Memoirs and Biographies We Love discussion
What'cha readin'?

I hae just finished a very, very good book: Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman. I highly recommend it. My review folows: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/.... Let me just add that it is long and it does have a lot of history in the book. This is simply because she was a powerful leader. You meet her a a leader and as an individual. I admire her tremendously. I learned so much. I did get tiored at points when I felt I was drowning in the history, but that is only due to my own ignorance. I believe that every time you reread this book you will appreciate it more. If you knew what this woman did. And in private she wanted no fuss, no impoliteness. A very intriguing woman that this author has done an excellent job in bringing to life.

I just finsihed my first audio A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Yes, I did enjoy it but I felt that it is primarily written for a young adult audience.OK, maybe also for those adults that want to reminisce. I felt that it was tring too bluntly to convey a message. I didn't feel it engaged me as it did when I was a child. I absolutely adored the book when I was in the pre-teens. My GR review explains in more depth what I enjoyed and what disappointed me on my second reading: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
A book has been written about the author Betty Smith. I give a link to that book in my review. I cannot find it with the button here.... Anyway, what is interesting is that "Brooklyn", although clearly a novel, is loosely based on the real life experiences of the author.

Well shoot, that's disappointing. I just picked this one up from the library to read with another group.






I did end up loving it, Chrissie. But I definitely went into it expecting YA and the helped. Thank you!

I did end up loving it, Chrissie. But I definitely went into it expecting YA and the helped. Thank you!"
I am not surprised. It is a book that must be read at least one inyour life.
Lisa wrote: "I loved the book. Just finished reading "Leaving the Saints." It was a chilling tale that made for very good reading."
I have not read Leaving the Saints: How I Lost the Mormons and Found My Faith, but it must follow Expecting Adam: A True Story of Birth, Rebirth, and Everyday Magic which I am glad I have read. If you haven't read that, I do recommend it. It must be about the birth of the same child. The two books have the same author.

I am not surprised. It is a book that must be read at least one inyour life..."
I agree.



I will begin again The Silence of Trees. I put it down to try an audio,



Now I will begin The Tricking of Freya. What do I think the book is about? A multigenerational saga filled with Icelandic myths, legends, culture and landscapes. Good writing. Exploration of family secrets. I hope I am right.
Neither are biographies or memoirs.

I just completed Cathedral of the Sea, which I am very glad I read. Here follows my GR review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... While this is historical fiction Many of the characters are true.

Now I will go to Croatia and read The Tiger's Wife. I have heard such good things about this book, and I enjoyed the Kindle sample. I realize now that what is most important to me, more than plot, is an author's writing style.







I will now start A Night to Remember. I am listening to the audiobook.

The book about the Titanic was clear, factual and concise. It is not for those of you who want a melodramatic rendering of the facts as shown in the movie. I enjoyed it. It gave the facts and drew a picture of what really happened. There have been many false stories drawn of this event! You learn of what happened to those in steerage. You get a minute by minute account of what happened. There is an epilogue with source info.
Concerning Nefertiti: I have read that the historical details are to be accurate. Are they?

I picked up RITS free a few days ago for my Kindle. My GR friend Misfit was so kind and told me about it being free at Amazon. I have been waiting to read UT for ages, and if I like this then I can read The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat & Other Clinical Tales as an audiobook! That is suppose to be really good too.
Picking books to read is almost as much fun as reading them. I NEVER have trouble finding books to read!
I have a feeling the latter will draw me more...... Will I end up reading one first?
I just finished Bloodroot. Here follows my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...


I'm reading Catherine the Great right now. I really like it, although it is slow reading at times. Fascinating. I'm learning a lot that I never knew.

I am glad you like it! I have discovered that Massie's "Peter the Great" has come out on both Kindle and in audiobook format. I absolutely must read it.

Thanks for letting me know. I'll put it on my to-read list.



I gave up on Uncle Tungsten. My review explains why: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/....

I recommend this book for those curious to know more about about Robert Louis Stevenson and his wife. She and they traveled and traveled and traveled. Through reading this book you will learn about life in the US, Scotland, Hawaii, Polynesia and France at the turn of the 20th Century. Fascinating stuff!
I am still listening to Dancing at the Rascal Fair. I am enjoying every minute of that too. It is clearly a comforting read, but now something heart-wrenching has happened. This has been brewing from the start, but I am impressed by Doig's ability put "flesh on the bones", to nuance the central theme. This book is for those who enjoy character portrayal. It is also of interest to those curious about pioneer life in western USA, the immigrant situation and the National Forest Parks instituted by Teddy Roosevelt.

Now I am going to read In the Time of the Butterflies.
I don't enjoy light, fluffy reads. That seems pretty obvious here.


I read Garson Kanin's play, A Gift of Time, which is based on this true story. It's the account of the last two months of a man, the writer Charles Wertenbaker, by his wife, the writer Lael Tucker Wertenbaker, and how he chose to die on his own terms. I liked the play so well that I hunted down the book that inspired it. So far I'm thoroughly enjoying it.

I finished In the Time of the Butterfliesand here follows my review:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
This is historical fiction. Maybe too much fiction for me.

I have already begun listening to The Art of Racing in the Rain! I love it. I hesitated to read this book when my last curly coated retriever, Skye, was very, very old. Now I have Oscar and I can read this book. ;0) I know, I know it's schmaltzy......

Thanks for the suggestion. I am old enough to remember the George Burns/Gracie Allen Show in the fifties and you ar so right, Gracie was a comedic genius. Thanks so much for your review. I need a laugh right now!

I finished When a Crocodile Eats the Sun: A Memoir of Africa. This is my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... The author is writing about his father and life in Zimbabwe.

My two reviews:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... and
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I will start today The Sacred Willow: Four Generations in the Life of a Vietnamese Family. I think I have read another book by this author, but I cannot find it here on GR. This is about one Vietnamese family over four generations. Within the family, members did not hold the same political beliefs. It is a biography.

I have read several books since posting here. I have given both The Sacred Willow: Four Generations in the Life of a Vietnamese Family and The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures four stars. Here are my two reviews:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I had written in my private notes to myself for both of these books the following: ABSOLUTELY MUST READ!
Do yourselves a favor. Read these books. I love reading about people who live in countries I am not well acquainted with. What about you? None of these books are fiction. They are concerned with the lives of real people.
I am also listening to The Children's House of Belsen. I confused this book with The Girls of Room 28: Friendship, Hope, and Survival in Theresienstadt and thought I would be learning about the camp near Prague. Still, this one is getting interesting too. I was just so stumped since it was going in a different direction than I expected. I would have to say that the author's choice of word is a bit strange, and I find the narrator kind of makes it more melodramatic than it need be. The story itself is horrible enough without the added intonation. I do not regret choosing it.

Debra Ann Pawlak, Author
Bringing Up Oscar, The Men and Women Who Founded the Academy
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Hollywo...

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