Readerville Veterans discussion
What are you reading?
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Miriam
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Jan 14, 2010 10:25AM

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Just back from five days of storms on the Inverness Ridge at Point Reyes -- I can pick 'em. At the least the rental cottage was waterproof and the we only lost electricity twice, 10 hours and 15 hours respectively.

"Disobedience" by Naomi Alderman
"The Confessions of Edward Day" by Valerie Martin
"The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox" by Maggie O'Farrell
"Foreign Land" by Jonathan Raban
"Family Money" by Nina Bawden
All finest kind.

It worked! Also, that's what I'm reading today and I like it very much. Anyone else read it?


I'm almost done reading Good to a Fault and am liking it very much. The blurbs are all over the place. One says ominous and the other likens her to Barbara Pym. Neither are correct, but I think the Pym comparison is closer. Very Canadian in ways I can't put my finger on, she's kind to her characters and I think her exploration of the "good Samaritan" an interesting one.
I'd forgotten about those Shinn books. I think I tried the first one once. It didn't take, but was interesting enough that I've always wanted to try again.



Having an indie is great. We're lucky to have McNalley, which is an excellent spot for books. (I don't think you'll regret getting is Cordel).

Books are like sex. It's the thrill of the chase.

Welcome home. I'm sorry the weather was terrible--I've seen a lot of those vacations. They're . . . unexpected.



And, yes, I am now reading 4 or 5 books at the same time. It's just something I'm going through.

I can't seem to sort the posts by date anymore, have to manually scroll down to the end.

The Twin by Gerbrand Bakker AND
The Confessions of Noa Weber by Gail Hareven
I want to read them both and they're not available in my entire library system. Plus, I wanted to BUY something.

I am still working on The Case for God, and finding it interesting but hard going.

I am reading Fuschia Dunlop's Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper which is about how she went to China for work and ended up studying the history of food and Chinese cooking. It's marvelous, especially if you don't mind reading about eating squidgy bits of offal.

I am reading like 7 books at once, but I'm trying to concentrate on RL book group books first. So I'm reading Gone With The Wind, which I am absolutely adoring, and The Elegance of the Hedgehog, which I just started tonight. After about 60 pages, I'm loving that one too! It's funny and smart and a little mean, just like me! :D

Oh, and I forgot to mention that I also purchased The Interrogative Mood: A Novel? by Padgett Powell. It was a total impulse, and the book is tiny. Anybody read it?




I finished Sharks Fin and Sichuan Pepper which was a well written, incredibly thoughtful book about eating in China. And I finished the first Colin Cotterill Dr Siri mystery and am onto the second one Thirty Three Teeth.

Still, I was one of the people who also loved Special Topics in Calamity Physics, so it's not surprising me that I'm loving this one too! Now I need to read The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie and Little Bee, because apparently they have precocious young girl narrators too. I seem to really like that. (Also loved What Was Lost, with a precocious girl who got dead.)


Anyone else besides Kat and me going to see Katharine at Kepler's?


OK, trying this linking thing so I can say I'm currently reading MJ's The Reincarnationist -- excited for her that the show debuts next week.





Dang. OK, just Kindled it -- looks fabulous.

I started Pearl Abraham's book American Taliban. it is such an interesting subject but the writing is not working for me. At all. It's an intriguing choice for her since she comes from a background that some would call religiously extreme.

Reading Elzabeth Taylor's At Mrs Lippincote's for the Virago Group and still plodding along on Robert Altman: The Oral Biography.

I just finished reading Nikolski (for some reason the linking feature isn't working for me, and I can't figure out why it isn't). A very quick, easy and fun read. It reminded me of Winterston's fiction a bit. My only real quibble is that he introduces some fabulous ideas (a family that tends towards piracy and rootlessness, maps, identity hacking, the place/role of geography, the archeology of garbage) but really goes no where with them. Nonetheless, I'd recommend it plus one of the characters runs a second-hand bookstore.
I continue to trudge through Quicksilver, as well as pick at those other two huge books on my list. But I started reading Ghosts by Ceasar Aria this morning. It's short and promising.
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The Luminaries (other topics)
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