff in compulsory anger management classes :-)


message 5046: by Trelawn (new)

Trelawn Hear hear :-)


message 5047: by Margo (new)

Margo Emma wrote: "Margo you should read the Thursday Next series if you haven't. They do some brilliant stuff with literary characters including Heathcliff and the rest of the Wuthering Heights cast.

Personally whi..."



LOL Emma you have given me a great laugh! I will definitely check out that series, thanks for the recommendation guys..


message 5048: by Paul (new)

Paul What Jasper Fforde does with Ms Havisham is beyond brilliant. And ol Uncle Mycroft


message 5049: by Thomas, Moderator (new)

Thomas (tom471) | 1967 comments Mod
I received a NetGalley.com approval for Murder in an Irish Village It takes place in County Cork,land of my ancestors.


message 5050: by Susan (new)

Susan | 4707 comments I just requested it. We'll see how that goes.


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