Books on the Nightstand discussion

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What are you reading February 2014

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message 151: by Melissa (new)

Melissa (thenovelbutterfly) | 101 comments Started reading The Tenth of December last night. I think I am going to read a story at a time and also start The Orphanmaster's Son (for my book club).


message 152: by Chanda2426 (new)

Chanda2426 | 136 comments I just finished The Last Days of California by Mary Miller. It was a refreshing read and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Trying to decide what comes next a YA ARC or something more substantial...


message 153: by Gerald (new)

Gerald Miller | 821 comments Just finished The Golem and the Jinnia very good first novel.


message 154: by Susannah (last edited Feb 28, 2014 11:22AM) (new)

Susannah (susannah-n) I just finished listening to the audiobook version of Persuasion, my favorite Jane Austen story, which was read by Juliet Stevenson. It was an EXCELLENT performance; highly recommended.

I am also nearly 200 pages into Drama High: The Incredible True Story of a Brilliant Teacher, a Struggling Town, and the Magic of Theater, and so far, it's pretty good. The sections that focus on the actual productions at the school - the kids, their parts, and the school's drama director (whom the book is ostensibly about) - are the best parts. The parts that focus on the economic challenges faced by the residents of Levittown, PA, are a bit less successful; interesting, but they drag on the rest of the narrative.


message 155: by Amy (new)

Amy | 463 comments Tracey wrote: "Pam, this was my problem with The Expats too. Thank you for putting it into words. :) ..."


Ditto for me too!


message 156: by Laura (new)

Laura | 90 comments I'm still listening to the audio of The Dinner and have yet to decide whether there is anything to admire in it. The events of the novel take place during a fancy restaurant meal, but it also includes flashbacks from our unreliable narrator's mind to fill in the context. You can't quite get your footing. If I were reading the book I'd probably be moving more quickly through the narrative -- I keep wishing the blathering narrator would cut to the chase.


message 157: by nancy (new)

nancy (npjacoby) | 261 comments Tracey wrote: "Pam wrote: "The Expats had a good storyline but a very confusing layout. Present day narrative is interwoven into the story but made the entire book indecipherable to me. After finishing, I went ba..."

I really loved the Expats and am going to read The Accident soon. I was able to follow the intricate plotting by reading it in big chunks. I read it a second time and it held up!


message 158: by Billiestamps (new)

Billiestamps | 4 comments I just finished Long Man by Amy Greene. It was the April pick for my
book club, and we saw the author at Vine Ave Books in Knoxville on Sunday afternoon. I loved this book, but must admit to being very drawn in by the fact that it takes place in an area very close to my home. That aside, I still think it was a wonderful book. Some of the sentences were so beautiful that I read them more than once. Long Man A novel by Amy Greene


message 159: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3102 comments Mod
Starting The Winter People by Jennifer McMahon The Winter People. I'm listening to Detroit An American Autopsy by Charlie LeDuff Detroit: An American Autopsy on my iPad, that means non-car listening. In the car I switched to I Still Dream About You by Fannie Flagg I Still Dream About You because the other Fannie Flagg I was listening to had major skipping issues on the second disc. :(


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