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Book Chat > Fiction- What are you reading? Part 2

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message 1901: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Diane S ☔ wrote: "Chrissie wrote: "I will soon start When All Is Said. What will I think?"

Have to admit to being very curious about your reception myself."


I get nervous when everybody loves a book and then comes picky old me........ I dread having to be the one to say it didn't work for me. I just hope I love it as everyone else has.


message 1902: by Diane S ☔ (last edited Mar 10, 2019 10:25AM) (new)

Diane S ☔ Believe it or not I get nervous when you do too! Lol!!


message 1903: by Joan (new)

Joan Esther - the shellfish was described as a family treat - matriarch & patriarch included- just after a description of a solemn Sabbath -
a surprise but I guess it is a challenge for authors to write about what they don’t know first hand. Nicholson didn’t know to ask.


message 1904: by Esther (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 1368 comments Joan wrote: "Esther - the shellfish was described as a family treat - matriarch & patriarch included- just after a description of a solemn Sabbath -
a surprise but I guess it is a challenge for authors to writ..."


She was writing about a Jewish family and didn't think to ask basic questions about kashrut? - that sounds like a complete lack of research.


message 1905: by Joan (new)

Joan Esther - agreed!


message 1906: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Diane S ☔ wrote: "Believe it or not I get nervous when you do too! Lol!!"

Did you love it from the start? I don't. It is a bit of a monologue.


message 1907: by Diane S ☔ (new)

Diane S ☔ No I didn't and yes it is I guess kind of a monologue, though I didn't look at that way. No, but I was slowly drawn into the life of this man.


message 1908: by Chrissie (last edited Mar 11, 2019 04:35AM) (new)

Chrissie Diane, re When All Is Said

I am trying to figure out what is bothering me. I know the hullabaloo about the coin doesn't do much for me. There is humor, but I feel I ought to be laughing more than I am. I have two toasts more.

Also, at the beginning, it seems obvious what Maurice is planning. Must wait to the end too see if I have guessed right. Maybe that the book is laid out as a mystery, to be figured out, is another problem for me.

At least figuring ut what is bothering me keeps me thinking.


message 1909: by Diane S ☔ (new)

Diane S ☔ I think the gold coin represents how one thing, one act can change things for so many. See what you think when you finish.


message 1910: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Diane S ☔ wrote: "I think the gold coin represents how one thing, one act can change things for so many. See what you think when you finish."

OK.


message 1911: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) I've started The Awakening.


message 1912: by Joan (new)

Joan Chrissie wrote: "Diane S ☔ wrote: "Believe it or not I get nervous when you do too! Lol!!"

Did you love it from the start? I don't. It is a bit of a monologue."


I’m intrigued by the comments of Chrissie & Diane S. so I’ve joined my library waiting list for When All Is Said

Thanks for asking Chrissie- I’m doing well, settling back into routine, feeling peaceful.
One of my friends warned me about what she calls STUGS, sudden, transient upwelling of grief - a universal experience I’m sure.


message 1913: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Joan, it is after all has been taken care of that the death of a loved one can really hit you.


message 1914: by Joan (last edited Mar 12, 2019 03:17PM) (new)

Joan Just when I was getting bored with Abdication the author gets back to fundamental questions:
“Did his newspaper not honor the people’s democratic right to know what went on in their” government?

Hmm...do people really believe that citizens have the right to know?


message 1915: by Nichole (new)


message 1916: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I have begun Other Voices, Other Rooms by Truman Capote. I want to read it because Capote's Idabel Thompkins, a character in this semi-autobiographical novel, is said to be young Harper Lee, just as Lee's Dill is young Capote in To Kill a Mockingbird. The bad thing is that I know I do not like the audiobook's narrator, Cody Roberts. He uses a ridiculous Southern accent.


message 1917: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I have begun The Lost Language of Cranes, by a new author for me.


message 1918: by Joan (new)

Joan Starting Flush , a biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s cocker spaniel by Virginia Woolf.
I’ve owned 3 springer spaniels and they have all been strong characters.


message 1919: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
Joan wrote: "Starting Flush , a biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s cocker spaniel by Virginia Woolf.
I’ve owned 3 springer spaniels and they have all been strong..."


