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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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Nina
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Mar 04, 2016 04:51PM

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I'm reading Time and Again by Jack Finney. It's a fiction story involving time travel back to the old days in NYC, the days of the horse and carriage. It mentions lots of famous landmarks like famous The Dakota apartments. Even has old photographs. But it isn't very compelling. I just keep reading to find out how it ends.
I'm not familiar with Snobs by Julian Fellowes. One GR member, in her review, complains about "too many digressions into intricate details of the upper echelons of the class system."




God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian by Kurt Vonnegut
My post is here: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016...

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016..."
Interesting article. I'll have to study it more later.
What caught my eye was this sentence: "male readers want an author ‘to get to the point quickly". I feel the same way!
I'll have to read on to see how I compare in other areas.
Thanks, Jim, for drawing our attention to the article.

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016..."
PS-Two other words which caught my eye in the article were: "rambling introductions". I HATE rambling introductions! I want to "get to the point!"
Detailed descriptions also bore me. That's the trouble with the book I'm currently reading, Time and Again. The minor details are annoying after a while. It seems that the author is obsessed with minor details. He writes descriptions of every little move made by the protagonists, whether they matter in the end or not. I'm learning very quickly to SKIM! lol (I always used to think I'd miss something, but in this book you can skim and miss nothing important.)

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2016..."
PPS-As I think about it, no matter what the statistics say, I don't think it matters whether the reader is male or female. There are so many other psychological reasons for our like or dislike of a book. We all have had different backgrounds and experiences which color our outlook and determine our likes and our dislikes.

Wiki says: "Rather than writing an autobiography, Mirren was commissioned by Alan Samson at Orion Books to write about her life in a series of chapters based on pictures from her extensive personal collection of photography and memorabilia."
Wiki also quotes Mirrren as saying: "I do believe in naturism and am my happiest on a nude beach with people of all ages and races!”
Wiki also says: "In 1990, Mirren stated in an interview that she is an atheist. In the August 2011 issue of Esquire magazine, Mirren said, 'I am quite spiritual. I believed in fairies when I was a child. I still do sort of believe in the fairies. And the leprechauns. But I don't believe in God.'"
FROM: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_M...



Nina, the only one-word book by Jane Smiley that I can find is Moo (first published 1995) . But I only did a quick search.

You & I certainly seem to be on the same page. I think I actually put books down faster now than I used to for several reasons. The big one is availability. As a kid, I had the very limited school library or the book mobile, which was lorded over by a draconian old witch who wouldn't get books if she didn't think they were appropriate. For decades after that, money, time, lack of inter-library loans, or even readily available through book stores. Often even lists of what were available had to be mail ordered, so I had fewer choices & made due with what I could get.
Dinner. I'll mention more later.

Nina, the only one..."That's not it Joy. It is a fairly new book. I wil try to Google it. It's our book for next month at my book club and I read it but already returned the book. I wasn't thrilled with it.

Yes, Jim, we're very lucky nowadays with so many books available to us in so many modes! We can afford to be fussy. :)


Nina, please let us know when you find out. Now you've got me curious. :)

Thanks, Nina. Some Luck I'll take your advice and avoid it.
Smiley won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1992 for her novel A Thousand Acres (1991). I remember that I liked it. It was adapted to film: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120323/Some Luck
You know what they say... you can't win 'em all! :)
Oh! I see you said that! LOL

I guess availability was the big reason all the way around. We do have a lot books available now & it's so easy to find where they fit in series, too. I literally spent over a decade trying to complete 2 different trilogies back in the 80s. I read the second book in both of them numerous times before finally getting the first & third. (Funny, but I was disappointed by the third in both cases.) Now I'm generally peeved if I can't have an entire series in days.


Nina, I know what you mean.

Now, I'm at last into my long-awaited read of my interlibrary loan book, The Sleeping Partner, the third and so far latest volume in Madeleine E. Robins' Sarah Tolerance series, which I've mentioned in this group before. When I finish this one, I'll be caught up with the series for the present. (Ms. Robins will need to get busy and write the fourth installment!)

