Women's Classic Literature Enthusiasts discussion
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What Are You Currently Reading?
message 351:
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Abigail
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May 26, 2023 07:02PM
The Readers Review: https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/....
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Currently reading The Brandons by Angela Thirkell, which is a group read in the Retro Reads group here on Goodreads.Just finished The Hollow Hills by Mary Stewart, and about to start a group read of The Monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis.
Abigail wrote: "I know, I belong to about twenty reading groups and always feel behind!"Holy cow! Are you retired? I cannot keep up with mine and it is considerably fewer. I am still working full time.
I am retired, yes, and reading is one of my chief occupations. I am not active (or only occasionally active) in a few of the groups, but for most of them I try to read the assigned book in a real-world group every month and in a Goodreads group at least half of the months. I generally read about 10 books a month. It is my greatest pleasure, and my best way of avoiding the next novel I’m supposed to be writing. 😄
Currently reading Transfer of Power by Vince Flynn, quite a come-down from Mansfield Park! The writing style is geared toward those who dropped out of school at age 10, seemingly. It’s a 1999 thriller about Islamic terrorists taking over the White House, and it’s simultaneously prescient and clueless. Every character is introduced with a physical description, including height and weight. Very sixth grade.
Enjoyed A Winter Away, followed by Precious Bane and Touch Not the Cat. Read a book I basically loathed (so disappointed because I had high hopes), Her Lost Words: A Novel of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley. Currently reading a book for the Jane Austen July challenge, Praying with Jane: 31 Days through the Prayers of Jane Austen, which I chose because Jane Austen’s prayers were the only scrap of her writing I had not previously read. Also for another group read, Olive by Dinah Maria Craik, pure Victoriana.
Just finished a rather surprising book by P. G. Wodehouse, Jill the Reckless. It has some of his usual comedic material but is a bit more substantive, including some sadder bits. Also it’s mostly set in New York City, in a Broadway theater, a world Wodehouse knew well, so not a British drawing-room comedy. I think members of this group would enjoy it.Also working my way through two group reads, Olive: A Novel and Carmilla by LeFanu, J. Sheridan (2012) Paperback by Sheridan LeFanu, a deliciously prurient Victorian lesbian vampire story. Anne Rice, eat your heart out! Then, for my sins, it’s on to The Scarlet Letter.
Abigail wrote: "and Carmilla by LeFanu, J. Sheridan (2012) Paperback by Sheridan LeFanu, a deliciously prurient Victorian lesbian vampire story"I love Carmilla! It conjures such a wonderful gothic atmosphere.
Anne Rice couldn't write like that in a million years.
Just finished a Virago classic; The Gentlewoman by Laura Talbot . It was engrossing after a slow start. Quite moving in it's depiction of society changes during WW2. Now I need some humour so back to EF Benson and his Paying Guests
Elizabeth wrote: "Abigail wrote: "and Carmilla by LeFanu, J. Sheridan (2012) Paperback by Sheridan LeFanu, a deliciously prurient Victorian lesbian vampire story"I love Carmilla! It conjures such a wonderful gothi..."
Very true! I’m enjoying it a lot too—the best so far of the series of gothic group reads in the Readers Review group here on Goodreads. I believe the next up is going to be Dracula.
MaryE wrote: "Just finished a Virago classic; The Gentlewoman by Laura Talbot . It was engrossing after a slow start. Quite moving in it's depiction of society changes during WW2. Now I need some humour so back ..."That does sound very interesting, MaryE. Sigh, the TBR never gets shorter, no matter how assiduously I read!
I loved Jill the Reckless . She was indeed not the average wodehouse heroine. I think I mentioned that that was my nom de plume( as it were) in the wodehouse group I frequented for years. All the members took wodehousian pseudonyms ; was great fun. Oh Dracula , I'm tempted. ( to read again ) Yes , the TBR gets longer every time I enter goodreads...lol
Finished reading Hester by Laurie Lico Albanese, which I enjoyed a lot. Set in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1829-30; Nathaniel Hawthorne is a character. This is NOT a retelling of The Scarlet Letter from Hester’s point of view, it’s much more creative than that. Then I read a disappounting Golden Age mystery, Death of a Bookseller by Bernard Farmer (1956), and am now starting Charlotte Fairlie by D. E. Stevenson.
I am trying to get out of a reading slump. I am listening to The Story Girl by Lucy Maud Montgomery and it is not what I expected. Or maybe it is but not what I had hoped.
That’s so frustrating, Jan! What I do in those moments is reread a beloved book and then seek out something that hits similar notes.Not a propos of that tactic, I’m clearing my palate after a long and intense reading of Angle of Repose by rereading Witch of Blackbird Pond. It’s a book I adored as a child but haven’t loved as an adult, but it’s an easy notch in another group’s reading challenge.
Starting a book about early twentieth-century Oregon: Honey in the Horn by H. L. Davis. A Pulitzer winner in its day, we’ll see. . . .
I did not get far with Honey in the Horn—too much animal cruelty for my stomach. Soothed myself with Merry Hall by Beverley Nichols, and now it’s on to a favorite essayist, Rebecca Solnit: A Field Guide to Getting Lost.
