Readerville Veterans discussion
What are you reading?

I'm reading Elizabeth Hardwick's Sleepless Nights which is beautiful and strange. Also still reading the Robert Altman bio on and off and a reread of A Room of One's Own.


I had the same experience with Harwood's The Ghost Writer. It was a mystery with some genre-mystery conventions, but was all new and exciting to me.


But I still love Nancy!

I gave up on the Harwood - far too much foreshadowing and angst.



Hum... After Fear of Flying, I must say I like The Postmistress better; I am past mid-book, but let me finish it, before I post an opinion...




I'll be interested to know what you think.

Then today we drove out to a real town and popped in to an indie bookstore. It's small, but they have a great fiction section. I bought the new Sue Miller, The Lake Shore Limited, which I didn't know had been released, and Norris Church Mailer's new memoir, A Ticket to the Circus, which looks to be filled with lots of great stories of my town and the world, and great gossip about the same. Also, photos. I am book-drunk.

Books -- I keep buying 'em. I just can't seem to get them read!

Hah! Good girl, LuAnn. I once kicked an Ann Coulter book behind a vending machine in the grocery store.
The Girl in the Dragon Tattoo is fun.

I read that as "Chuck Norris Church" - interesting association.
I'm really out of control too. eBooks combined with BB, here, and various remainder tables has turned my book buying into one extended click.
I'm 'reading' the 3 books (cause I haven't touched Ulysses in weeks) that are listed in my profile plus I started Open: An Autobiography.

Reading Sam Lipsyte's The Ask, and even though I'm halfway through, I'm still not sure how I feel about it. I'm thinking the comic novel just might not be my thing, although it's not so much the humor as the incredibly broad-based humor -- there's slapstick and sophisticated stuff, dry and silly and black and everything in between. So MUCH humor. But well done, no matter what. And certainly aimed at me and my people (NYC, academia, Jews, artists, parents, slackers).
And yeah, go Luann! And Karen.

'tis the season for good new books.

I really like The three Weissmanns of Westport. A few quibbles but nothing major. Now I am reading Hidden in the Shadow of the Master about three artist's wives who served as models for their husbands (Monet, Cezanne, Rodin). Sadly, it's not very good.

I have this AND the new McEwan. Now just have to find time to read!
I read to for blurbs that have just come out, Tatjana Soli's The Lotus Eaters and Brenda Rickman Vantrease's The Heretic's Wife. Enthusiastically recommending both!

>Hah! Good girl, LuAnn. I once kicked an Ann Coulter book behind a vending machine in the grocery store.
I love this gang.


Heh. My staging area turned into bookshelves. Its handy haivng a cabinet making husband. He got tired of all the piles. That was my permission to start buying more of course . . .
I'm not reading Solar, so can't comment, but am reading
The Anthologist and liking it quite a bit.

Both books I was waiting for at the library came in (The Privileges and Wolf Hall) but my branch is closed & I can't pick them up until tomorrow. I also have Cassandra at the Wedding coming up.

The NYT review of Solar was so negative it was kind of unbelievable. What say you, Nance?
I have been reading a bunch - Richard Russo's That Old Cape Magic (Nancy, did you read that?) which was sweet but not exactly penetrating. And a terrible book on 3 artists wives in 19th c France and a kind of boring book on rock history and who slept with who. Sad when that's a snoozer.
I am glad the decks are clear.


I have been reading a bunch - Richard Russo's That Old Cape Magic (Nancy, did you read that?)"
I have been holding that NYTBR aside until I finish SOLAR. So far, I'm liking it quite a bit and will keep you posted.
Richard Russo's novels have never held my attention for very long. They seem like novels that I should like, but I have not yet been grabbed by them. The same is true for me of TC Boyle--they always look delicious, but just don't work for me.

I have the Russo and have been kind of thinking I should read it at the beach -- I've only read one or two of his -- liked Straight Man -- funny enough. I find him entertaining but he doesn't wow me.

I loved Russo's The Risk Pool (eww on the ugly new cover, because the old one was nice) -- anyone else read it? It was an early one of his and I read it oh so many years ago and found it very wry, kind of sweet.
Right now I'm reading Tinkers, which won the Pulitzer for fiction. Really elegant and beautiful book, but it keeps putting me to sleep -- not because it's boring or badly written, actually the opposite. It's sooo dreamy, going off on reveries about old clocks and nature and weather, and I get into the rhythm and just drift off. Might have something to do with not sleeping enough too, but I'm still enjoying it a lot. And hey, it makes the book last longer, right?
I don't mean to make it sound boring because it's not at all. Reminds me a bit of William Maxwell's So Long, See You Tomorrow in its focus and very quiet, human scale.


Oi, TINKERS. I got that several months ago from Powell's Indiespensible collection. It was a ltd edition, signed, HC with slipcase. I returned it. In a related story, last year I sold my 1st edition of Olive Kittridge just before it won the Pulitzer. I am an idiot.

I started Mandrakes in the Promised Land which is an epistilary novel about a woman who is part of the Bloombury group and who goes to Palestine in 1906 to paint flowers mentioned in the Old Testament.Is that nutty enough for you? I simply have no idea where it's going to go.


Mandrakes from the Holy Land

It's interesting so far. I love the idea and I'm hoping that I am interpreting the tone right - there are occasional comments by Beatrice's doctors which are critical of her behavior. I am reading them as examples of typical-f-the times misogyny and homophobia, but I could be wrong.

I finished Disobedience



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I'm grumpy this morning. I'm really just avoiding reading. I'm not particularly loving Exploding Mangoes, but because I need to read it for Monday's bookclub I'm trying to get it done. And I really want to be reading other books instead.