Aussie Readers discussion

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Archives > What Are You Currently Reading? (doesn't have to be an Aussie book)

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message 4151: by Mark (new)

Mark Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappointing!

About to start my next Lee Child..."


I wonder if his books have "Child numbers." :)


message 4152: by [deleted user] (new)


message 4153: by Iris (new)

Iris Blobel (iris-b) | 127 comments Phrynne wrote: "Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappointing!

About to start my n..."


Oh I loved his books so far!


message 4154: by Sabina (new)

Sabina | 37 comments I've started To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf last night.


message 4155: by Nicola (new)

Nicola (sn295) | 30 comments Melissa wrote: "Cloudstreet by Tim Winton. I have been reading it for a while now, I can't seem to get into it but will keep trying."

Yeah I couldn't get into Cloudstreet either. I've left it on my currently reading list. I've moved on to other books. I don't know if I'll go back to it or not.


message 4156: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn I have finally finished book 6 of the Wheel Of Time series. Now onto boo 7 A Crown of Swords. I really want to finish them so I can move onto something else.


message 4157: by Dale (new)

Dale Harcombe | 6890 comments I didn't care for Cloudstreet.Never finished it. Was beginning to think I was the only one. Loved The Riders and liked Dirt Music.


message 4158: by Janine (new)

Janine (janineor) | 2172 comments Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappointing!

About to start my next Lee Child..."


I enjoy Susan Elizabeth Phillips books as they are great fun but did like her earlier ones best. I am also about to start the latest Lee Child and am really looking forward to it.


message 4159: by Dale (new)

Dale Harcombe | 6890 comments My review of The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton os npw up at http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...


message 4160: by Sabina (new)

Sabina | 37 comments Dale wrote: "My review of The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton os npw up at http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."

Thanks, Dale! I already had it pre-ordered, so I was always going to read it, but now I'm looking forward to it even more!


message 4161: by Iris (new)

Iris Blobel (iris-b) | 127 comments Janine wrote: "Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappointing!

About to start my n..."


Agree - the Chicago Stars book were definately my favourites!
Which Lee Child are you reading ?


message 4162: by Janine (new)

Janine (janineor) | 2172 comments Iris wrote: "Janine wrote: "Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappointing!

Abou..."


A Wanted Man


message 4163: by Iris (new)

Iris Blobel (iris-b) | 127 comments Janine wrote: "Iris wrote: "Janine wrote: "Iris wrote: "Anybody else out there liking Susan Elizabeth Phillips ? She's one of my favourite authors, but I have to admit, the last two books have been really disappo..."

oh you're well ahead of me ... I think I'm about to start #8


message 4164: by [deleted user] (new)

Just finished Celtic Blood, here is my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I'm now reading, Dracula and Risk


message 4165: by Dale (new)

Dale Harcombe | 6890 comments Sabina wrote: "Dale wrote: "My review of The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton os npw up at http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."

Thanks, Dale! I already had it pre-ordered, so I was always going to read it..."


Don't think you'll be disappointed Sabina


message 4166: by Mark (new)

Mark I've just finished The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which puts one in mind of The Holy Roman Empire (which was neither "holy," "Roman" nor "an empire"). Diaz' book is interminable, fathomlessly tedious, the very antithesis of "wondrous"... and, no, the dysfunctional übergeek protagonist's name was not really "Wao," though it hardly matters. Much of the book is in a mixture of untranslated Spanish (in which I'm fluent, but you could imagine it might piss off someone who wasn't, and who'd purchased the book under the misapprehension that it might be intelligible), geekese, and footnotes of book-length duration. It goes without saying that it won the Pulitzer Prize and earned Diaz a MacArthur Genius Award. (I read it under duress from the members of a book club, who all agreed that it had been 300 pages of unremitting agony to read, but might have been redeemed by two or three pages of uplifting poignant redemption at the end. You know, even as it's good to be hit by a train if you subsequently find an uneaten candy bar on the track.)


message 4168: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)

Brenda | 80013 comments Mod
Mark wrote: "I've just finished The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which puts one in mind of The Holy Roman Empire (which was neither "holy," "Roman" nor "an empire"). Diaz' book is interminable, fathomles..."

Not your most favourite book Mark;P


message 4169: by [deleted user] (new)

Currently reading, listening to audio-book, The Pillars of the Earth


message 4170: by Mark (last edited Oct 20, 2012 02:55AM) (new)

Mark Brenda wrote: "Mark wrote: "I've just finished The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which puts one in mind of The Holy Roman Empire (which was neither "holy," "Roman" nor "an empire"). Diaz' book is interminab..."

