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Fiction- What are you reading? Part 2


It's difficult to get here, and on Amazon is ridiculously expensive for used copies.

I need to try and finish a few books- I've been reading Mansfield Park since February but I keep picking up other books. I'm also very behind on my read of Les Misérables
I'd like to finish Mansfield Park and read a good chunk of Les Miserables this weekend before starting something new!
I'd like to finish Mansfield Park and read a good chunk of Les Miserables this weekend before starting something new!
Marina (Sonnenbarke) wrote: "Karin, I can't remember now, but I think I bought it on AbeBooks. They usually (not always) have cheaper prices than Amazon, although it is an Amazon company. Sometimes the shipping costs can be hi..."
Good tip Marina!
Have you read So Long a Letter? It's by a Senagalese writer - I read it based on Raul's recommendation, and I wasn't disappointed. I tend to like everything he recommends.
Good tip Marina!
Have you read So Long a Letter? It's by a Senagalese writer - I read it based on Raul's recommendation, and I wasn't disappointed. I tend to like everything he recommends.

I like it much more than The Marriage Plot, by the same author, though I find both have stayed in my memory.

I’m not loving it. The book blurb compares the writing to Jane Austen but I feel it’s more like L.M. Montgomery, less wry social commentary and more moral subtext.

No, I haven't, Greg - I'd never even heard of it. Thanks for the recommendation, it looks good and I've added it to my wishlist :)
Joan wrote: "Greg - Middlesex is an amazing work of art - the protagonist is in the middle in so many, many ways.
I like it much more than The Marriage Plot, by the same author, though I find both have stayed i..."
It is amazing Joan - I love the treatment of historical events in it as well!
I like it much more than The Marriage Plot, by the same author, though I find both have stayed i..."
It is amazing Joan - I love the treatment of historical events in it as well!


I’m very glad because the writing in the last book I read was plodding, The Summer Before the War
And the books brefore that were very serious.
Joan wrote: "Thoroughly enjoying The Keeper of Lost Things - it’s sweet and the writing sparkles.
I’m very glad because the writing in the last book I read was plodding, [book:The Summer Before..."
Glad you're enjoying it Joan!
I’m very glad because the writing in the last book I read was plodding, [book:The Summer Before..."
Glad you're enjoying it Joan!

“Eliza was a spirited child...and once spent the whole day walking everywhere backwards “just to see what it feels like.””
From The Keeper of Lost Things, an All About Books group read for July.

Bette mentioned this author in the daily literary thread.

Yes, the shipping costs make a difference--I always look at the total price of the book plus shipping :)


There is a great website www.bookbutler.com that compares against multiple sites and includes shipping in its calculation. The prices can sometimes be a bit out of date (particularly their Amazon prices) but it's a great resource.
Jess wrote: "Karin wrote: "Marina (Sonnenbarke) wrote: "Karin, I can't remember now, but I think I bought it on AbeBooks. They usually (not always) have cheaper prices than Amazon, although it is an Amazon comp..."
Thanks for the tip Jess, that site sounds great!!
Thanks for the tip Jess, that site sounds great!!

Thanks--I've never heard of that before.




It is nice and funny, nothing preachy or self-help and also not too much religious though we learn about the most important teachings of Buddhism through the eyes of a cat that lives with the Dalai Lama. I've read only the first chapter but like it till now.

Have started The Banker’s Wife.

Have started The Banker’s Wife."
I find it very difficult to read. That it gives me the creeps I guess means that it is well written. Enjoyable? No.




I'm currently reading Lonesome Dove and a new English translation of Sand by Wolfgang Herrndorf. Lonesome Dove is really good. I'm not sure about Sand yet! It's kinda different and I'm not sure where it is going. But, I'm going to give it a few more chapters. It's nothing like the other book Why We Took the Car of his that I read, a YA road trip.
Pam wrote: "I finally read The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. I have never even seen the movie. I'm glad I read it but I wasn't that impressed. 3 stars...."
I'm another one of the minority that wasn't impressed with it. For me, the allegory was a little too heavy handed and pat, and the characters are extremely undeveloped. I actually thought the movie did a great job of flushing out the characters a bit, taking the tiny amount that was there and expanding it to make them human. I would give the book the same rating you did, but I've never gone back and added any books I read pre-Goodreads. Too many years of reading pre-Goodreads .. way too much work.
Ron tells me that the later Narnia books are better. One day I'll read more.
I'm another one of the minority that wasn't impressed with it. For me, the allegory was a little too heavy handed and pat, and the characters are extremely undeveloped. I actually thought the movie did a great job of flushing out the characters a bit, taking the tiny amount that was there and expanding it to make them human. I would give the book the same rating you did, but I've never gone back and added any books I read pre-Goodreads. Too many years of reading pre-Goodreads .. way too much work.
Ron tells me that the later Narnia books are better. One day I'll read more.

