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So, What's On the Bedside Table these Days? -- Part 2
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Deborah, Moderator
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Jan 01, 2014 02:22PM

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Just finished Judge Sotomayor's My Beloved World and now wish for the time to read the bios of at least several of the other Supreme Court judges. I very much recommend Sonia's story -- I found it slow going to start, but faster towards the end. It became a very satisfying look at a remarkable life.


I have that Vincent Price biography on my TBR shelf--love him! Enjoy! :-)
I'll have to put the Wilkie Collins book on my tbr shelf. I'm reading a modern novel called Ready Player One. It's hard to put down.



That's great! I've had that book in the back of my head, not sure if I wanted to try tackling it or not.
Erica wrote: "Just finished "The Aspern Papers" by Henry James and it made me so curious to speak with others about it that I found this web site and joined it!"
Erica, I am so glad that you enjoyed The Aspern Papers, and highly recommend that you read Edith Wharton's The Touchstone. You'll find some amazing parallels, and perhaps you'll even walk away with a better appreciation of Wharton. Please do let me know your thoughts about her novella if you read it. Cheers!
Erica, I am so glad that you enjoyed The Aspern Papers, and highly recommend that you read Edith Wharton's The Touchstone. You'll find some amazing parallels, and perhaps you'll even walk away with a better appreciation of Wharton. Please do let me know your thoughts about her novella if you read it. Cheers!


Hi Lori, I read Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You, My Lad after learning it had been voted Scariest Story Ever (I can't remember by who.) I read a few other stories in the same volume and while I found them quite atmospheric, they certainly didn't strike me as the scariest ever.
I think in his time MR James must have been quite innovative, and I can imagine his stories working well when read aloud by a crackling fire with a winter storm blowing outside... but I suspect with so many horror stories/movies around nowadays we're too used to the genre. It's hard to read his stories in the same light as his contemporaries would have approached them.


My Audible read is "The Brutal Telling" by Louise Penny, which I listen to when I go to the gym. I rarely read contemporary works; they mostly disappoint me aside from some of the mysteries. I don't think I am a snob--I just think I was raised to appreciate the cadences and complexities of the 19th-century novel.

Isn't it wonderful? I am stalled at the moment (at about CD 17 of 40), but am re-listening to it. This will be my third pass through the book, and it is not likely to be my last.
Natalie wrote: "I have spent 2015 slowly rereading War and Peace. It's well worth it. I am just finishing "The Edwardians" by V. Sackville- West and am also going to slowly reread Moby Dick for a book club in th..."
I read popular stuff in bed, and am also reading the Brutal Telling.
I read popular stuff in bed, and am also reading the Brutal Telling.

I do read contemporary lit and sometimes love it, but when I pick up one of the classics it's like taking off a corset, as though this is literature in its most natural state, the way it was meant to be.

Abigail wrote: "Recently finished A Tale of Two Cities; currently reading John Halperin’s life of Jane Austen and Die I Will Not by S. K. Rizzolo."
I've loved Tale of Two Cities since I had to read it in middle school. Yes, I've reread it since
I've loved Tale of Two Cities since I had to read it in middle school. Yes, I've reread it since

The other is "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande, which explores eldercare and finding the balance between safety and quality of life. Having been my dad's caretaker until he died earlier this year at the age of 93, these issues are all too familiar. Very interesting.

It was great. I think I want to read more of the older Australian novels if that was anything to go by. Surprisingly relatable for over 100 years ago!
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

The Professor by Charlotte Brontë
Let Me Be Frank With You: A Frank Bascombe Book by Richard Ford
Bleeding Shadows by Joe R. Lansdale
Two different books by Icelandic author Gyrðir Elíasson and listening to Kansas City Noir on audio :-) I like listening to short stories in my car, as I can usually hear 2 stories each day driving to work and home again.

Kate wrote: "I just started The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare by G.K. Chesterton"
I read that and enjoyed it
I read that and enjoyed it
Deborah wrote: "Kate wrote: "I just started The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare by G.K. Chesterton"
I read that and enjoyed it"
I have never read Chesterton and am looking forward to reading this.
I read that and enjoyed it"
I have never read Chesterton and am looking forward to reading this.
Kate wrote: "Deborah wrote: "Kate wrote: "I just started The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare by G.K. Chesterton"
I read that and enjoyed it"
I have never read Chesterton and a..."
That title was my first Chesterton too
I read that and enjoyed it"
I have never read Chesterton and a..."
That title was my first Chesterton too

Very strange book. We'll be interested in hearing what you think of it.
I'm reading Twenty Years After by Alexandre Dumas. It's the sequel to The Three Musketeers. It's really good, but there are a lot of political intrigues and I'm having a hard time keeping the characters straight! So right now I'm trying to find a character guide that doesn't give away any spoilers.

