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What I'm Reading - January/February 2018
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Linda
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Jan 22, 2018 06:18AM

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I read it last year and quite liked it!








I think so too, Patty. I always bring my bag of books along on substitute days.


I also enjoyed The Uncommon Reader.
My favorite Bennett book is the memoir he wrote about his very humble roots: A Life Like Other People's.
I never had the opportunity to see his plays, but I loved the movie versions of THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE and THE HISTORY BOYS. Bennett also wrote the screenplays for both of them.

I read it about 10 years ago. I liked it, but didn't love it. Did appreciate the VERY British humor.
I did have the pleasure of seeing The History Boys performed. Very powerful play.


Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen – 4****
One of the best opening lines of literature: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.” It's no wonder this is a classic. Austen is simply the master of dialogue. The way in which the characters interact brings them to life.
LINK to my review

Now I'm fascinated and entertained by Nell Zink's Mislaid, a subversive novel with a southern drawl told with deadpan hilarity.



Hidden Figures – Margot Lee Shetterly – 3.5***
The subtitle is all the synopsis anyone needs: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race. I had seen the movie, but it covers just a few years, and compresses the story of many women into three characters. Shetterly’s book covers the time from the early years of WW2 to the Moon Landing in August 1969. I’m glad I read it, and that these women’s stories are finally brought to the forefront of America’s consciousness.
LINK to my review

It's an entertaining, completely fabricated romance between a couple of historical figures in early Sydney town. Such a painless way to learn a bit of history. :)






Inside the O’Briens – Lisa Genova – 5*****
A diagnosis of Huntington’s Disease affects not only Boston cop Joe O’Brien, but his entire family. Genova writes so well about neurological disorders, making the story both entertaining and informative. I really felt as if I knew these characters – their fears, joys, dreams, and anxieties.
LINK to my review


I loved it and quoted quite a lot about Bligh's colourful character.




Killers of the Flower Moon
– David Grann – 4****
Wow. I am ashamed to say that I knew nothing of this shameful episode of American history. Gra..."
I just finished this for the in person group I’ve joined at our local library. I knew nothing about these horrific events, either, and neither did the other 20 people in the group.
The writing was competent, if not wonderful. But the stories were so convoluted and involved I could have used a flow chart.


The Longest Night – Andria Williams – 4****
A young military couple, Nat and Paul Collier vs his supervisor at the nuclear power plant where Paul works, and MSgt Reynolds’ mean-spirited wife, Jeannie. Add a handsome local cowboy and a reactor with problems that are being ignored and it’s only a question of which will blow first: the reactor, Paul’s career, or Paul and Nat’s marriage. Great character-based novel with a gripping story line. I was engaged and interested from beginning to end.
LINK to my review

Artemis is the second book by the author of The Martian, and it's great fun, an adventure on a lunar colony with a female wise-cracking anti-heroine. The first page is a map, which made me a goner early on. Like The Martian, it's sprinkled with plausible science (as if the map weren't enough to steal my heart!).
Love and Other Pranks is very much in the vein of Tom Robbins, very creative, fun, and occasionally thought provoking.



Oh yeah, I'm leading the discussion and I hope others are reading this.




Ann,
I finished this book about a week ago and really look forward to its discussion.


I love the fact that she's a Saudi girl living on the moon and getting by on her wits, which is a nice way of saying that she's a small time criminal who would really like to be a big time criminal ... although "criminal" may be a flexible term, because who is making the rule/laws on the moon? I really like how Weir thanks several women at the end of the book for helping him with creating a protagonist who is a teen age girl. If you ever read any of Heinlein juveniles and liked them, I think that you'll love this book.


It could be a great movie, especially if the screenplay sticks to the novel.

When I have to put down the Biden book, I pick up Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. A little fantasy helps, in this case.

Haha, I stayed up and finished it last night Ann. I rated it a four. I’ll discuss why not a five later.
Now I have started Doc by Mary Doris Russell. I am a sucker for historical tinged books.
@Mary Anne, Joe Biden’s book sounds interesting. I like the man .

I would give Manhattan Beach a 4.5. I enjoyed Doc by Mary Doria Russell. Her books are really original.
Mary Anne, I like Joe Biden too.


Packing For Mars – Mary Roach – 3***
Subtitle: The Curious Science of Life in the Void. Another entertaining and informative read from an author who has become a favorite “science” writer for me. As she has done for sex, our alimentary canal, and cadavers, Roach turns her curiosity, sense of adventure and wit to the topic of space travel. Entertaining and informative (and with some laugh-out-loud moments).
LINK to my review


Packing For Mars
– Mary Roach – 3***
Subtitle: The Curious Science of Life in the Void. Another entertaining and informative read from an author who has bec..."
I'm putting this one on my TBR list, BC.

I'll be late with this book. Waiting on it from the library. Still I'm #9.


I hope they have multiple copies of Manhattan Beach, Gina. Join in whenever you can."
I just started it last night and am hooked.


Etta and Otto and Russell and James – Emma Hooper – 3***
Eighty-two-year-old Etta has never seen the sea, so she decides one day to leave her Saskatchewan farm and head out on foot. It reminded me of Rachel Joyce’s The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, but it was not quite as engaging. Use of magical realism and non-linear timeline.
LINK to my review
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