I'm currently reading [book:Lonesome..."
Yeah, Lonesome Dove is special. When I got my dog (Oscar) and had not chosen his name yet I was considering Gus, b/c of the Gus in this book. I got a bit sick of the book at the end b/c it felt like the author had a lengthy check list of all the events that had to happen to cover every aspect of the Western experience, still it is a book I will never forget.


I'm another one of t..."
I loved The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and it was one of the first chapter books I read.
At that age I didn't notice the allegory.
My favourite of the series is The Magician's Nephew which as a prequel often gets overlooked and there is no doubt that as I older and got to the end of the series the religious themes became a little heavy-handed.


Alice wrote: "Still reading The Sunne in Splendour, which is about the War of the Roses. I had previously read three novels on this and feel this one is the best. I love the way the author portrays..."
Sounds good Alice!
Sounds good Alice!
As a little break in the middle of my other longer reads, I've been reading the play Between Riverside and Crazy this morning. It's poignant and absolutely hilarious at the same time!
AB wrote: "Currently juggling a few things:
The Thing Around Your Neck, which is great so far! A collection of great stories - anyone else read it?
The Sun and her Flowers, a collection of poems by Rupi Ka..."
I haven't read any of those yet AB - sound good though!
The Thing Around Your Neck, which is great so far! A collection of great stories - anyone else read it?
The Sun and her Flowers, a collection of poems by Rupi Ka..."
I haven't read any of those yet AB - sound good though!
AB wrote: "Let us know how ‘Between Riverside and Crazy’ goes! Sounds good though. How long is it?"
It's a play; so it's quite short .. only 71 pages.
It's a play; so it's quite short .. only 71 pages.

I'm currently reading [book:Lonesome..."
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is definitely best read as a child.

What age AB? Remember loving





.."
That was my first Theorux. If you like it as much as I did you will not want to spread it over a month! A week a go I picked up The Last Train to Zona Verde: My Ultimate African Safari! I still have not gotten around to reading a novel by the author though. Probably soon I will try this too.

Two of my favorites were

and My Zoo Family

AB wrote: "What’s everyone’s favourite fiction from their childhood?"
One I remember loving was A Wrinkle in Time - it was read to us a chapter at a time by a grade school teacher. I also recall loving Where the Red Fern Grows as kid, though it is awfully sad.
My nephew adored the Goosebumps books - he just did not get tired of them and would want me to read them to him over and over as a kid. I actually enjoyed them too - the surprise twists can be a little silly but they're entertaining. That obsession went on for quite a few years - I can't remember how old he was when he started.
And my other nephew and niece (at about 5 years old) for some reason never get tired of Pete the Cat. I don't really get it, but for them nothing is better. :)
One I remember loving was A Wrinkle in Time - it was read to us a chapter at a time by a grade school teacher. I also recall loving Where the Red Fern Grows as kid, though it is awfully sad.
My nephew adored the Goosebumps books - he just did not get tired of them and would want me to read them to him over and over as a kid. I actually enjoyed them too - the surprise twists can be a little silly but they're entertaining. That obsession went on for quite a few years - I can't remember how old he was when he started.
And my other nephew and niece (at about 5 years old) for some reason never get tired of Pete the Cat. I don't really get it, but for them nothing is better. :)

Favourites from childhood What Katy Did
What Katy Did Next
Little Women

It's taking me a while as it's a big fat book but an interesting read.
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I finished Middlesex which I absolutely loved (possibly my favourite book of the year). I then went on to read ..."
I'm in the midst of reading Middlesex now - the tone & style are wonderfully entertaining!