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What I'm Reading OCTOBER 2013
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Cateline
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Oct 23, 2013 10:44AM

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I read most of REALITY HUNGER. I thought it got pretty repetitive after awhile. It seems to me that his POV--that the novel is essentially finished as a genre--is deeply embedded in the premise that what's important is how a genre changes and develops. Although that's of course important from a critical perspective, i.e., from the standpoint of intellectual history, I think most readers come to novels looking for a story that will intersect with their own experiences in a way that broadens them. And the novel is certainly not finished from that perspective.

Cateline, I do have the first six of the Lew Griffin books. (And I guess that's the whole collection of them!) I will read them. I just discovered that there was a sequel to DRIVE. I'll probably re-read the first book and then the sequel, Driven.

Glad you liked Stoner; it's one of my favorites.


I agree! Have read and really liked his Drive, Long-Legged Fly and Moth. Will get the one you read. Excellent writer!
Marge


Eighteen-year-old Mary Katherine (Merricat) Blackwood narrates this story of her family’s isolation due to past scandal. This psychological study of a disturbed family is a short quick read but still offers a rather full exploration of distorted thinking. The tension is based on not knowing how things will turn out; the reader is constantly waiting for something dreadful to occur and even when things go badly the reader knows this can’t possibly be the end of it. The result is a suspenseful read without gore or graphic description. Even when the book is finished, I’m left anxious and in suspense.
Book Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...




Eighteen-year-old Mary Katherine (Merricat) Blackwood narrat..."
This is the only Jackson I've read. I absolutely loved it! I know these people, heck, I'm related to some of them. heh :)
I haven't read Hill House, but saw the film, with Harris....can't remember her first name, in it.
Yeah!! Very scary. /shiver/


Me, too. I've had The Haunting of Hill House on my tbr for a few years, but I don't read much horror any longer. I also remember seeing the movie with Julie Harris (when I was in about 7th grade?).


Yes! Julie Harris was such a fine actress.
Book Concierge wrote: Me, too. I've had The Haunting of Hill House on my tbr for a few years, but I don't read much horror any longer. I also remember seeing the movie with Julie Harris (when I was in about 7th grade?).
I can't remember off hand if I actually finally bought a copy of HH, I meant to, but dithered. :)
I have never read horror anyhow. I started It by Stephen King twice, and couldn't. Just couldn't. I have read a few by King, but not the truly "horror" ones.



Wendy, please use more than the covers to identify your books. They are impossible to read on a computer without "hovering" and on an iPhone or an iPad, they are black boxes.


Atkinson is one of my favorite authors.



In December 2059 Father Emilio Sandoz returns to Earth, the only survivor of a Jesuit expedition which had left some 40 years previously to explore the planet Rakhat. He is broken in body and spirit, but once he has recovered his strength, he will be subject to an official inquiry as to what happened. Told in flashbacks, the novel is a gripping tale of man’s search for meaning and the role of faith and religion in shaping our lives. I was mesmerized from beginning to end, and when finished I wanted to start reading it again to make sure I had fully understood and appreciated every part of this novel. David Colacci does a wonderful job performing the audio.
Book Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...




In December 2059 Father Emilio Sandoz returns to Earth, the ..."
Book Concierge,
Such a good review for such a good book! It is one of my favorite books. If and when you read CHILDREN OF GOD, be prepared for a letdown. It's good but such a disappointment after THE SPARROW. (I won't say anything else, but I still recommend this sequel.)
And if you haven't read Mary Doria Russell's Doc, I really suggest this one. I don't like the Western genre, but I loved DOC.


In December 2059 Father Emilio Sandoz..."
I agree wholeheartedly. Don't let too much time go by before reading the sequel to The Sparrow. I just recently read it, after having read The Sparrow when it first came out. I was quite confused for a long time, and almost didn't finish. But I love Mary Doria Russell, so I persevered. I also agree about Doc. She has just finished a sequel to that one, too, called Epitaph, but I don't think it has come out yet. Her next project is about Poe. I follow her on Facebook, so I feel like her good friend.

Russell's new book Epitaph will be out in Spring of 2015. I follow her blog and just received a note regarding the new book.
Her new interest in Poe sounds quite interesting as well.