Oh, it was significantly better than Mein Kampf, or being crushed by a piano. :) Of course, I have to admit that Diaz may not have benefited from my current frame of mind. On the other hand, a MacArthur Genius Award? Díaz teaches creative writing at MIT. If there is a single one of his colleagues in the sciences who isn't more properly a genius than Juniot Diaz is, then I'll eat my partial differential equations. Literary geniuses do exist. Shakespeare was one. James Joyce. Cervantes. Marcel Proust. Jane Austen. T.S. Eliot. George Eliot. Probably even Thomas Pynchon and arguably, Kurt Vonnegut. But Juniot Diaz??? Which one of these does not fit? All over Massachusetts Institute of Technology, legitimately brilliant people must be tearing their hair out.


message 4171: by [deleted user] (new)

Mickey wrote: "Currently reading, listening to audio-book, The Pillars of the Earth"

Oh I hope you like it Mickey - I did. I still haven't got to World Without End which is waiting patiently on my Kindle.


message 4172: by MarciaB (new)

MarciaB - Book Muster Down Under | 225 comments Currently reading MasterMind by Helen Goltz by Helen Goltz


message 4173: by MarciaB (new)

MarciaB - Book Muster Down Under | 225 comments Thanks Michael - once I've finished, I will post my review and let you know.


message 4174: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)

Brenda | 80013 comments Mod
Marcia wrote: "Currently reading MasterMind by Helen Goltz by Helen Goltz"

Michael wrote: "I will be interested to read your thoughts on that one Marcia."

Me too;)


message 4175: by Phrynne, Series Queen! (new)

Phrynne | 15803 comments Mod
Mickey wrote: "Currently reading, listening to audio-book, The Pillars of the Earth"

I won't repeat my views on The Pillars of the Earth. Suffice it to say I have not given up yet. But it has come close several times.............


message 4176: by Mark (new)

Mark Phrynne wrote: "Mickey wrote: "Currently reading, listening to audio-book, The Pillars of the Earth"

I won't repeat my views on The Pillars of the Earth. Suffice it to say I have not given up yet. But it has come..."


I find Ken Follett misogynistic, prolix and annoying. But that's probably only because he is. Reading The Pillars of the Earth has this going for it: it took (slightly) longer to build the cathedral. All of that said, the novel wasn't actually intolerably boring.


message 4177: by Phrynne, Series Queen! (new)

Phrynne | 15803 comments Mod
Mark wrote: I find Ken Follett misogynistic, prolix and annoying........All that said the novel wasn't actually intolerably boring.

No it isn't intolerably boring, just slightly tedious. Usually a character in a book has a drink. Follett's characters grasp the wooden cup in their strong, sun burnt right hands and raise it slowly to their parched lips.
Is he misogynistic? Example???


message 4178: by [deleted user] (new)

Jen wrote: "Mickey wrote: "Currently reading, listening to audio-book, The Pillars of the Earth"

Oh I hope you like it Mickey - I did. I still haven't got to World Without End which is waiting patiently on my..."


I originally watched the T.V mini-series: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1453159/
I loved it so I bought the book, so I've been reading and listening to the audio-book so I can get through it quicker, as it's a big book. I'm liking it so far and have noticed a few things that are different between it and the mini-series.


message 4179: by Katie (new)

Katie (ieishanalani) Finished "Rock me" by Cherrie Lynn yesterday my library doesn't have the first book in the Ross siblings series so I'm buying it from BD
I'm now reading Voracious by V.K Forrest I'm going to be reading the Clare point books out of order as my library has most of them checked out but owell!!! I'm enjoying it so far :)


message 4180: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)


message 4181: by Tango (new)

Tango | 290 comments Just about to start Elliot Perlman'sThe Street Sweeper. Hope it's better than the last one of his I read. This one is for my in-person book club.


message 4182: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)

Brenda | 80013 comments Mod
Michael wrote: "Will be starting this one tomorrow. Celtic Blood"

I hope you enjoy it Michael:)


message 4183: by Tango (new)

Tango | 290 comments I have to admit that I am really enjoying The Street Sweeper despite my initial reluctance.


message 4184: by Mish (new)

Mish | 3601 comments Tango wrote: "I have to admit that I am really enjoying The Street Sweeper despite my initial reluctance."

Glad you're enjoying it. I thought it was excellent. What was the last book you read of his Tango?


message 4185: by Mark (new)

Mark Phrynne wrote: "Mark wrote: I find Ken Follett misogynistic, prolix and annoying........All that said the novel wasn't actually intolerably boring.

No it isn't intolerably boring, just slightly tedious. Usually a..."


Possibly, Phrynne, I'm being unfair to Follett, but the rape scenes struck me both as gratuitous, and as presented with an abstracted indifference, as in: "these things commonly happened." Well, they did (and they do), but they're not okay, and I'm not sure that historical authenticity motivated Follett more than a desire to appeal to a certain segment of his audience. It's been a long time since I read it, though, so perhaps my impressionistic sense betrays me. Do *you* think I'm being unfair? I suppose I'd tend to defer to your impression over mine, since I have a very low threshold of tolerance for violence of any sort.


message 4186: by Phrynne, Series Queen! (last edited Oct 21, 2012 08:52PM) (new)

Phrynne | 15803 comments Mod
Mark wrote: "Phrynne wrote: "Mark wrote: I find Ken Follett misogynistic, prolix and annoying........All that said the novel wasn't actually intolerably boring.

