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What I'm Reading OCTOBER 2015
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I was definitely absorbed while reading this book, even though it is very long. I became caught up enough in the characters and steady storytelling of the novel that I used it several days to escape from my own life responsibilities by reading for hours.
I enjoyed the fact that it is in many ways different than anything I have read before. The author (interestingly, a woman who created main characters that are almost exclusively men) has talked of it being about people finding family and community more in friendship than in traditional ways, and I did like that bent of it, something I feel people may increasingly be doing in society today.
The reader is somewhat sucked in, as the book at first seems to be about four young male college roommates and their friendship as they go through life. It's awhile into the book when it becomes focused mostly on one of them, Jude, and how horrendous physical and sexual abuse as a child has affected him in ways that mentally and physically continue to make adult daily life an enormous struggle. Jude's closest friend Willem, almost too kind to be true, was my favorite character.
The novel's characters were envisioned in such a way to be vivid and memorable, so I was involved even while not quite believing they could be true, as both the good and bad elements of the book and the characters seem to be exaggerated and so not quite believable reality. The facts that all four men attained wealth and success, that everyone almost automatically and fiercely loved and respected Jude (unless they were one of his horrific abusers), including a law prof who developed the desire to adopt him as an adult, that Jude's self esteem never seemed to actually improve fundamentally even a little bit over the decades of life with the support of loving friends, and that Willem so smoothly went sexually from women to Jude were things that rang a little bell of incredulity even as I went along with them and kept reading. It also seemed to me that the male characters talked of love and affection for each other more easily than I have ever seen male friends do (but perhaps for young men today this is changing).
However, the author imagined characters and presented them in a way that made one want to keep reading, and although there was resolution at the end, the story was not tied up in an bow but finished in a way that was true to the character of Jude that she created.
This is recommended reading if you have time to get lost in the world of a book for awhile. I would be interested to hear what others thought of this one.


Quanjun, how about putting the title along with the picture of the book. Those of us with old eyes cannot decipher that little icon, and it doesn't show up on mobile apps.


I find that very odd. We like to be able to read the name of the book without squinting.

I was definitely absorbed while reading this book, even though it is very long. I..."
Lyn, thanks for the review of this. It is the next book from this year's Booker list that I shall be reading. It is currently sitting on my table just waiting on a break in proceedings of life to have time to start it.

As promised...here's a link to my review of Slade House by David Mitchell. I loved it! http://e135-abookaweek.blogspot.com/2...

My copy comes tomorrow, and I can hardly wait. Your review makes me want to read it post haste. I have enjoyed all of Mitchell's books. Thanks for the link.

I can't wait to hear what you think of it!
Now I'm on to After Alice by Gregory Maguire.





Is there anyone who doesn’t know the basic storyline of Alexei Karenin, his wife Anna, and her lover Count Vronsky? Tolstoy’s novel explores much more than this love triangle, but this central story was what I found compelling. Too bad I had to wade through all that other stuff. Nadia May does an okay job of narrating the audio version. She does tend to “read” rather than perform but her pacing was good and her diction clear.
Full Review HERE




Gina, if you're interested, we read The Reader years ago (1999) for the reading list. Here's our discussion:
http://constantreader.com/discussions...


Is there anyone who doesn’t know the basic storyline of Alexei Karenin, his wife Anna, and her lover Count Vronsky? Tolstoy’s nove..."
Thanks Barbara. I hadn't thought about that, but you're right. She never becomes a victim.

Thanks Sherry. I read the CR discussion this morning. It gave me insights I didn't get the first time.

I love that we have these old discussions to read. I had totally forgotten the book, but reading the discussion brings back memories.


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Great, he is one of my favorites.