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What are you reading or what books have you read or heard about? (Part TWELVE) Ongoing general thread.
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Werner
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Jan 29, 2016 12:51PM

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Yes! You said it so well, Werner!

Werner, I haven't read anything by Sharyn McCrumb but I did read Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez which is in the genre of magical realism. I remember liking it. Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I tried to read One Hundred Years of Solitude by the same author but hated it. See my review at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

==================================
(view spoiler) LOL
==================================
FROM: http://www.shelfari.com/books/11594/L...




The two books were:
The Lake Shore Limited and
While I Was Gone
I wrote the following in my reviews of the above:
"I like the way Sue Miller analyzes her characters. She has a psychological approach."
"It's this psychological aspect of the author's books which I enjoy."
In _While I Was Gone_, the main character does a lot of reflecting about herself and others... about their personalities, their temperaments and other aspects of their natures.
In a GR review of the same book, a GR reader writes:
===========================
"This novel is a psychological examination of the main character who is narrated in a very reflective first person style. This psychological unveiling is why I loved this book!
Sue Miller really understands people. Her insights into human behavior is startling at times in its accuracy."
ABOVE QUOTE IS FROM THE GR REVIEW by Misti at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
================================
Below are links to my reviews:
_The Lake Shore Limited_: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
_While I Was Gone_: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Two other books I liked by Sue Miller are listed below with links to my reviews of them:
The Senator's Wife ----- https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
The Good Mother ----- https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
(Sue Miller has presented the above story in such a way that you gradually get drawn in. That seems to be the nature of the books of hers which I've enjoyed. She slowly draws you in.)
Two of Sue Miller's book which I did NOT finish because they did not draw me in were:
For Love ----- https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Family Pictures ----- https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
You just never know when an author, whom you sometimes enjoy, may disappoint you. Not every book is a guarantee.

Nina, I'm glad you agree with me. It's nice to be validated. :)

Nina, I didn't like either the book, Chocolat, or the movie, "Chocolat" (2000).
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0241303/?...
IMDb Description: "A woman and her daughter open a chocolate shop in a small French village that shakes up the rigid morality of the community."
But then again, you love cooking and I don't. LOL
All that talk about cooking turned me off.

Nina, from the Goodreads description, I'd say that Chocolat sounds more in the general fiction line; but of course it's a very short description, and I haven't actually read the book.


Werner, DO check out my spoiler. It's funny and it really doesn't give much away.
==================================
(view spoiler) LOL
==================================

Yes, Nina, it was too strange for me. I'm never comfortable with strange stuff. However, chocolate candy is always welcome. :) I love chocolate. :)
Talk about strange... after watching the SAG awards last night, I streamed 6 episodes of "Transparent" via Amazon Prime into the wee hours of the morning. That is one unusual movie. Jeffrey Tambor won the award as the "trans" parent. With movies like that in the main stream, our grandkids won't stay innocent for long. So much strange raw sex. We were so innocent when we were young. I'm not sure if that was good or bad.
"Transparent": http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3502262/?...
"An LA family with serious boundary issues have their past and future unravel when a dramatic admission causes everyone's secrets to spill out. "

Werner, it occurs to me that it might be fun writing a "Ridiculously Simplified Synopsis" for Shelfari.com. :)
Not all of them are as funny as the one I posted. For example, the Ridiculously Simplified Synopsis for Leaving Time (by Jodi Picoult) is:
=======================================
"An ode to motherhood in all its forms -– the good, bad and the ugly."
FROM: http://www.shelfari.com/books/3720557...
======================================
Interesting and concise but not funny. At least it's an interesting point of view.


BOOK: Watership Down by Richard Adams
Ridiculously Simplified Synopsis: "It's about bunnies."
FROM: http://www.shelfari.com/books/19995/W...
I love it! LOL

Ridiculously Simplified Synopsis:
What can Charlie McGee do with fire when she really gets mad?
FROM: http://www.shelfari.com/books/18900/F...


Gee, Nina, I hope that's not true. We need romance in our lives. I'm hoping they'll still make some good romantic movies without all the raw sex. I wonder how the young people feel about that.


As for errors in books and on the screen, they're probably the fault of editors. Aren't they supposed to fact-check these things?
I recently mentioned elsewhere in this group that in an old movie, I heard Bette Davis say that a piano composition, "Fur Elise", (which was was being played), was by Brahms, when it was actually by Beethoven. I know because I used to play it on the piano. I entered it as a goof at IMDb.com and it's on the appropriate webpage for goofs. You can see it here: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036230/t...
(They call it a "factual error.")


The rest is memory." Louise Gluck
"Life is a field of corn. Literature ishshot glass it distills down into." Lorrie Moore
These quotes are from the book, "The Art of Memoir," by Mary Karr

Here's a related one:
"The business of life is the acquisition of memories. In the end, that's all there is."
---Carson on Downton Abbey on TV - Julian Fellowes
[posted by Jacki of our group on 1/20/14]


The self-publishing & audio book industries have come a long way. I'm 2/3 of the way through Tony Bertauski's The Socket Greeny Saga. He originally published it as an ebook trilogy, but has now recorded an audio book version. I'm picky about narrators, but he's done a great job.
It's really great how the book industry is shaking out. I'm seeing a general rise in the quality of self-published books or else I'm just getting better at picking which ones I read. Might be a bit of both. I'm really excited that audio books are doing so well. They're getting less expensive & more pervasive all the time.





I tried listening to it but it didn't draw me in. Maybe I didn't give it enough time.





That sort of thing turned a lot of people off reading entirely. It's a crime. Some books worked & that's one of the marks of the best of the classics, IMO. The best are meaningful at different ages. Huck Finn & 'To Kill A Mockingbird' are 2 examples. Sometimes different things impressed me at each age, but others were the same.


Wow, Nina. A great-grandchild who is 19! I'll be lucky if I get see my youngest GRANDCHILD turn 19! She's only 2 weeks old. LOL I guess I'll have to live past 100. :)
My granddaughter recently visited the Fordham campus while looking for colleges. Our son says it's a beautiful campus.

I looked at some of the GR reviews of Tony Bertauski's books. They are very positive. If he's that good, he should be noticed sooner or later by the libraries. Look at this very positive GR review of _The Socket Greeny Saga_:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
BTW, what does Socket Greeny mean? Is that the character's name?
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