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Mapping Your Reading
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Lesley
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Jun 25, 2016 08:37PM

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Are you enjoying them? First time or reread?

I just read a review on this book from another friend. It has been on and off my TBR over the years. It seems to be having a resurgence of popularity with better overall reviews.

I just read a review on this book from another friend. It has..."
Well this one seems to be a thumbs up or thumbs down book. so far, I'm loving it. I am listening to the audio and enjoying the narrator.

Oh, yes, I'm also in the sea near Ireland with the sinking Lusitania in the later part of Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania as the ship is going down.
Denizen wrote: "Booknblues wrote: "I'm stuck in magic England reading the Harry Potter books one after another."
Are you enjoying them? First time or reread?"
I am enjoying them and I've never read them before. The fantasy choice for PBT pushed me into reading the first one which I have and after reading that< I couldn't stop. I'm on a binge.
Are you enjoying them? First time or reread?"
I am enjoying them and I've never read them before. The fantasy choice for PBT pushed me into reading the first one which I have and after reading that< I couldn't stop. I'm on a binge.

This is one of my all time favourites, so I hope that doesn't put you off...(smile).. Interested to see if you like it.

You're in a real restaurant in Amsterdam! I listened to an interview with the author and he said the restaurant owners now hate him because of how he portrayed the place and the clientele.

I'm in London with The Butcher's Hook

You're in a real restaurant in Amsterdam! I listened to an in..."
After listening some more last night, I realized I was in Holland. The narrator has me cracking up, and so far, I'm enjoying it a lot. I don't think the French are too crazy about him either, lol.

I'm in London with The Butcher's Hook"
The Butcher's Hook sounds like your cup of tea - hope it holds up for you. It reminds me to keep Tipping the Velvet somewhere in the foreground of my reading plans.
"Storyheart wrote: "BnB, I love how you get on reading binges. Remember the great cat mystery binge of 2013? 2014?
."
I had to look it up, it was the summer of 2014. A huge binge as there were 18 books.
Dosha wrote: " "I don't really know where I am, but it is in a restaurant with 2 families in The Dinner"
I'm glad you are liking The Dinner. I keep reading negative reviews and am glad to know everyone doesn't feel that way, because it sounds so interesting.
I'm in London with The Butcher's Hook"
I had to look it up and it was the summer of 2014, it was huge as there were 18 books.
."
I had to look it up, it was the summer of 2014. A huge binge as there were 18 books.
Dosha wrote: " "I don't really know where I am, but it is in a restaurant with 2 families in The Dinner"
I'm glad you are liking The Dinner. I keep reading negative reviews and am glad to know everyone doesn't feel that way, because it sounds so interesting.
I'm in London with The Butcher's Hook"
I had to look it up and it was the summer of 2014, it was huge as there were 18 books.

I love how GR lists all my friend's reviews and ratings with just a single click. The ratings are all over the place. I'm developing a taste for unsavory characters. Fates and Furies kept me very entertained.
Dosha, do you recommend the audio for The Dinner?

Personally, I think the narrator is doing a fine job. I highly recommend the audio. I have read other reviews that don't care for him or the story.

You know me well, Den. I'm liking but not loving The Butcher's Hook. Hope you enjoy TtV when you get to it. I wish Waters would write another novel with a Victorian setting. I haven't enjoyed her 1940s-50s set books as much.

Karin wrote: "Phew, finally out of the water and back on land in the last part of Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania, having, as a reader, followed the survivors and other people and a..."
I enjoyed the book but did not do it on audio.
I enjoyed the book but did not do it on audio.


I bought it as a Daily Deal shortly after it won the Booker. The reviews on Shelfari were decidedly tepid, however, so I've been reluctant to tackle it at 700+ pages. It was the same with the Goldfinch which I did finally read and enjoy this spring so might get to The Luminaries if you come back and rave about it.

I'm in the Soviet Union, Siberia, Chechnya reading The Tsar of Love and Techno. I love how Marra writes but feeling a little restless with the story format. Following Cloud Atlas with Tsar of Love and Techno was probably not the wisest choice given my predilection to avoid short stories.
Denizen wrote: "I'm in World War I France with Fear: A Novel of World War I in audio - too early to say how I'm liking it.
I'm in the Soviet Union, Siberia, Chechnya reading [book:The Tsar of Love..."
As you know I loved both Fear and Love and Techno....
I'm not a short story fan either, but felt Love and Techno coalesced well.
I'm in the Soviet Union, Siberia, Chechnya reading [book:The Tsar of Love..."
As you know I loved both Fear and Love and Techno....
I'm not a short story fan either, but felt Love and Techno coalesced well.

I am loving the languid, slowly revealing clues required to solve the various interlocking mysteries.
Lesley wrote: "I am still in South Island New Zealand, page 460 of 820...in The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton in 1866. Not my normal reading period as its set in 1866, not 2016...
..."
I'm happy to see that you are liking it.
..."
I'm happy to see that you are liking it.
I'm in Dordogne, France reading Fatal Pursuit a chief Bruno book, a series which is a favorite of mine. They combine a good protagonist with cooking, descriptions of a lovely region and interesting stories.

Storyheart wrote: "Apparently there will be in mid-air battle on broomsticks in later chapters. I can't wait."
Sounds like fun!
Sounds like fun!


I'm feeling the same way. It doesn't seem like I'm getting very far in my current books.
I have moved on to Baltimore with Ta-Nehisi Coates Between the World and Me

Lesley wrote: "I am lucky enough to have found The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro on my library EBOOK cat... sigh, sad to leave New Zealand 1866, for England. But as I loved his [boo..."
I will be interested in your take on this.
I will be interested in your take on this.

I've given up already; sad to say.
I am now happily in Cape Town in The Pickup by Nadine Gordimer. Oh wow, this is such wonderful writing, in my opinion, that even tho the print is a bit small, am really enjoying it.

I've Given Up Already; sad to say"
Not sad at all IMHO. I read it to the bitter end and then thought what a waste of my precious reading time.


Yes, I'm getting braver at just NOT continuing.
Denizen wrote: "I'm in Haiti with Roxane Gay's An Untamed State. The heroine has just been kidnapped by a group of men with machine guns."
That sounds like my kind of a book. Let me know if it is any good.
That sounds like my kind of a book. Let me know if it is any good.


One of life's little pleasures is picking up a new book by a favorite author - hope you enjoy!

On my TBR list, now. Thanks.


I read and loved several Gordimer books in the late 80's early 90's. I own two that I haven't read July's People and Burger's Daughter. I'll have to look into The Pickup. I've been toying with reading something else by her.

My favourite is (might have said, before ) No Time Like the Present caught me up on life for the 40 years I have lived in OZ. BUT I still 'knew' these people...


I re-read Rebecca on my pendo-pad, while waiting for a friend to come back from an operation.. Good read for a long worried wait, too.

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