But I immediately moved on to another genre novel. This is George Pelecanos' new crime novel, The Double. It's so good in so many different ways, but I could start with mentioning how Pelecanos develops his characters. Everything just unfolds slowly--but not tool slowly ... it's actually the pace is JUST RIGHT--as we learn more and more about the main characters and even some minor characters. Everything seems so real. Pelecanos' writing is interesting in that nothing really stands out so that I would recognize one of his novels as being a George Pelecanos novel ... except for the way he writes about music, food,and restaurants. All of those shout out "This is a George Pelecanos novel!" I've said it before but if you want to read Pelecanos, DO NOT start with one of his first novels. The first two or three are just typical crime genre novels and have some of the bad traits of the genre. But Pelecanos has gotten better with almost every successive novel (how many writers do that?) and now writes novels that will last. SO if you want ot read a Pelecanos novel and haven't, just start with this one. I'm only halfway through it, and yet I know that I will not be disappointed by the time I get to the end.


http://www.theguardian.com/books/2013...

Russell's new book Epitaph will be out in Spring of 2015. I follow her blog and just received a note regarding the new book.
Her new interest in Poe sounds quite interesting as well."
It's hard to wait. The Poe interest is exciting.
About three years ago, I had brain surgery at Johns Hopkins. We got a unit at the Marriott Execustay Hotel about two blocks from Hopkins. Half of the Marriott building is an historic building, which has been totally renovated inside the building. As we arrived my wife noticed a sign on the building that read something like "This is the site where Edgar Allen Poe died." She was a bit horrified. I just looked over at her and said, "Don't worry about it, honey, I think he died in the gutter and not in our room." My neurosurgeon also left my sense of humor.



Cateline, I've been reading this series also. A lot of dead bodies in the previous book. ;-)

Cateline, I've been rea..."
I've only read the first two of the Tourist series, and now this one. Now I have to read the in-between ones. :)
I've finished An American Spy by Olen Steinhauer. Here is my review. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Ruth, I enjoyed The Ocean at the End of the Lane, but it was still a disappointment overall. It was definitely not one of my favorite Gaiman works.



One of my wife's reading groups had a fairly famous author (name concealed to protect the guilty) scheduled to call in and talk with the group about her latest book. At the last minute, the author's assistant called in and said that she was too tired to talk with the book group. It was very easy for the group to criticize the book. ;-)


A well written and researched biography of the master songwriter, Cole Porter. Born to wealth, his maternal grandfather, one of the richest men in Indiana, his mother, the indulged and indulgent daughter with a penchant for the arts, his nondescript father, a small-town druggist, Porter left his home state as an adolescent for eastern prep schools and later, Yale where his talent was instantly recognized. A natural sophisticate, Porter married a divorcee of equal urbanity and their union endured despite his homosexuality; they were perhaps more intellectual and social mates, than sexual ones. Porter’s success is legendary. He pursued a hedonistic existence and enjoyed life’s luxuries. His witty and cosmopolitan lyrics mirror a life that seemed charmed until a riding accident left him half-crippled and in constant pain. He endured 30 operations with remarkable fortitude, continuing his songwriting, yet gave way to depression in later years after an amputation rendered him unable to do the things he loved.

Have you ever seen the Spencer Tracy/Katherine Hepburn movie "The Desk Set"? I'm curious about how the book handles the onset of computerdom as opposed to the film. I'm guessing the movie is more... entertaining. I wonder how its "facts" are, though.

Marge

I really liked Under the Dome. King can tell a good story, can't he? I wondered all thru it how on earth the dome could have gotten there and loved his explanation.
I have his Doctor Sleep (sequel to The Shining) next to me on the table and am looking forward to reading it.
Marge


I have his Doctor Sleep (sequel to The Shining) next to me on the table and am looking forward to reading it.
Marge"
Hah, I can't wait for the explanation. So far it's Lord of the Flies vs. dystopia. Love it. :)
I haven't read The Shining, so Doctor Sleep isn't really on my radar at the moment. I can't always take King's stories.
He is a great storyteller, I agree.
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