You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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What are you reading and why? Jan-Jun 2014
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Pragya
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Mar 22, 2014 12:09PM

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I'm still working on Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History (paperback) and Nemesis (ebook). Later today, I will start my next audiobook, Croak.


I'm reading this at the moment. Great review Dem! It is not uplifting no but I still find that I am interested by it and want to read on. I am glad I am reading it at the same time as lighter reads!


I'm reading this at the moment..."
Thanks Sarah, look forward to your thoughts.

Audio: i am listening to Greywalker, next are Insurgent, another chunkster.


Your connections are soooo clever Travis!☻


Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury
AND for Stephen King Recommends Group Read
Almeta's Review of Something Wicked This Way Comes
Old Bones (Gideon Oliver Mystery, #4), Aaron Elkins
I can always count on "The Skeleton Detective" to provide interesting entertainment, AND excellent Challenge-fit titles.☻
The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood
AND for Flick-Lit Challenge
Almeta's Review of Handmaid's Tale
Midnight Tales, Bram Stoker
AND for Shortcut Challenge
Almeta's Review of Midnight Tales
The Midwife's Tale, Sam Thomas
AND for Yearbook Challenge
Almeta's Review of Midwife's Tale
Midnight's Children, Salman Rushdie
AND for b4iDie, In-a-Land-Far-Far-Away, Left-Over-Stew Challenges
Why, oh why have I ignored Rushdie for so long?
Read for YLTO! March Challenge
Unspoken Secrets, Lynette Mather
AND for Yearbook Challenge
Almeta's Review of Unspoken Secrets
Now Reading for YLTO! Group Read and Chunkster
The Round House

No, no, I really do like your imaginative connections. This is the first time that I have looked at them all.
As for one word titles, I'll be using that as well. Whether one, two or three, etc. I am, however, claiming the phrase: "(excluding a,an,the)". Something the moderators have inserted into their challenge rules regularly. Just a hint in case you can use it.☻

Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury
AND for Stephen King Recommends Group Read
Almeta'..."
Almeta,
Please,tell me that you are not reading all does books... "That's a LOT of books"... :)

Oh no, I should have said that I had completed them. ☻ They are just some of my March reads that I had not listed yet, and for which I finally considered writing reviews!
Today I am reading only The Round House! and then will start Medicus and the Disappearing Dancing Girls.



Now I'm reading Telling it Straight and Stranger in the Forest. Gave up on The Singing Top: Tales from Malaysia, Singapore, and Brunei. Just not enjoying it now. Will save it for another time.
For the March "No place like home" challenge, that I've really been appreciating, I've read these: La Salle's Ghost; The Girl From Long Guyland; Sleep Toward Heaven; and Spanking Watson. Have more I want to read. May make this a linking theme for later in my chunkster challenge reading.
Also exploring my newly acquired, replacement copy of The New Complete Book of Mexican Cooking. My old copy was falling-apart paperback. Could barely turn the crumbling pages but had some much-loved recipes. Now it's practically like exploring an all new cookbook!

I liked this book, though I didn't love it. By the moment the letter was opened I already knew what was written in it. This didn't really bother me (I read many reviews complaining about the book being predictable) since I don't think this is a mystery. Mystery is just one of many condiments. So that was fine with me.
I liked the fact that I stopped many times to think what I would have done in the characters situation (this is one of the things that defines a good book to me), though I would never have solved things in the way characters did.
I'm still not sure what I think about the epilogue... Sometimes I think it was unnecessary. Sometimes I think it was a good addition.
It could have been a 4 stars (maybe, I don't know for sure) if I didn't have so many issues about the way she presented the catholic community where the story takes place...
But her writing was funny, fresh and enjoyable enough to want to try another novel by this author. Perhaps today I'm too positive(?)
Now I'm resuming The Visionist by Rachel Urquhart that for some reason is being slow for me...


This is my review www.goodreads.com/review/show/808947754"
I bought her first book, Crow Lake so long ago, I don't remember buying it. One day, I'll read it, and then maybe Road Ends. I

Next up on audiobook is Naked in Death. I doubt I will finish it by April 1st, but I have to have an audiobook in the works.
I'm also going to start Consumption for my leftover stew challenge. It is set in Nunavut, and was on my unfinished Cross Canada challenge. And here I thought I was done with the Canadian winter.

I liked this book, though I didn't love it. By the moment the letter was opened I already knew what was written in it. This did..."
I have gone back and forth about reading this book. Based on your comments, I am willing to bet I won't like it. I've taken it off my TBR list!

I think that what upsets me more is since so many of my friend loved it I was expecting a 5 stars...
I gave it 3 stars only because the writing was fine and I found my self more than once saying "Oh my God! What I'd have done in this situation?!".


Did Cress stand up to the other two in the series? I have not read Scarlet yet, and I have Cress in my chunkster list.

I have finished another book for my chunkster challenge. Riders by Jilly Cooper was not great literature. It was mildly diverting. The story lurched from one encounter to another and was, at times, rather outlandish. Being generous I will say that I think that maybe it was a product of its times and it has not aged well. One for the "not again" pile.

Finished Miss Peregrine's - it was an incredibly quick read. Now I am starting Ham: Slices of a Life: Essays and Stories and my next Matthew Shardlake Sovereign.
My husband had to leave for a business trip today so I have been having my own mini Toppler :)


Hate when that happens. I hope you get out of your reading slump soon. Maybe something light, fun, and pure fluff would help?

Okay... phew! Hot in here!
So, I finished it just in time to start my April challenge selection tomorrow, The Shadow of the Wind. My library download expires in 6 days, so I'm champing at the bit to start it.


I will be starting The Shadow of the Wind for a buddy read next which I am really looking forward to.

Okay... phew! Hot i..."
Ah, yes, the In Death series! I've read 26 of them so far. Roarke is ........well, you know. Keep reading them, Janice, but sit in front of a fan. ; )


ROFL! I almost downloaded Glory in Death today.


I'm still reading Have Mother, Will Travel: A Mother and Daughter Discover Themselves, Each Other, and the World and Telling it Straight. These are both for my chunkster challenge.
In terms of enjoyment, Have Mother, Will Travel wins handily. I like Telling it Straight, but it's more like assignment reading for a class or something.
Have Mother, Will Travel is so engaging. I love the switching back-and-forth narrative between mother and daughter. What they have to say resonates with me so much. Their thoughts and emotions could so easily be my own.
Makes me miss my own mother, who died 11 years ago. But don't know a nice way to say how happy I am to not be a dependent child any more living in my parents' house and all that entailed... ugh, really not good.
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