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What are you reading in 2014?
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Jennifer
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Oct 22, 2014 04:06PM

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Currently have four books on the go:
Love, Nina: Despatches from Family Life
Life After Life
HarvestParaphernalia: The Curious Lives of Magical Things.
None exceptional so far, aiming to finish two this weekend
Love, Nina: Despatches from Family Life
Life After Life
HarvestParaphernalia: The Curious Lives of Magical Things.
None exceptional so far, aiming to finish two this weekend

I need to start one tonight, not sure what. One of:
A Long Walk Home: One Woman's Story of Kidnap, Hostage, Loss - and Survival by a local lady whose husband was murdered by kidnappers in Africa (also my book club book)
The Spinning Heart
Lucky Jim
Or
Tales of the City, a re-read, part of my magic square.
Decisions are never easy for a Libran.
A Long Walk Home: One Woman's Story of Kidnap, Hostage, Loss - and Survival by a local lady whose husband was murdered by kidnappers in Africa (also my book club book)
The Spinning Heart
Lucky Jim
Or
Tales of the City, a re-read, part of my magic square.
Decisions are never easy for a Libran.


I just connected after a long absence, and your post was the first thing I read...coincidentally I am reading The Goldfinch too! Quite an undertaking as it's a longer book, which I usually avoid during the school year (I'm a teacher) but a very good one too.
I also read and loved The Rosie Project, but I think that was a choice of this book group.
Another book I read recently -- about the only other one since September -- is The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides . I would recommend that one, especially, but not only, for fifty-somethings.

It was given a big thumbs up by Paula McLain, who wrote The Paris Wife, a book which I really liked, so I'm hoping this one will be somewhere near as enjoyable for me - not that endorsements by other authors can always be anything to go by!
Started Heartstone by C.J. Sansom yesterday. Huge 700 page book, but it is good so far. Will also be picking up A Storm of Swords in the next day or so too
Betty wrote: I just connected after a long absence, and your post was the first thing I read...coincidentally I am reading The Goldfinch too! Quite an undertaking as it's a longer book, which I usually avoid during the school year (I'm a teacher) but a very good one too...."
Good to see you around again Betty. The Goldfinch is quite a monumental book. The discussion threads are still open should you want to add your thoughts.
Good to see you around again Betty. The Goldfinch is quite a monumental book. The discussion threads are still open should you want to add your thoughts.


A Storm of Swords is my favourite ASOIAF book so far, closely followed by A Dance with Dragons. A Feast for Crows is my least favourite so far and seems to be everyone else's, too, so be prepared. It does at least introduce some interesting new characters and story arcs.



Going to start Rubbernecker by Belinda Bauer today. It has a rating of 4.14 here on goodreads so im hoping it lives up to that. She's a new author for me.


Going to start Rubbernecker by Belinda Bauer today. It has a rating of 4.14 here on goodreads so im hoping it ..."
Jackie, you mentioned earlier that The Chaperone was recommended by Paula McLain. I loved The Paris Wife - is it similar?

I think the Paris Wife was probably more about her relationship and life with Hemingway than this is about the chaperone's relationship with Louise Brooks, if that makes sense? From what I remember anyway! I read one review that complained that the book was hardly about Brooks at all but I wasn't really expecting it to be.
I'm a bit iffy about recommending books because it's such a personal thing isn't it but I'd be quite surprised if you liked The Paris Wife and hated this. I don't even know if Louise Brooks had a chaperone so I'm not sure if this is a totally made up story or a fictionalised account based on real events. Either way it was very enjoyable!
If you decide to give it a go Id love to know what you think of it.

Started Moon Over Soho yesterday. Been really good so far. Aiming to read books 2 and 3 this week as i will be seeing him on Sunday at the science fiction afternoon as part of the Wimborne literary festival.



I read it a couple of weeks ago and found it a great book.

Started two books today
Gideon's Spies: The Secret History of the Mossad on Mossad, and 60 Postcards: The inspirational story of a young woman's journey to celebrate her mother, one postcard at a time about a ladies tribute to her mother. She is very local to me, having previously lived just round the corner
Gideon's Spies: The Secret History of the Mossad on Mossad, and 60 Postcards: The inspirational story of a young woman's journey to celebrate her mother, one postcard at a time about a ladies tribute to her mother. She is very local to me, having previously lived just round the corner



At the moment I'm re-reading Terry Pratchett's discworld series in order - up to Sourcery so far - and these have definitely stood the test of time.
Joy wrote: "I've decided to work through my bookshelves and either re-read or pass them to a charity shop if I no longer like them. It's quite interesting, as I have a few thrillers from the 80s which I enjoye..."
I have been meaning to re read the Discworld series at some point, are you passing those on, or keeping them?
I have been meaning to re read the Discworld series at some point, are you passing those on, or keeping them?





Next week books are:
The Beating of His Wings
Broken Monsters
Tracks: A Woman's Solo Trek Across 1700 Miles of Australian Outback
H is for Hawk
The Sleeper and the Spindle
Deep Breath. And Go!
The Beating of His Wings
Broken Monsters
Tracks: A Woman's Solo Trek Across 1700 Miles of Australian Outback
H is for Hawk
The Sleeper and the Spindle
Deep Breath. And Go!


The Heartland series of novellas set in outback Australia and written by Aussie writer John Holland are not connected by story line, but by setting. Each is a complete story in itself.
Not so much a triumphant march through the land of his birth this, more a grim determined slog uphill on a hot day. The people who populate these stories are often flawed and bitter. However like the hard country they live in they have beauty in them as well. Expect for a couple of characters who don’t have many redeeming features at all!
Raw powerful stories that pluck at the heartstrings and challenge the mind. Let’s look at the four leading characters from each book, shall we?
Shane Morris is suffering from depression. (Somewhere far from Iris)
Mick Creedy, a laconic outback policeman. (The Light at the Bottom of the Garden)
Dexter Knight, a tormented man with a disfigured face. (Bitter Bread)
Buck Brown, a boy facing almost certain death in the outback. (Left of the Rising Sun)
Not a collection for the faint hearted, but if you like your literary fiction raw and real you will love these stories of the hot hard places, where the bony elbows of humanity collide with the sharp edges of life.
~Marion~
Links.
Somewhere far from Iris: http://amzn.com/B00L3L1G3A
The Light at the Bottom of the Garden: http://amzn.com/B00LJAZ7U8
Bitter Bread: http://amzn.com/B00MZHKUAG
Left of the Rising Sun: http://amzn.com/B00O45SJN2

I'll be shortly reading Two Sisters and The Sweetness of Forgetting. I received both to participate in two author-reader discussions in another group next month.
Just started The Deaths of Tao, fast paced sci fi thriller, and How Not to Be Wrong: The Hidden Maths of Everyday Life, a maths book on how most things we do are affected by maths
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