Abigail wrote: "...and now it’s on to a favorite essayist, Rebecca Solnit: A Field Guide to Getting Lost."Oooh, this one is on my tbr as well! I'm looking forward to your thoughts on that one 😊
Jassmine wrote: "Abigail wrote: "...and now it’s on to a favorite essayist, Rebecca Solnit: A Field Guide to Getting Lost."Oooh, this one is on my tbr as well! I'm looking forward to your thoughts on that one 😊"
Loving it so far. I always enjoy the way her mind roves around without losing track of the point.
Abigail wrote: "Loving it so far. I always enjoy the way her mind roves around without losing track of the point."I only read her Men Explain Things to Me (collection not just that one essay) which I thought was good if a little dated and I wanted to read more from her since. This one is definitely high on the possibilities...
Jassmine wrote: "Abigail wrote: "Loving it so far. I always enjoy the way her mind roves around without losing track of the point."I only read her Men Explain Things to Me (collection not just tha..."
This one is less political and more philosophical. I’ve read only the first two so far; the first was about losing and finding, the second about longing.
I’m re reading The Child from the Sea by Elizabeth Goudge . I adored her books when I was about 15 so it’s interesting to re visit this . Not sure that I’ll persevere but I think the early third is my favourite section of the book .
Abigail, yes I agree with some of her others . This one is interesting to re read from an adult viewpoint . I’m sure I loved the bravery and wildness of the heroine , Lucy , and actually still do..
It’s magical in many ways …
Finished A Field Guide to Getting Lost (thought-provoking and moving in the end) and A Walk in Wolf Wood (not one of Mary Stewart’s better children’s books IMHO) and am going to start Frequent Hearses by Edmund Crispin.
Abigail I think todays readers wouldn’t be happy with the very accurate way children were treated in the time of this book . They were treated like adults . Children weren’t children , basically ; quite sad . ! Lots of punishments ; whipping etc . I hadn’t remembered those details so quite frankly I don’t think I’d recommend it .
Read a book I gave five stars to (though I didn’t think I would at the start): We Are Not Like Them by Christine Pride and Jo Piazza. Really well done. Moving on to a new (to me) annotated edition of Jane Austen’s ≤i>Emma, the one by David Shapard.
I'm currently reading Little Women by Louisa May Alcott for the first time and i'm enjoying it a lot!!
I'm continuing with E M Delafield. I enjoyed The Way Things Are and am now into Thank Heaven Fasting . I found Consequences on Abe Books so will enjoy that when it finally arrives.
I just finished readingJane Eyre. Couldn't believe how it blew me away. Here is my review to sharehttps://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Glad you could enjoy Jane Eyre as an adult, Georgia! When I read it a few years ago, the bloom was off the rose for me. A Goodreads group called The Readers Review is just starting a group read of it, if you wanted to join in.I’ve missed recording several reads here over the past few weeks—Goodreads keeps dumping me off threads—but one I just finished is The Manningtree Witches by A. K. Blakemore. Blakemore is a poet and this is her first novel, about the seventeenth-century Witchfinder Matthew Hopkins and one of his would-be victims. Very intense.
Just finished Ithaca and The House of Odysseus by Claire North. Excellent writing told from the POV of Penelope and the women left behind. A new twist on the ancient Homeric tales. Highly recommend!
Sense & Sensibility by Joanna Trollopefor a library challenge to read a modern version of a classic.
Abigail wrote: "I wonder if Little Women was ever read in this group."I actually didn't read Little Women yet... I'm planning to for several years, but it's still not happening 🙈😂😂😂
I know Little Women is a big favorite but I didn’t love it as a child and have never reread it.Currently I’m going back and forth between two books: The Heroine, Or, Adventures of a Fair Romance Reader by Eaton Stannard Barrett, an outrageous spoof of gothic novels published in 1813 (with the Readers Review group); and The Wicked Day, the last volume in Mary Stewart’s Merlin/Arthur series, which is part of the ongoing read of all her books in publication order in the Madam, Want to Talk about Mary Stewart? group.
Finished a reread of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin and read The Daughters of George III: Sisters and Princesses by Catherine Curzon, the latter quite disappointing—mostly about romance and sex. Next going to start A Night of Errors by Michael Innes.
Georgia wrote: "I just finished readingJane Eyre. Couldn't believe how it blew me away. Here is my review to sharehttps://www.goodreads.com/review/show......"
I read it when I was about 12 (decades ago) and not since.
I thoroughly enjoyed A Night Of Errors and am now reading a little-publicized book from England, Somebody Loves You by Mona Arshi, which I bought for the cover without knowing a thing about it.
Several books have gone by since my last note—The Heroine, Or, Adventures of a Fair Romance Reader, The Daughters of George III: Sisters and Princesses, Miss Hargreaves, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, Thornyhold, I may be missing one or two—and now starting the original edition of Frankenstein: The 1818 Text.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Seán Barrett (other topics)Virginia Woolf (other topics)
Mary Wollstonecraft (other topics)
John Ehle (other topics)
Geraldine Brooks (other topics)
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