You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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Chit Chat About Books
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What are you Reading and Why

I began Fin & Lady: A Novel loving every page and wondering why I hadn't read than The Love Letter by this prolific author. But somewhere mid book, it began to be repetitive and not really as good as I thought it could have been,
I reread Murphy's Law by Rhys Bowen which I first read in 2009. I decided to read on with this series and had to read from the beginning to remember details. An OK read and I'm wondering how many more books about this Irish detective new to America I will read in the future.

My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I listened to the audiobook, and will now continue on with Speak, Memory, narrated by Stefan Rudnicki. It is autobiographical, speaks of synesthesia already in the second chapter and the writing by Nabokov is "Nabokovian" of course!

Well, it's happened again. I've decided not to continue reading the Molly Murphy series. I think I'm coming to the conclusion that I really don't like mysteries except for a handful of writers which include Nelson DeMille and Harlan Coben.



I am moving on to Gone Girl


Brief Review
Starting Earl Derr Biggers', The Black Camel for a Zodiac Challenge.
and then James Thompson's Lucifer's Tears for the tee in the Alphabet Challenge,
Chocolate Chip Cookie Murder by Joanne Fluke for a Connection Challenge.



Travis, this was my experience exactly with the Kafka on the Shore. The writing pulled me in but at times it was very confusing and disturbing. I couldn't wait to get back to it each time. I gave it 4 stars but may reassess. I wish I was smart enough to "get" all of it.


I started Railsea in audio for my M book and will give another try at Joe Nesbo for my N book. So many of you here like him that I will give The Bat another shot.






I'll be interested in what you think of Joyland since I have it on Audiobook.

I've only read 50 pages so far but I'm really enjoying it. I can feel it's going to be a good one! It's one of his shorter books too at only 283 pages so it shouldn't take me long to read it.

Sycamore Row by John Grisham
Doctor Sleep by Stephen King
The Girl You left Behind by Jojo Moyes (don't think this is brand new but it showed up as a new book - maybe in paperback)
The Daughter of Mars by Thomas Keneally
After Her by Joyce Maynard
The Returned by Jason holt
The Affair of Others by Amy Grace Lloyd
Dissident Gardens by Jonathan Lethem
Songs of Willow Frost by Jamie Ford
Someone by Alice McDermott
Sister Mother Husband Dog by Delia Ephron
The Quest by Nelson DeMille

I read Joyland recently after pretty much abandoning King's books BUT since I loved Joyland, I have placed many of King's titles on my TBR list. BTW - Joyland is old time King and more about a place, time and characters than it is about a mystery or murder.


I'm curious as to why you abandoned Stephen King?



Well, I did enjoy it, but it is really just a loooong prologue to the next book. It was an introduction to the important characters and their cultures. I am hoping the next one has more action!


Speak, Memory was fantastic, for how it is written. But it will not be every one's cup of tea.
My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Reading The Surrendered after To the End of the Land was not a good choice. A comparison made it totally impossible to appreciate "The Surrendered".
My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Both present multiple love relationships within a historical background. In one you empathize with the characters and in the other they remain at a distance. Grossman's is fantastic.
I have begun Snow Hunters and am thoroughly enjoying it. For me HOW an author strings together his words is VERY important. This is an audiobook narrated by he author and it really works well, at least so far.
On kindle I am reading The People in Between: A Cyprus Odyssey for the history of the Cypriot conflict. The writing isn't exceptional, but the historical facts are well woven into the fictional tale. I have just begun.


I really liked the film - I wonder how true to the book it is - I have it on my TBR. Freaking the family out with the mask sounds fun too!

I want a mask!

I believe Helen is in the UK, unless she's moved across the pond while I wasn't looking. I think the confusing came in with RL, which some of us abbreviate Real Life down to. Ie. not a Goodreads bookclub.
Enjoy your trip. Boston is on my list of places to go to if I make it to the States one day.

Now, I'm trying to decide what to start next. Maybe I should go back to my original book for "L" - Last Night in Twisted River.

I do this challenge for other groups both for titles and another one for authors but the challenge is for a year and you slot them in as you read them.
Will someone let me know, please? I am a mood reader and rarely if ever plan out my books except for my f2f book groups which meet monthly.

I haven't seen the movie but they say the novel is much darker and the characters more evil. In order to make the movie enjoyable it had to be lightened up a little is what I've heard.

You need to read the books in order of the alphabet. I gave quite a bit of consideration to this when I set up the challenge and decided to go with the requirement. It helps to make the challenge... challenging! :)
This thread will give you all the details on the challenge.

I will have to give it go then - sounds good!


I really liked that book, Peggy. Enjoy! :)




I pick up every Murakami book I see in my second hand bookshop, whether I know anything about them or not. And this was the last one. So looking forward to your thoughts!
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My reivew: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Moving on to The Surrendered. I have wanted to read this for ages. Setting Korea.
I am listening to To the End of the Land. I am absolutely loving it. How it depicts parent/child relationships is unbelievably good. In addition there is the theme of the Israeli conflict. I haven't read such good fiction in ages, but that is me. Maybe you will react differently. One bit of advice is that before you pick this you should know that the beginning has a long prologue that is set when the three main characters (Ora, Avram and Ilan) are young, sick, scared and alone in a hospital. Only later do you flip to the trip Ora and Avram take walking in Galilee.