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I'd like to try reading...what would you recommend?
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Tracey
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Feb 25, 2015 05:44AM

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As a side note, it's a sin that a lot of his work hasn't made it to the Kindle in English.


Thanks for the help/suggestions!
Have you ever read a review so horrible that it actually made you want to read the book?
I'm kind of in that situation. I need a book whose title starts with "and" for a challenge (I've already read And then there were none, which I loved, so I need a new one). I found out this And Then You Die. On goodreads it has 6,705 ratings and an average of 4.02 stars. Sounds promising, right?
Then I went on amazon and these are a bunch of the best titles for readers' reviews:
- Preposterous and Awful. ( Preposterous is one of my favourite words in the English language. You guys should find a way to use it every day XD )
- This rates a minus star.
- I just wished I were dead.
- Painful to finish.
- A mind-numbing unbelievable head-ache!
- Read And Die of Boredom.
- DID WE ALL READ THE SAME BOOK? (this person gave the book 5 stars)
I feel like I need to read this now. Is it crazy?
What do you think?
I'm kind of in that situation. I need a book whose title starts with "and" for a challenge (I've already read And then there were none, which I loved, so I need a new one). I found out this And Then You Die. On goodreads it has 6,705 ratings and an average of 4.02 stars. Sounds promising, right?
Then I went on amazon and these are a bunch of the best titles for readers' reviews:
- Preposterous and Awful. ( Preposterous is one of my favourite words in the English language. You guys should find a way to use it every day XD )
- This rates a minus star.
- I just wished I were dead.
- Painful to finish.
- A mind-numbing unbelievable head-ache!
- Read And Die of Boredom.
- DID WE ALL READ THE SAME BOOK? (this person gave the book 5 stars)
I feel like I need to read this now. Is it crazy?
What do you think?

Jean wrote: "I'm often attracted to books which get such diverse ratings. It means there's something about them that is different, at least! I call them "Marmite" books (you love 'em or you hate 'em, like marmi..."
That's a very valid point I had not considered, Jean!
That's a very valid point I had not considered, Jean!
Jean wrote: "I'm often attracted to books which get such diverse ratings. It means there's something about them that is different, at least! I call them "Marmite" books (you love 'em or you hate 'em, like marmi..."
LOL
LOL

Anyway for my Austro Hungarian Empire challenge I'm looking for a book with links to the part of current Italy that used to be in the AH Empire.
So my first question is, does that include Trieste?
My second question is, am I correct Italo Svevo is from Trieste?
Is he the best person to read, or is there anyone else who also fits the bill?

He WAS fron Trieste! His actual name was Aron Hector Schmitz.
I think that Zeno's Conscience it's his best book
I think that Zeno's Conscience it's his best book



Maracin, Paul (2004). The Night of the Long Knives: 48 Hours that Changed the History of the World. New York: The Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-59921-070-4.




Try Me Before You - I don't read lots of chick lit either, but this one is special.

Have you read Bridget Jones's Diary?

Patricia, I haven't read Bridget Jones's Diary, though I have seen the films and enjoyed them. It's kind of my back up option right now.

I know exactly what you mean! It's hard to work up much enthusiasm for a genre you don't generally like.

Have you tried Literature Map? You put in the name of an author and it shows graphically other authors that are similar -- the closer to the original name, the more similar.
http://www.literature-map.com/

Snow Flower and the Secret Fan is very good, I found.

You might try something by Emily Giffin like: Something Borrowed.

The author that started me in this genre (after incorrectly thinking for years that all romances were humorless and anti-feminist) was Jayne Ann Krentz. Her later books are more romantic suspense which I don't care for as much, but there are still plenty to choose from. Another delightful contemporary author is Susan Elizabeth Phillips.

This looks interesting, Leslie. Thanks

Petra, did you mean Snow Flower and the Secret Fan for a chick lit option? I'd love to read it, but didn't think it fit this category.
I'll take a look at the other authors mentioned, as I haven't heard of them before.
Tom wrote: "So I was at the pub yesterday and we were talking books, and the conversation came to Jose Luis Borges. He has long been on my Want To Read list, but I haven't made a move toward i..."
I started this book but I grew tired of it. The fault is obviously mine, for Borges writes well.
I started this book but I grew tired of it. The fault is obviously mine, for Borges writes well.