Werner, that was a great bonding experience with your grandson. Looks like the apple hasn't fallen far from the tree. :)
I envy your enjoyment of your books. I can't seem to find one that really draws me in. Maybe I'm not looking hard enough. Maybe I'm too fussy. :) Thank goodness that every once in a while I find a book that engages me.

Hope your next book is a five-star read for you, that brings a lot of interest and enjoyment with it!

Here's the link to the sample I used. It's in my brief private notations below:
=============================================
_Point of Honour_ (Sarah Tolerance #1) by Madeleine E. Robins (Goodreads Author) RECOMMENDED BY WERNER AT GR:
https://play.google.com/books/reader?...
THIS IS A SERIES. I DIDN'T LIKE THE SAMPLE. 3/10/16 UNINTERESTING CONVERSATON. TOO MANY NAMES
===============================================


Actually, Robins does a good job of developing and fleshing out her characters as she goes along; but you're right that she does this slowly, and the first conversation, between Sarah and Matt, is mostly a matter of everyday commonplaces (though the author is using these to convey certain pieces of information about the characters, the household and the situation). The names dropped in the beginning are mostly of historical figures to establish the setting; they don't have to be remembered for a role in the plot. But I'm guessing that Robin's prose style (which won't be to everyone's taste!) probably was irritating enough to you that it understandably tended to magnify the other factors.
Where reading is concerned, we all like (and dislike) different things; comparing our often disparate reactions is what gives Goodreads a lot of its fun and interest! I'm flattered that my interest in the book at least prompted you to check it out, though I'm sorry I didn't happen to steer you to a read you'd have liked better yourself.

Werner, your words "everyday commonplaces" definitely describes the type of thing I don't enjoy (especially in dialogue), even if their purpose is to explain the situation and characters. I can see doing a LITTLE of it but it seemed to go on for page after page. It became boring for me.
This is an instance where the literary idea of "show and don't tell" doesn't work for me. Sometimes a story needs exposition and I believe the reader has to be TOLD certain things instead of being SHOWN those things via long, dull, drawn-out dialogue.
I guess I don't have the patience to wade through so much of that sort of thing.


Well put, Werner. I admire your ability to articulate these ideas. You make me feel better about my inability to appreciate certain types of literature.


---"slow plot development"
---"complex prose with a low excitement factor"
I need to be drawn in and immediately engaged, one way or another, whether it be suspense or a topic which appeals to me, such as pondering over relationships and/or psychological aspects of people. I also like to wrap my mind around philosophical issues about life. Nothing too deep vocabulary-wise (or too academic) but enough to get my mind ticking.

Thank you, Werner. You certainly do inspire good discussions. Your positive attitude and understanding enable me to express myself instead of intimidating me. There are some people who are knowledgeable but they stifle discussion because they exhibit an air of superiority and over-confidence. I've learned to avoid them.


There's an old song to that effect. Have you heard it?
It's here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34Myo...


Anyway, from what I've heard from you about Barb, you two certainly are a Mutual Admiration Society!


Anyway, from what I've heard from you about Barb, you two certainly are a Mutual Admiration Society!"
I can hear the words (especially if they're clear, and not slurred; the singers in the link you shared did a good job with that), the tempo, and certain variations in sound. But I just can't clearly distinguish whether certain sounds are higher or lower than others (unless they're at the very extremes of the spectrum). It's probably difficult to explain to someone like yourself, who hears music normally.

Sounds very romantic, Nina.
Couldn't find that exact song but I found this one:
"Hello Again" - Neil Diamond:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBQVK...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnbMH...
It's a beautiful song. I think it's the one you're looking for.

Werner, that's interesting. Makes me value my normal ability to hear melodies.
I've always wished for perfect pitch. They say that people with perfect pitch can imagine the exact note inside their head just like we can imagine a certain color in our head.

Probably I do, Nina; but in that context it isn't significant, because people usually don't vary the highness or lowness of their speech much when they talk normally, and they aren't trying to do it for any artistic effect. (We use the term "tone" deaf, but I'm not deaf to what we normally mean by "tone" in conversation --angry tone, bantering tone, earnest tone, and so forth. What I'm deaf to is more like what we call "pitch," between the high and low extremes of the register.)
Yes, Joy, we tend to take abilities for granted unless we meet someone who lacks one; but ability to appreciate music naturally truly is a gift to value!
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