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What are you currently reading?

Thanks, both of you, for the feedback on The Shack.
Oh, and does that review contain any spoilers?


...so now I'm reading a book and practicing my French at the same time :)
Cool! and welcome to the board, Catarina. :-) How are you liking Mermaid A Twist on the Classic Tale?

I really enjoyed The Tender Bar, recommended to me by my pharmacist.


Sorry to hear that. I thought the scene where he couldn't find his girl on the mesa was worth the whole story. But I enjoyed the whole book and I don't read very many memoirs.

Cool! and welcome to the board, Catarina. :-) How are you liking Mermaid A Twist on the Classic Tale?"
Thank you, Reggia! :)
I'm really enjoying the book. It's a good fantasy book and it's also nice to see how well the author treated the classic and created a new story at the same time!





ebook:
Is This The Real Life? by Mark Blake
Shadow's End by Moira Katson
audiobook:
J.K. Rowling, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire", read by Stephen Fry.
paper:
Home Improvement: Undead Edition, anthology edited by Charlaine Harris & Toni L.P. Kelner. Has stories by Seanan McGuire, Harris & Kelner themselves, Stacia Kane, Melissa Marr, Patricia Briggs, James Grady, Heather Graham, Victor Gischler, S.J. Rozan, E.E. Knight, Simon R. Green and Rochelle Krich. (If you're getting it, don't get it for the Charlaine Harris story, but DO get it for the Seanan McGuire short. That's my advice...)










Glad you're able to balance author friendships and reviews, Werner. Sometimes those can be tricky.





Love in the Time of Cholera is my third favourite book of all time, so after I read it, I went looking for more by Gabriel García Márquez and read One Hundred Years of Solitude. I HATED it, LOL! Came very close to giving up on it, but my stubbornness carried me through to the end (I think I can count on one hand the books I haven't finished). Let's just say it was a bit TOO abstract for me. I hope you enjoy it more than I did, Reggia!


My Supernatural Fiction Readers group is set to start a common read of Storm Front on October 1. Since that's so close, and I was ready to begin on a new book today anyway, I decided to go ahead and get an early start!

Banner- One of my favorites.
Still plugging my way through Drood, and just started House of Leaves- perfect reads for a spooky month.

Banner- One of my favorites.
Still plugging my way through Drood, and just started House of Leaves- perfect reads for a spoo..."
MichelleCH. I've finished the Book Thief and also loved it. I'm look forward to the movie, but I don't see how it could capture some of the amazing moments in the book.











But I did finally settle for the next in the #1 Ladies' Detective Agency series. Like the other, it is light and witty but I am enjoying this last, The Limpopo Academy of Private Detectives more than the last few in the series.
Charly, I am finding that true as well! I looked at my "unfinished" list recently and there are several that I did think I'd get back to... but no promises. :-p
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Sometimes, though, the author is telling a long story that can't be fitted into one volume, and you need to read the whole thing in order to know that story and experience it as an artistic whole. That's often the case with trilogies or other short series (such as the Twilight Saga, the Inheritance Cycle, or Krisi Keley's On the Soul series) that aren't intended to be open-ended. The Hunger Games trilogy definitely falls in this category! Then too, there are some open-ended series that have an episodic structure, built around a particular character or set of characters that the reader likes and wants to spend more time with. Reading sequels in these series is like visiting an old friend. :-)
For whatever it's worth, I gave The Shack: Where Tragedy Confronts Eternity five stars, and even recommended it to a number of people. Here's the link to my review: www.goodreads.com/review/show/45339596 .