Readerville Veterans discussion
What are you reading?
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Lauren
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Jun 16, 2009 09:46AM

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"The Missing" is another example of Gautreaux's superb storytelling skills. He takes his sweet time telling the story, with several detours which might at first glance appear to have little relevance but later prove to be absolutely essential to the rolling-snowball momentum of the plot. And yet, you are never ever bored. This is a story about a man surrounded by violence, who is urged to give in to violent vengeance, but yet resists every step of the way, believing that issues can be resolved without resorting to the gun, the knife, or the fist. It is a profound and beautiful novel.
....And I certainly haven't done it justice in this short space.

Not sure what's up next. Just read a short story, "Rope," by Katherine Anne Porter this morning because we were talking about it at dinner last night as an example of an author knowing what NOT to put in. Really good stuff, and I want to read more in this collection of hers. Right now I'm plowing through a backlog of New Yorkers and the new Believer.

On that note I've 'joined' the Infinite Jest summer reading/group thing and have started reading it. So far it's a bit of a narrative ride, but I expected that.
Lauren, do report back on the Sunee book when you're done. I'd be interested in how you feel at the end of it.

Lisa, I'm a big fan of KAP. If you end up getting more into her, the Joan Givner biography is excellent. She had an interesting life and was a consummate liar so much that she told about herself while she was living was untrue. Fabulousness itself.
Miriam, did you read Trail of Crumbs? It's hard to feel sorry for someone as they are driving through Provence in their Saab on their way back from a rose-petal facial, but I do.



I'm just finishing off another YA novel (Trickster's Choice) given to me by my niece which I enjoyed despite its predictability (or maybe because of its predictability)
And have started reading Infinite Jest. I'm almost caught up with the online group that's reading it. It's a real ride. I'm only 70 or so pages in and my view could shift, but so far it's quite exhilarating.
I'm reading Fugitive Visions, the new memoir by Jane Jeong Trenka. It is achingly beautiful, exquisite, searing.
Lauren wrote: "I started The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao and I am totally into it. "
I reallllllllly wanted to love this book but somehow did not.
I reallllllllly wanted to love this book but somehow did not.

I started Oscar Wao last night, but I was sucked back into Infinite Jest this morning. I was planning to read Infinite Jest in small bits over the summer as part of the Infinite Summer project but it's really spectacular and I'm not sure I'm going to be able to read it in bits. His facility and control of the English language combined with his complete lack of calculation is mind blowing. Plus he's funny, warm and its fun to hang out in a book with someone that's as bright as he was (is).

I'm going to look for Diaz's short stories.


I'm a bit bogged down in the grandfather/daughter/trujillo section - suspect what's going to happen and not really wanting to go there. I also think the quest is lame and suspect that Diaz thinks that Oscar is lame too which is problematic. Almost always happy when the sister is in the picture though - she's a good character. The ride is bumpy, but I've decided to forge through the last bit and finish it.
David, my dad read Kidnapped to us when we were kids and I'm tempted to read it to my boys.

Yes, Mir, finish it. But you are right. The quest is lame.

I woke up in the middle of the night last night and decided I wasn't up for Hemon's The Lazarus Project immediately after The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, so I picked up Burning Marguerite and think I'll stick with that. I'm also going to finish the Manguel (The City of Words) that I started months ago. Its really good, and a shame to leave it languishing on my shelf unfinished.



Lauren has got me hooked on -- I said hooked on ? Addicted to are the words to be used here... -- Donna Leon's series with detective Brunetti. Nothing special about these mysteries, but one DOES get used to Brunetti, his family and friends, his office at the Questura and all... Reading now her Death and Judgement , and as I have mentioned on Readerville's Notebooks, I really like Brunetti and his wife Paola's discussion on morality.

I'm starting Wendy Wasserstein's novel for something fun and light this week. I'm on a Pym kick this summer so may read Some Tame Gazelle as I'm not sure I ever did read this one.
What would anyone recommend for my upcoming beach week? What has knocked you out lately?

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society most definetely... Believe me, you will not regret having taken it to the beach... It takes place in the aftermath of WWII, and is constituted solely of letters from and to this writer Juliet to her best friends and to the Islanders who become her friends too... You know the kind of book whose characters become friends of yours ? Well, this is that kind of book...

I'm reading Jane Hamilton's Laura Rider's Masterpiece (very funny) this weekend, and I have Trollpe's The Bertrams underway as well. Dawn Powell's Dance Night needs to be started in a day or two.
Susan P.



I'm reading The Man Who Loved Books too Much by Alison Hoover Bartlett. She's not an ex-Readervillian, but would have been a lovely addition.


http://www.npr.org/templates/story/st...

I am reading Adam Haslett's Union Pacific. Did anyone read his stories You Are Not a Stranger here?
Very fine.

I'm now--and still--reading Museum of Innocence. I really, really love it.


I'm reading a library copy of Museum of Innocence, but I'm getting through it slowly. I think I might buy it--so I can continue reading slowly and so that I can have it.

I'm reading a library copy of Museum of Innocence, but I'm get..."
So people at RV didn't like it, Nancy? That was before my time, I'd love to have heard that discussion. I mostly like it so far, but I can understand how it would be off- putting to some people.

I'm reading a library copy of Museum of Innocenc..."
I read The Corrections, but after I finished, I didn't find it memorable. I never got as fired up as the people in the Readerville discussion.
Right now, I'm reading The Bishop's Man, the Giller winner for 2009, and enjoying both the style and the characters.

I always do this. If a book sounds interesting and I find out that I can't obtain it, I start really really wanting it.

The Corrections was like a literary Truman Show. I felt manipulated and emotionally micromanaged, but he did it really, really well. A lot of the writing was beautiful. And although it was some of the most dispassionate narrative I've read in a while, he somehow made me feel the compassion that the writing left out. And all of it very purposefully. It was a strange reading experience, but I was absorbed and entertained all the way through, so OK.
Now I'm reading Wolf Hall and just loving every bit of it. She's such a good storyteller, and the characters breathe.

So now you know my dirty little secret of 2009.


So now you know my dirty little secret of 2009.
Hey, we all have 'em. Mine aren't necessarily literary, though...
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