Pink, yes, Snow Flower and the Secret Fan is shelved as "chick lit" and thinking back on it, it is about women and written for women, I think.
I'm not that familiar with the boundaries of a genre or, even, in the definition of one. To me "chick lit" is fairly light, breezy, with women characters, love, etc. Snow Flower has all that and at the same time has history and culture as well. Depending upon your definition, it could work.

"Chick lit is genre fiction which addresses issues of modern womanhood, often humorously and lightheartedly. Although it sometimes includes romantic elements, chick lit is generally not considered a direct subcategory of the romance novel genre, because the heroine's relationship with her family or friends is often just as important as her romantic relationships."

Petra, did you mean Snow Flower and the Secret Fan for a chick lit option? I'd love to re..."
Pink, Lisa See isn't really known as a author light and gabby chicklit. She writes usually about traditional Asian ways in which women were/are expected to live.
The fact that said book is shelved as 'chicklit' is just one of the many examples which has me tearing my hair out in frustration. But books get incorrectly shelved by readers in all genres. I firmly believe publishers/editors/Goodreads should have a genre data 'line' which is supplied from book info; you know, like how we enter the publishers name.
Bear in mind that the shelves that are the product of lots of different people's definition of what constitutes a certain genre. I've seen Me Before You shelved as Literary Fiction; I had to hold myself back from sending that person a 'you idiot' note, lol.
Please remember the above is my opinion; I realise not everyone might agree with my views.



LOL, same pet peeve here! ;)

I think that Jane Austen has been unfairly categorised as chick lit. Jane Austen was very innovative in her time.
Petra wrote: "Oh. Then, Snow Flower wouldn't fit. That's lighter and breezier than I thought :(
Sorry, Pink."
I'm sorry, Petra, I mentioned sex.
Sorry, Pink."
I'm sorry, Petra, I mentioned sex.
Greg wrote: "I think that Jane Austen has been unfairly categorised as chick lit. Jane Austen was very innovative in her time."
I'd never consider her chick lit!!!!!
I'd never consider her chick lit!!!!!

By the way, I read Me Before You as my chick lit choice and it was a perfect recommendation for me, plus I think it represented the category very well.
Thanks everyone for all your suggestions :)

Some other thoughts - Roddy Doyle's Paddy Clark Ha Ha Ha, Sebastian Barry's The Secret Scripture (though that might be a bit darker than what I'd like), Flann O'Brien's At-Swim-Two-Birds (though that might be a bit too weird), Christina McKenna's The Misremembered Man. I've read all of the above, so I'd really like something new and good for me to read as well. Thanks in advance for replies.
Tom wrote: "I have the choice of book for March in an online book club I belong to. I was thinking about going with something by Irish authors that's ultimately upbeat - Frank McCourt's 'Tis comes to mind. I s..."
Have you read Irish author Frank O'Connor? I read him a long time ago, but I remember much of his work mixing humor and seriousness; for instance, I recall some of the stories in My Oedipus Complex and Other Stories being very funny in parts.
Have you read Irish author Frank O'Connor? I read him a long time ago, but I remember much of his work mixing humor and seriousness; for instance, I recall some of the stories in My Oedipus Complex and Other Stories being very funny in parts.

He has written novels that can be classified in all the genres possible. My recommendations would be: The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne or/and The Statement or/and The Colour Of Blood.

I found McCourt's 'Tis and it's predecessor Angela's Ashes really depressing.
Or you could have a go at something by James Joyce.

A few of us read At Swim-Two-Birds last September. It was a good book for a readalong but I am not sure how good it would be for a traditional bookclub... You can look over our comments at the thread below:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Perhaps his other famous book would be a better choice: The Third Policeman.
If you don't mind a classic, Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield is great (but not particularly Irish). Gulliver's Travels again is great but not particularly Irish. Or there is Some Experiences of an Irish R.M. which is pretty funny.
Or something by Samuel Beckett; though not "ultimately upbeat", Molloy has some amusing moments.

Incidentally, I mistyped when I said that I'd read 'Tis - I remember starting it, but it wasn't as good as Angela's Ashes and I have yet to finish it.
And yes, I was/am looking for books set in Ireland or about Irish people. In my research, I found that Bram Stoker was Irish so I could have included Dracula, but that's not what I'm going for.
Also in my research, I've found that the contemporary Irish novels various websites were extolling were between 3.5 and 4 stars here on goodreads.
As of right now I'm thinking of putting forward:
Ireland by Frank Delaney
Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt
In the Woods by Tana French
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