You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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What are you Reading and Why
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Nancy from NJ
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Aug 29, 2013 01:11PM

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This is my first Jonathan Safran Foer book, I heard so much about him and I was curious. I think I'm about 25% through now, and it'..."
Your sentiments are exactly why I could never read this author. Did you know he is married to the author Nicole Krauss. Both are considered real star authors. They are among an elite group according to critics if not this reader. LOL


I had finally gotten a copy of The Bookman's Tale: A Novel of Obsession that I had reserved from my library, and I had to take it back last week - without being read because I was not allowed to renew it because there was a hold on it. I wanted to cry!


I purchased The Forgotten Highlander last year for my Burma read, and for that fact alone, it will be my choice. It is also 100 pages shorter than Unbroken. Because I'm woefully behind in all my challenges, shorter is better. :) Maybe some day down the road, I'll get to Unbroken.

Sounded good, didn't it? Time travel? Historical fiction? How could you go wrong? I decided to give it a try even thought the overall rating isn't that good.

My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Now reading The Big Sky. I might be mistaken, but I think he got a Pulitzer for this. It takes place in the 1830s and is about the first pioneers that traveled West, the Oregon Trail and the settlement of Montana. It is like one of the very first Westerns. Other of his books continue where this ends in 1846. Published about 60 years ago it is early historical fiction! The introduction discusses the authors view on what historical fiction can achieve that non-fiction cannot.
The Way West is the second book, and Fair Land, Fair Land the third.

Definitely! Let me know what you think. It looks like it might be hard for me to get hold of it - not stocked at library, not available on kindle either.

I've started Pirate Latitudes. Sarah and I are going to do a buddy read if anyone wants to join us.

So now I have begun reading The Burgess Boys on my I PAD for a challenge and Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library in book form from the library. Just now I added the audio of Me Before You. While I recently read this book, also for a challenge, it was available at the library while little else was and I thought it might be interesting to have another experience with this book.

Hmpf. I'll read some more pages until dinner is ready.

I've started Pirate Latitudes. Sarah..."
My library has it. I might join later this week.

Yeah I felt the same and abandoned it quite sometime back.


You may want to read Household Gods. That's another one where the character goes back in time, this time to the Roman era. I liked it a lot.

Finished listening to Goodbye Sarajevo: A True Story of Courage, Love and Survival. Atka Reid & Hana Schofield and it was creepy b/c it felt so close both in place and time, but the writing felt very ordinary.
My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Peggy, I pretty much felt the same way about this story as you do. I knew that there was a lot of hype and I read it for that. I thought about stopping too, but did not and continued on to the end. It did not resolve anything for me to have done so.

So now I have begun reading The Burgess Boys on my I P..."
Me Before You, I loved:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
The Burgess Boys, I thought was ok:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I couldn't read it because memories of 9/11 were too hard to deal with, but when the movie came out, I did go and see it. It was a very odd movie, with a plot that didn't make that much sense to me, but it was very poignant.

I also started Chickens, Mules And Two Old Fools: Tuck Into A Slice Of Andalucían Life which I put on my TBR because someone here wrote about it. I like travel and food stories, and this one's set in Andalucia, Spain, where I'll be going in 4 weeks time. I thought now would be a good time to read it :)


I put Fevre Dream on hold while I read this one. When I got Fevre Dream I was quite surprised that it was under 400 pages long - with Game of Thrones everything was 1000 pages or more so I thought Fevre Dream would be a quicker read but it's not - the writing is tiny on the page - I reckon if the font size was the same as the average book, it would be closer to 800 pages than 400! It is good though!

Read The Art of Racing in the Rain and Dogsbody for the Happy Ending Toppler.
Almeta's Art of Racing Review and Almeta's Dogsbody Review
Finished One Hundred Years of Solitude for a Buddy Read and Monthly Group Read alternate selection. Almeta's One Hundred Years Review
We are in the "It's not the heat, it's the humidity" weather here. So I loved this quote from 100 Years: "The air was so damp that fish could have come in through the doors and swum out the windows, floating through the atmosphere in the rooms."
Starting Stardust.

So now I have begun reading The Burgess ..."
Interesting that as much as I enjoyed the book,Me Before You I am almost enjoying the audio even more.
Thanks or your reviews.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I chose this book for a challenge and although I had two other alternates, thought I might enjoy this book more. I thought that because of how much I loved Olive Kitteridge but I do see some very mixed reviews. I may have to rethink about my alternates.

Skipping is good. I often wonder how some of these authors become so popular among the intelligentsia. Maybe they write for a different reader than me who is very mainstream and to the point.


I am now starting to read The Ocean at the End of the Lane


My review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
From Iceland to......
Sri Lanka! Now I have begun:
Anil's Ghost. I so like Michael Ondaatje's writing.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."
Oh that book! I cried like a baby and yet the ending was so uplifting!
I'm going to try another Jojo Moyes book soon, but there's no way it can live up to Me Before You.

I just spent over 2 hours reading to finish Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close and I'm so tired now. I read pretty fast just to get it finished, although I liked the final one-third of the book better than the rest. Still though, not my cup of tea, and I don't think I'll be reading his other books. Here's my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
That's my second 2-star book in a row. It's time to find something I really like again.




I have Forever on my bookshelf for forever. LOL. I tried reading it once but couldn't get into it so I put it away for another day. I have read several of Pete Hamill's other titles which I loved. They were Snow in August and Why Sinatra Matters. Two very worthwhile reads.

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."
Oh that book! I cried like a baby and yet the ending was so uplifting!
I'm going to try another Jojo Moy..."
Jojo Moyes has a new book out now
The Girl You Left Behind. I have it reserved at the library but may download it since there are so many reserves ahead of me for it now.



Chrissie - make no mistake about it, I don't do fantasy but
Snow in August is so much more or at least to me. It speaks of an unusual friendship and growing up different in a neighborhood and the great snowstorm of 1947. It is somewhat biographical about Pete Hamill's youth. Please try to read it and let me know if you don't enjoy it on some level.
BTW - Forever didn't pull me in either but now I am waiting for the mood to move me to read this book.


I haven't read too much romance in the last few years but borrowing an audiotape from the library by Lisa Kleypas and enjoying it, I decided to borrow another book in this series. Some of these heavy reads are a bit too much and a little comfort is good for one too.

I'll start reading The Light Between Oceans tomorrow for the monthly read.




I am also reading The Hive (because my daughter asked me to read it so we can talk about it.

Then I am listening to Kafka on the Shore while I cook for my holiday this week.

I won Wilson on Goodreads, but it is 800 pages and I haven't turned page 1 yet, my husband started it.

I also have to start My Promised Land, which my husband asked me to read. I think I might have bitten off too much!


Here are some good books that are not boring. You will through them lean about all the founding fathers.
John Adams and
Washington: A Life
Benjamin Franklin: An American Life
You will also learn about Jefferson. These books give not only the events but focus on the personalties of the people. I think McCullough is easiest to read.


Thanks for you suggestions. I read John Adams and I own Washington, which is on my TBR shelf which, btw, is getting large enough to threaten me with toppling, since it has moved from the overstuffed bookshelves to a closet, and some are even on my nightstand in what now looks like a tower. People used to joke about having to buy a new car when the ash trays were full (before anyone knew about the dangers of cigarettes), now I think I may have to buy another house to gain more book shelves. Just kidding!
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