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What Are You Reading
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Paul
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Oct 10, 2015 07:49AM

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A cold/flu and applying for new/better jobs has really curtailed my reading life. All I've gotten through this month are two audio books. We Have Always Lived in the Castle and MASH: A Novel About Three Army Doctors. I'm looking forward to discussing the BOTM when more people have gotten to read it. MASH is the book the popular (here in the States anyway) movie and t.v show are based on. While it was a solid read, it wasn't quite as funny as the t.v. show.

Just finished Our Souls at Night - a quick and very satisfying read. Also reading NOS4A2 which is going pretty quickly. I misplaced my kindle which got me off track. I'm now reading it on my mini Ipad.

I think Edith Wharton focused on the same class of people that Virginia Woolf did. There's one story that she would write pages (Wharton) and then let them fall to the floor so her servants could pick them up. Virginia Woolf seemed to be somewhat similar and dismissed James Joyce as being, basically, too working class for her to bother with. That influenced my opinion of Woolf.

That is helpful to know. I haven't read Woolf, and right now I am feeling life is too short to read more Wharton or Woolf. At least I can say I tried.

Yes. That's how I feel about Jonathan Franzen. He's lauded as the "great American novelist," and I read Freedom and thought, "ok, I tried. Enough of him! "

I've heard enough similar comments about Franzen that I am also skipping him.



I did a ghost walk in St. Mary's Close in 2002. We really did sense a ghost in one of the rooms, and it broke my sister's camera. We definitely felt a cold spot and a presence. When she brought it to a camera store in Edinburgh, they opened it up and said inexplicably the insides has just fallen apart. She bought a little point and shoot for the rest of the trip.

I did a ghost walk in St. Mary's Close in 2002. We really did sense a ghost in one of the rooms, and it broke..."
What a creepy story!


It is my library book club book for the month. If I put aside I'll probably never go back to it. Might not be a bad thing either!!

I did a ghost walk in St. Mary's Close in 2002. We really did sense a ghost in one of the roo..."
It reinforced my belief in the spirit world.


I am liking Eleanor & Park a lot. And just started reading I Lived on Butterfly Hill. The first is definitely labeled not for young readers so it is probably for readers 15 and above. The second is for readers 10-14 and set in Valparaiso Chile at the time of the 1971 coup. Valparaiso is a World Heritage City and I visited there a few years ago. The hills are so steep I was a bit terrified as we drove up and down them in a minibus. I kept worrying somehow we'd tip over.
I just started listening to The Orphans of Race Point which I chose because of it's setting - the far end of Cape Cod, and its setting in the Portuguese community.


But what about the ghostly kid with wierd teeth. Glad to know it's not about vampires. It's an incentive to finish it.

I remember shortly after my visit to St. Mary's Close they closed that tour and "redid" things. I wonder it they've changed things around.


Well as you read more of this genre and were also misguided, I don't feel too dumb.



I didn't get the name Barbara, so you're not alone! Bought it cheap on audible but never got around to listening to it.

I got it cheap on Kindle. I feel better missing the significance of the name.