Interesting! I read TTM years ago, but had never heard of Twenty Years After. Do you find that the French names make it easier or harder to keep track of characters, or that it doesn't make a difference?
I've always had a problem with Russian novels because they use different names for characters in unfamiliar ways. I realize, for example, that in an English language novel if somebody is introduced as Robert and later somebody refers to Bob, I know that's (usually) the same person because that's a culturally understood abbreviation for Robert. But with Russian names I don't have the same cultural understanding of diminutives, so I'm more easily confused.
Wondering whether you're finding the same in Dumas, or whether it isn't an issue. (Or maybe you read French so it's all familiar territory.)

I agree with you that The Boys in the Boat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics is very enjoyable and filled with fun facts. One of the daughters found Brown to tell her father's story and the story of the crew. It, of course, was also the year of Jessie Owens at the Games.
The care of the aging book that I enjoyed this year was the one that had captured a National Book Award nomination: Roz Chast's Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant?.
Oh yes, Twenty Years After is a sequel that still has all four musketeers in it. There's a third one too that includes the "Man in the Iron Mask" story. I'm hoping to read that too.
Yes, the French names do make it more difficult. I know this sounds terrible, but they all sound similar to me, LOL! And I'm reading on a Kindle, so it's hard to go back and find out where I last saw the character's name! I agree about the Russian names as well.
Yes, the French names do make it more difficult. I know this sounds terrible, but they all sound similar to me, LOL! And I'm reading on a Kindle, so it's hard to go back and find out where I last saw the character's name! I agree about the Russian names as well.

It's awkward, but sometimes I bookmark my place and then search for a name or incident I need to refresh my mind on. My original Kindle won't search just within the book I'm reading, but my newer one will. (Had to get a new one when the battery on my original K died and Amazon didn't have replacements. Eventually found an after-market battery so it's working again, so now it's by my bedside and my new one by my reading chair.)


Let us know if it does. When I read it, I found some quite exciting passages, but a lot of interludes which I found went on far too long. But others will see it differently, so let us know what you find.
Abigail wrote: "Currently reading The Mysteries of Udolpho. A campy delight in the first few chapters, though I can see how it may swiftly pall."
I liked "The Mysteries of Udolpho," but it did get kind of overly melodramatic at some points. I don't drink at all, but every time I read Anne Radcliff, I think, hmm, someone should start a drinking game where you take a drink everytime someone faints.
Everyman, I have an old Kindle, so the bookmarks don't work very well. Sometimes I try to download the same book on pdf on the computer, so I can search for names there. But I usually read on the bus, so then I have to wait til I get home.
I liked "The Mysteries of Udolpho," but it did get kind of overly melodramatic at some points. I don't drink at all, but every time I read Anne Radcliff, I think, hmm, someone should start a drinking game where you take a drink everytime someone faints.
Everyman, I have an old Kindle, so the bookmarks don't work very well. Sometimes I try to download the same book on pdf on the computer, so I can search for names there. But I usually read on the bus, so then I have to wait til I get home.

Or bursts into tears! :-)

:) I don't drink either, but even if I just tried to drink a cup of tea each time, I would be wired and bloated by the end of the first few chapters.
I'm reading Zanoni by Edward Bulwer-Lytton right now. Someone I really respect recommended it several years ago, but I don't remember why. He is a Sufi, so I suppose it was because of the mystical aspect of the book. I'm a little under halfway through and it's really interesting. Definitely different from anything else I've read!

I started Villette for the upcoming book read. After the first chapter I am hooked. I may need to read The Life of Charlotte Brontë after finishing this.
Meregwyn wrote: "I started Villette for the upcoming book read. After the first chapter I am hooked. I may need to read The Life of Charlotte Brontë after finishing this."
The Victorian group will be reading that book in March - the life of Charlotte bronte
The Victorian group will be reading that book in March - the life of Charlotte bronte

Deborah wrote: "Meregwyn wrote: "I started Villette for the upcoming book read. After the first chapter I am hooked. I may need to read The Life of Charlotte Brontë after finishing this."..."
I am in that group as well. I thought after reading Villette, reading about her life seemed like the logical book to read next.
I am in that group as well. I thought after reading Villette, reading about her life seemed like the logical book to read next.
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