Read for the second time last year. Loved it!!! After having finished it I went with my husband on Elisabeth Barrett Browinig Tomb. Fascinating


message 1920: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
Petra wrote: "LauraT wrote: "Up to now I'm liking it quite; it is true that the prose is flat, but I don't find it a drawback. To many "flowers" in books are not to my taste! ..."

Thanks, Laura! We have similar..."


Finished yesterday and I can confirm my first impression: really a great book. And I don't think that anything is needed there. A very dry style, for a subject that needed nothing more ...


message 1921: by Joan (new)

Joan Petra wrote: "LauraT wrote: "Up to now I'm liking it quite; it is true that the prose is flat, but I don't find it a drawback. To many "flowers" in books are not to my taste! ..."

Thanks, Laura! We have similar..."


Funny how we all like different things and describe things differently- I guess I like “flowery” prose. William F. Buckley Jr. wrote funny spy novels that always sent me to the dictionary because he used obscure adjectives that seemed just right. And I love the way Marcel Proust envelopes the reader with his descriptions of smells/sounds/textures.


message 1922: by Joan (last edited Mar 15, 2019 10:02AM) (new)

Joan LauraT wrote: "Joan wrote: "Starting Flush , a biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s cocker spaniel by Virginia Woolf.
I’ve owned 3 springer spaniels and they have al..."


Good to hear from someone else who enjoyed it. I’ll binge on Elizabeth Barrett Browning next.


message 1923: by Diane S ☔ (new)


message 1924: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
Joan wrote: "Petra wrote: "LauraT wrote: "Up to now I'm liking it quite; it is true that the prose is flat, but I don't find it a drawback. To many "flowers" in books are not to my taste! ..."

And I love the way Marcel Proust envelopes the reader with his descriptions of smells/sounds/textures."


But I DO love Proust Style! Or Dicken's, Trollope's or Tolstoi's. I worship almost all South American literature, where authors usemore words you can possibly think of: Gabo, Allende, Amado .... I love long books where I can loose myself in the too many words that lull me.
Still this book, with this story and this terrible background I think was rightly written that way.


message 1925: by Joan (new)

Joan Laura - I get it - the author needs to know when to turn off flow, has to be appropriate.


message 1927: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Will begin Cold Spring Harbor, another by Richard Yates.


message 1928: by Diane (new)

Diane (heatherluna) B is for Burglar by Sue Grafton. I just finished the 1st book in the series A is for Alibi. I'm loving it!!


message 1929: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
I'm at the moment reading The Return of the Dancing Master by Henning Mankell. A great book ....


message 1930: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I have begun the very short Audible Original freebie--A Mind of Her Own by Paula McLain, about Marie Curie.


message 1931: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I thought I would try the classic thriller The Collector by John Fowles.


message 1932: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) Almost finished with Rules of Civility by Amor Towles. Just barely started these 3: Harry's Trees (audiobook), Where the Crawdads Sing, and Who Slays the Wicked (ARC). Still trying to get through A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, reading the occasional chapter here and there.


message 1933: by Joan (new)

Joan I’m going for pure escapism with an English cozy - A Death in the Small Hours


message 1934: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) I've started The Marvelous Village Veiled in Mist, which was the inspiration for the movie "Spirited Away" by Hayao Miyazaki.