Thanks to Emma for the recommendation (from awhile back) to check out Roddy Doyle on Facebook. He's totally brilliant there.
The most recent one:
-D’you ever go to plays?
-In a theatre, like?
-Yeah.
-No.
-Meself an’ the missis went to one – a while back. She was on about us doin’ somethin’ a bit different. Instead o’ the pictures. So, it’s her birthday an’ her sister got her two tickets for this play.
-An’ did she expect yeh to go with her?
-I was fuckin’ dreadin’ it – all the fuckin’ fuss, yeh know. But annyway, we go along.
-An’ it’s fuckin’ brilliant.
-How did yeh know?
-Your face.
-Well, it was. It was brilliant. Faith Healer, it was called. Your man, the Nazi, was in it.
-Ralph Fiennes.
-Him - yeah. He was very good.
-He’s good in everythin’.
-That’s true. But the play itself. Man – the words. There was him an’ two others. An’ they just talked - just fuckin’ talked. But – brilliant. Spellbindin’. It was like listenin’ to really interestin’ people, ‘cept way better.
-Wha’ made yeh think of it?
-Well, your man who wrote it died today. Brian Friel.
-I heard tha’, yeah – on the news.
-So – yeah.
-It made a big impact on yeh. The play.
-It did, yeah.
-Have yeh been to any since?
-Plays?
-Yeah.
-No. Fuck tha’.
I do plan to get back to The Guts eventually.
The most recent one:
-D’you ever go to plays?
-In a theatre, like?
-Yeah.
-No.
-Meself an’ the missis went to one – a while back. She was on about us doin’ somethin’ a bit different. Instead o’ the pictures. So, it’s her birthday an’ her sister got her two tickets for this play.
-An’ did she expect yeh to go with her?
-I was fuckin’ dreadin’ it – all the fuckin’ fuss, yeh know. But annyway, we go along.
-An’ it’s fuckin’ brilliant.
-How did yeh know?
-Your face.
-Well, it was. It was brilliant. Faith Healer, it was called. Your man, the Nazi, was in it.
-Ralph Fiennes.
-Him - yeah. He was very good.
-He’s good in everythin’.
-That’s true. But the play itself. Man – the words. There was him an’ two others. An’ they just talked - just fuckin’ talked. But – brilliant. Spellbindin’. It was like listenin’ to really interestin’ people, ‘cept way better.
-Wha’ made yeh think of it?
-Well, your man who wrote it died today. Brian Friel.
-I heard tha’, yeah – on the news.
-So – yeah.
-It made a big impact on yeh. The play.
-It did, yeah.
-Have yeh been to any since?
-Plays?
-Yeah.
-No. Fuck tha’.
I do plan to get back to The Guts eventually.
My reading has picked up a bit since my last update post in this thread 10 days ago.
I've listened to some more of the The Complete Sherlock Holmes: The Heirloom Edition.
My update review was "I'm 33% done with The Complete Sherlock: I'm finding the Sherlock Holmes stories to be much tighter than the first two novels so far and thus liking them better. My favorite short stories so far are "A Scandal in Bohemia," "The Adventure of the Red-Headed League, "The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb," and "The Adventure of the Copper Beeches."
I think that maybe given the short story format, Doyle has much less room to include racial and other stereotypes that come out in his longer work. The short stories were for the most part written after the first two novels, so it will also be interesting to see how this plays out in The Hound of the Baskervilles...which I should get to in part 3/7 of the audiobook.
For now I've switched to listening to Economics: Making Sense of the Modern Economy which is dry but educational...and less dry than I expected.
In the realm of physical I've finished The Fifth Season. It starts out on a but, but once I finished it, I realized it is absolutely brilliant and a strong contender for my favorite book of the year. I find it hard to say more without giving a way spoilers.
It did, however, leave my brain a little dazed, so for a change of pace I’ve been reading the lighter middle grade fantasy Percy Jackson books. I had paused my reading of them a couple years ago due to thinking the second and third books were a bit weak and heavy on plot filler, but the fourth book, The Battle of the Labyrinth[insert link], resorted my faith in the series, and I’m now about the third of the way through the fifth and final book, The Last Olympian. The books started as bedtime stories for his son, a 9 year-old with dyslexia, ADHD, and an interest in Greek mythology. The author has subsequently received a number of letters from kids with learning disabilities and their families.
Lastly, I’ve dipped my toes into the autobiography,Dust Tracks on a Road, of Zora Neale Hurston, who wrote one of my favorite books of all time, Their Eyes Were Watching God.
I've listened to some more of the The Complete Sherlock Holmes: The Heirloom Edition.
My update review was "I'm 33% done with The Complete Sherlock: I'm finding the Sherlock Holmes stories to be much tighter than the first two novels so far and thus liking them better. My favorite short stories so far are "A Scandal in Bohemia," "The Adventure of the Red-Headed League, "The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb," and "The Adventure of the Copper Beeches."
I think that maybe given the short story format, Doyle has much less room to include racial and other stereotypes that come out in his longer work. The short stories were for the most part written after the first two novels, so it will also be interesting to see how this plays out in The Hound of the Baskervilles...which I should get to in part 3/7 of the audiobook.
For now I've switched to listening to Economics: Making Sense of the Modern Economy which is dry but educational...and less dry than I expected.
In the realm of physical I've finished The Fifth Season. It starts out on a but, but once I finished it, I realized it is absolutely brilliant and a strong contender for my favorite book of the year. I find it hard to say more without giving a way spoilers.
It did, however, leave my brain a little dazed, so for a change of pace I’ve been reading the lighter middle grade fantasy Percy Jackson books. I had paused my reading of them a couple years ago due to thinking the second and third books were a bit weak and heavy on plot filler, but the fourth book, The Battle of the Labyrinth[insert link], resorted my faith in the series, and I’m now about the third of the way through the fifth and final book, The Last Olympian. The books started as bedtime stories for his son, a 9 year-old with dyslexia, ADHD, and an interest in Greek mythology. The author has subsequently received a number of letters from kids with learning disabilities and their families.
Lastly, I’ve dipped my toes into the autobiography,Dust Tracks on a Road, of Zora Neale Hurston, who wrote one of my favorite books of all time, Their Eyes Were Watching God.

The most recent one:
-D’you ever go to plays?
-In a theatre, like?
-Y..."
Love it. It made me think of a recent interview I heard with Wendall Pierce who played Bunk on The Wire. He's from New Orleans and was telling a story about performing "Waiting for Godot" in the Lower 9th Ward, the part of New Orleans that suffered the greatest amount of damage and number of deaths. He also repeated this story he'd heard:
"At one performance in the Mississippi delta for sharecropper farmers, legend has it that at intermission a man turned to the director and said, ‘Godot? He ain't coming.’"
Related to plays, I got to meet Rosemary Jenkinson tonight (at Mimi and Dennis's)who is from Belfast. She wrote "Johnny Meister and the Stitch" and has a play as part of the Women's Voices Theater Festival here in DC - The Dealer of Balynafeigh.
http://www.culturenorthernireland.org...
Paul wrote: "Delighted to hear The Fifth Season is worth the read . Definitely one I'll pick up soon ."
I think it's the strongest of her work to to date...although I haven't read The Shadowed Sun yet.
I think it's the strongest of her work to to date...although I haven't read The Shadowed Sun yet.
I stayed up until 2 am to finish The Last Olympian and it was well worth. This is a very good series, especially if you know middle school age kids who struggle with reading.
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