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What are you currently reading......
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Lee
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Jul 25, 2015 02:22PM

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I really loved Half of a Yellow Sun :D looking forward to reading more of her work.
Kathy-Ann wrote: "June wrote: "Now reading: A Girl Called Problem, and Half of a Yellow Sun / Americanah / Purple Hibiscus"
I really loved Half of a Yellow Sun :D looking forward to ..."
I enjoyed both Half of a Yellow Sun and Purple Hibiscus. She is a great story teller.
I really loved Half of a Yellow Sun :D looking forward to ..."
I enjoyed both Half of a Yellow Sun and Purple Hibiscus. She is a great story teller.



I found the first enlightening and the latter both enlightening and moving


Also listening to the audiobook of The Broken Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin.


A light in the wilderness was great read Cynthia. One of my favorites! I will add the other to my TBR list

Spectacle: The Astonishing Life of Ota Benga by Pamela Newkirk.
I am also reading:
The Shadow of the Crescent Moon by Fatima Bhutto

Also reading Street Poison: The Biography of Iceberg Slim by Justin Gifford.




The Kitchen House by Kathleen Grissom. Seems like a good read. I haven't read a book that drew me in in so long so I really hope this does the trick.
^^^ I really enjoyed that book. It was very emotional for me.
I'm reading Cane River by Lalita Tademy and The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America by Erik Larson
I'm reading Cane River by Lalita Tademy and The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America by Erik Larson
Lulu wrote: "^^^ I really enjoyed that book. It was very emotional for me..."
I can't remember where I heard this book from. Probably this group. I'm about to start it tonight. I'm glad to hear you loved it, it's motivating for me.
I can't remember where I heard this book from. Probably this group. I'm about to start it tonight. I'm glad to hear you loved it, it's motivating for me.

I always plan to read over a three day holiday weekend - not that is always works out that way.
So here goes:
Jade Dragon Mountain by Elsa Hart
The Book of Phoenix by Nnedi Okorafor
Bull Mountain by Brian Panowich
Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta
House of Thieves: A Novel by Charles Belfoure

Have a great weekend.



I am reading a few books right now, The Picture of Dorian Gray, Black which is this months group read, and The Kitchen House. Some of you may remember that I am not good at reading multiple books because I'm not the best at focusing on several things at once. But I'm gonna give this an honest shot!

Let us know how the multiple reading will work for you.
I think it will help that the books are different from each other.
When I started out reading multiple books - I use to have one book that was my "commute" read back & forth from work and the other book was my "evening" read. That way I could compartmentalize and separate the two books like I did with other things I had to do in the day - such as work, cook dinner.
But if reading multiple books is not for you, then okay. At the end of the day (month)you are not necessarily reading more books as how many books you read in a given time period is based on how much time you spent reading, not doing multiple books.
Yes, Beverly it is a challenge for me. Right now I'm reading "Dorian Gray" at work during downtime because i can read the pdf version on my computer. I am reading The Kitchen house on lunch break and Black at home lol. So far it's working. Hopefully I'll be able to keep it up. And yes it does help that I am reading completely different types of books.



Ghost Summer by Tananarive Due
A Dictionary of Mutual Understanding: A Novel by Jackie Copleton
Listening to The Blood of Flowers by Anita Amirrezvani

I've just finished reading Witches, a tale of Scandal, Sorcery and Seduction which is a study of the persecution of three women from an area close to my home town in the early seventeenth century, and about historical witch-hunting in general during that era. I read it because I saw the author speak in 2013 at my local book festival. My mum is a heritage educator at the castle where the women were executed. The book is also interesting because Borman's research uncovered a conspiracy relating to the royal family behind the scapegoating of 'witches' in this case, which has not been previously noted.
Today I'm starting Kindred = )

I've just finished reading Witches, a tale of Scandal, Sorcery and Seduction which is a study of the persecution of three women from an ..."
I love witch stories - especially the NF ones. So adding your book to my tbr list. And it is always great when there is personal connection to reading a book.
I have an ARC copy of The Witches: Salem, 1692 by Stacy Schiff.
I am interested in how she will approach this story.
I loved what she did with Cleopatra: A Life.
Octavia Butler is one of my fav authors - I have loved everything she has written.


Borman covers a lot of ground and she mentions Salem and The Crucible, which I studied in high school. What most struck me about the book is that she writes as if the herstory is not over. In 2008 there was a petition to the UK government to apologise to historical victims of witch trials here.

That sounds really good & has high ratings. I've put it on tbr = )



Oooh this would be totally new on my radar if it weren't for the essay at the end of Kindred mentioning Delany... Looks interesting


That's another one on my list so I'm glad to hear you're liking it
(I'm currently reading Ursula Le Guin's first three Hainish books... which is really not AA historical fiction!)

That sounds real..." Great. Just finished it. It was realistic yet not a typical "typical life in" collection of stories :D really well written

I hope you are enjoying this book.
I have enjoyed many books, including this one by Maryse Condé.
She writes in French and her husband Richard Phileox does the translation into English. I thought the writing was beautiful in the translated English that I almost thought it would be worth learning French to read the books in the original.

Th..."
Adding this short story collection to my tbr list, though I am bad about reading short stories, as I usually want more.

I hope you are enjoying this book.
I ..."
I did enjoy it. There are so many different angles to think about with the story. I could spend a lot of time thinking about that book and still think about it some more. :) I did more some more of the author's books on my Want to Read list.
Books mentioned in this topic
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Black No More (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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