message 1935: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
I've started yesterday L'ultimo capitolo inedito de La famiglia Mushkat. La stazione di Bakhmatch by Isaac Bashevis Singer.
It is the last chapter of The Family Moskat, present only in the Yiddish original, never translated in English - and considering that all other translations were taken from the English one, never translated. Erri De Luca, an Italian writer, has translated it from Yiddish. It seems that somehow it reverses the tragic ending of teh masterpiece. I'm really interested


message 1936: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) I just started Yugoslavia, My Fatherland by Goran Vojnović. I had requested my library purchase the book (and of course I forgot about it) and they bought it and checked it out to me! I was really trying to focus on reading books that I own this month but I will make the exception. I think it will be really interesting (and counts for 4 of my challenges, always an important consideration!)


message 1937: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) I've now started Americanah. The only other book I've read (many years ago) by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was Purple Hibiscus, which I loved.


message 1938: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14371 comments Mod
Marina (Sonnenbarke) wrote: "I've now started Americanah. The only other book I've read (many years ago) by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was Purple Hibiscus, which I loved."

Never read anything by her. I'll give a look at her then


message 1939: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) LauraT wrote: "Never read anything by her. I'll give a look at her then"

Do, Laura. As I said, I loved Purple Hibiscus, and I'm really enjoying Americanah. I hope you'll like her books.


message 1940: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I began yesterday a mystery, which is unusual for me. In the Lake of the Woods by Tim O'Brien. I have enjoyed another book by the author so I thought I would give it a try. I have been told it is very good.


message 1941: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) Sounds good Chrissie! I just downloaded the ebook from my library.


message 1942: by Chrissie (last edited Mar 23, 2019 08:10AM) (new)

Chrissie Pam wrote: "Sounds good Chrissie! I just downloaded the ebook from my library."

I liked the first chapter a lot. You start in the woods and there is a beautiful lake and I liked the thoughts of Kathy, who you know is going to disappear....... . The second or third chapter chapter or something like that irritated me because you get quotes and don't know who is saying what until after--because I am listening. Also you get statements and opinions from assorted people whom you do not yet know. How can I evaluate their statements if I do not know them? I am a manic for needing to understand every bit of information given to me--which is stupid. I am telling myself to just cool it and see what the book offers.

Have you started?

Sandy recommended the book to me!


message 1943: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) No, Chrissie, I haven’t started it yet. I downloaded it after I read your comment. I struggle w audiobooks in general so I understand your comment! I’ll let you know what I think as soon as I get into it.


message 1944: by Nichole (new)


message 1945: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Agha-Jaffar | 1418 comments Nichole wrote: "I just started The Forty Rules of Love by Elif Shafak."

I've got that on my TBR. Let us know what you think of it.

I've read her The Bastard of Istanbul, which I enjoyed; her Three Daughters of Eve, not so much; and The Architect's Apprentice, which I thought was her best book.


message 1946: by Nichole (new)

Nichole | 554 comments Tamara wrote: "Nichole wrote: "I just started The Forty Rules of Love by Elif Shafak."

I've got that on my TBR. Let us know what you think of it.

I've read her [book:The Bastar..."


Thanks. I will try to post updates.


message 1947: by Joan (new)

Joan Looking forward to goosebumps (or what a Ukrainian friend translated as chicken-skin) reading This House is Haunted


message 1948: by Chrissie (last edited Mar 23, 2019 11:50PM) (new)

Chrissie Pam wrote: "No, Chrissie, I haven’t started it yet. I downloaded it after I read your comment. I struggle w audiobooks in general so I understand your comment! I’ll let you know what I think as soon as I get i..."

I see what the author is getting said but still not sure what I think of the book. Mysteries are not usually my thing and how he spies on her gives me the creeps. People should talk and play straight with each other.


message 1949: by Pam (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) Christie - the second chapter was kind of weird. It was a flash forward - evidence and statements from the trial for which the crime hasn’t even been committed yet! I’m not sure if I like the book. I’ll give it a few more chapters.


message 1950: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Pam, I finished it a few minutes ago. The book is put together in a fashion to keep you guessing--it is a mystery! I like the ending and I have nothing against its message, but how it is put together is not to my taste. For me it was OK, so I am giving it two stars. I will write a review as soon as I have a chance--today or tomorrow.


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