No it isn't intolerably boring, just slightly te..."


Actually one of the things I dislike most about Follett is that he over indulges in nastiness because that was supposed to be how it was at that time. I think I agree with you that he is trying to appeal to a certain segment of his audience.I don't know if you are in Australia but our illustrious leaders here are throwing the word misogynist around very freely at the moment and I am not entirely sure the glove always fits. Anyway you have helped me identify one of the reasons why I cannot like a book that so many other people adore!


message 4187: by Mark (new)

Mark Phrynne wrote: "Mark wrote: "Phrynne wrote: "Mark wrote: I find Ken Follett misogynistic, prolix and annoying........All that said the novel wasn't actually intolerably boring.

No it isn't intolerably boring, jus..."


Hi, Phrynne. No, I am *shudder* an American, and misogyny has become so well entrenched here, at least on the side of the political divide that apparently wants urgently to restore to women the rights and privileges they enjoyed in the ninth century, that I do always worry. The frequency of use of the word in Australia may, for all I know, exceed what's empirically warranted, but I feel as though the backward social momentum may be global. Howsoever, I think we agree generally about Follett's motives and many of the defects of his craft, and I really appreciate your comment.


message 4188: by Cathy (new)

Cathy | 123 comments Mark wrote: "I've just finished The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which puts one in mind of The Holy Roman Empire (which was neither "holy," "Roman" nor "an empire"). Diaz' book is interminable, fathomles..."

Have to agree - I hated this book and not being Spanish speaking some content was also impenetrable - can't see how making your audience feel dumb/shut out is a good idea??


message 4189: by Mark (new)

Mark Cathy wrote: "Mark wrote: "I've just finished The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which puts one in mind of The Holy Roman Empire (which was neither "holy," "Roman" nor "an empire"). Diaz' book is interminab..."

Hi, Cathy,

I think it appeals to critics, who think it's numinously multicultural and who, having studied languages in prep school, enjoy the feeling of ostensible superiority, even though they probably don't recognize half the words. I read Spanish perfectly well, and I found no instance in which substitution of the English word or phrase -- or providing a gloss, for heaven's sake -- would have vitiated the linguistic virtue of Diaz's work.


message 4190: by Tango (new)

Tango | 290 comments Mish wrote: "Tango wrote: "I have to admit that I am really enjoying The Street Sweeper despite my initial reluctance."

Glad you're enjoying it. I thought it was excellent. What was the last book you read of h..."


Seven Types of Ambiguity. I thought it was way too long with dysfunctional characters (some with weird fetishes). But it was a while ago ...


message 4191: by Mark (last edited Oct 22, 2012 12:15AM) (new)

Mark Et pourtant, Cathy, since there does parecer to be ein fantastische literary incentive para escribir bøger med beaucoup de untranslated слова, I tænke that yo am going to soumettre this very параграф for six kinds of prix littéraires. Se non è осуществимый, por lo meno, credo quia absurda est. What do you pensar? Should I übersetzen anything, or is this merveilleux just the way it ist?


message 4192: by Phrynne, Series Queen! (new)

Phrynne | 15803 comments Mod
I am currently reading The City of Dreaming Books and it is really wierd. Some of it is really clever a la Terry Pratchett kind of clever. And some of it seems a bit try hard to me. Has anyone else read this or anything else by Walter Moers?


message 4193: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)

Brenda | 80013 comments Mod
I started In Cold Blood by Truman Capote today.


message 4194: by Mish (new)

Mish | 3601 comments Tango wrote: "Mish wrote: "Tango wrote: "I have to admit that I am really enjoying The Street Sweeper despite my initial reluctance."

Glad you're enjoying it. I thought it was excellent. What was the last book ..."


Thanks Tango. I was curious to know what his other books were like but I'll probably give that one a miss


message 4195: by Sabina (new)

Sabina | 37 comments I've finished City of Veils: A Novel by Zoe Ferraris, which was excellent, and now I'm reading The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton. Joy!


message 4196: by Dale (new)

Dale Harcombe | 6890 comments Sure you'll enjoy it Sabina.


message 4197: by Dale (new)

Dale Harcombe | 6890 comments I've finished The Soldier's Wife by Joanna Trollope. Review up now
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13...


message 4198: by Brenda, Aussie Authors Queen (new)

Brenda | 80013 comments Mod
Dale wrote: "I've finished The Soldier's Wife by Joanna Trollope. Review up now
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13..."


http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... :)


message 4199: by [deleted user] (new)

Michael wrote: "Finished this one abit earlier. Celtic Blood.

For fans of historical fiction it is worth a read.

Review here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."


Great review Michael.


message 4200: by Phrynne, Series Queen! (new)

Phrynne | 15803 comments Mod
Just finished The City of Dreaming Books and I am sorry I wasted my time! It was just a bit too silly in the end.


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