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Lounge: OPEN, please come in... > What are you currently reading?

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message 601: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Reggia wrote: "Don't you just love when a favorite book becomes a series, Werner?" Actually, I have mixed feelings about series. Sometimes I think they're just ways for the author/publisher to make more money off of a literary vision that was already fully expressed and experienced in the first volume, with the later books losing freshness and suffering from what I call "sequelitis." Anne of Avonlea, for instance, wasn't up to the standard of Anne of Green Gables, IMO; and while I really liked both Dune and 1632, I was never tempted to go on to the voluminous sequels.

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 .


message 602: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments I see your point, Werner, but mostly I've been happy with sequels.

Thanks, both of you, for the feedback on The Shack.

Oh, and does that review contain any spoilers?


message 603: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments No, Reggia, I read over the review again just now, and didn't find any spoilers.


message 604: by Catarina (new)

Catarina Coelho Now I'm reading Fantasy, "Mermaid: A Twist on the Classic Tale", by Carolyn Turgeon. At the same time I am reading "Georgie", a manga book (there's no Portuguese or English version of this Japanese book, but I can read French, so now I'm reading a book and practicing my French at the same time :) !).


message 605: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments
...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?


message 606: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Just finished Les Liaisons Dangereuses, now reading The Rook, which has a great beginning.


message 607: by William (new)

William Charly wrote: "Finished Tourist Season, And Water for Elephants, which I found surprisingly interesting one I got into it. I am currently closing in on the finish of the Tender Bar."

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


message 608: by William (new)

William I am currently reading Cloud Atlas to cleanse my palate after the bitter taste left behind by Dan Brown's Inferno.


message 609: by William (new)

William Charly wrote: "Didn't care that much for Tender Bar"

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.


message 610: by Catarina (new)

Catarina Coelho Reggia wrote: "...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?"


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!


message 611: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Finished The Rook, starting The Moonspinners for a group read.


message 612: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Although my Goodreads friend Karin Kaufman's new novel, All Souls A Gatehouse Thriller (Gatehouse Thrillers #1) by K.T. Kaufman isn't for sale in a print version yet, I was fortunate enough to get in on a giveaway offer for an e-copy, and started reading it this evening. (I expect to buy a paperback copy once they're available, which will be a ways down the road.) This is my first exposure to Karin's work, and I've been looking forward to it!


message 613: by Reggia (last edited Jul 26, 2013 09:14PM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Abandoned last book (due to time) and now reading A Passage to India.


message 614: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Just finished The Moonspinners and Joy of Gardening- both were great. Now reading A Clash of Kings.


message 615: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments In the mail yesterday, I received my eagerly awaited advance review copy of the latest novel by my Goodreads friend LeAnn Neal Reilly, The Last Stratiote by LeAnn Neal Reilly , which she was kind enough to offer me earlier this summer. I was able to get started on it right away!


message 616: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Just finished A Clash of Kings, now reading Child 44.


message 617: by Tria (new)

Tria (trialia) | 19 comments Can't link from the app (stupid thing), so will edit links in later, but currently focusing on the following from my currently-reading list of 15 ;) --

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...)


message 618: by Reggia (last edited Sep 13, 2013 03:36PM) (new)


message 619: by Werner (last edited Aug 24, 2013 11:14AM) (new)

Werner | 2693 comments A couple of days ago, I started on the memoir Heart in the Right Place by Carolyn Jourdan . The author, Carolyn Jourdan, is one of my most long-standing Goodreads friends, but the book has been on my radar ever since it first came out in 2007. I'm glad to have finally gotten around to reading it! Memoirs aren't my characteristic choice of reading material, but I'm enjoying this one.


message 620: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments So, I had been waiting for Philippa Gregory's The White Princess to be published, and figured that when I ordered that, I would order SOME of the classics I've been wanting to read for so long. Well, 'some' turned out to be five: Fahrenheit 451, Animal Farm, The Book Thief, For Whom the Bell Tolls and The House of the Spirits. Ah, there's nothing like a little retail therapy in an online bookstore!


message 621: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Finished Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, now reading Drood.


message 622: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments One of my other groups is doing a common read of C. S. Lewis' The Great Divorce this month. I read this once before, about 20 years ago, but quickly realized that I don't remember it well enough to contribute intelligently to a discussion of it. So, I started a reread of it today.


message 623: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, I read Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee a good many years ago (history is my undergraduate major). I found it an enormously powerful, eye-opening (and starkly tragic) book; I count it as one of the most educational history books I've read.


message 624: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Earlier today, I started The Pulptress by Tommy Hancock an anthology of New Pulp short stories by Pro Se Press authors, featuring one of Pro Se's original heroines, the Pulptress.


message 625: by Banner (new)

Banner Werner, this seems so interesting. I am going to read the kindle sample and see how I like it. I grew up on the Doc Savage paperbacks.


message 626: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Banner, I've never actually read any of the Doc Savage books (though I've heard of the character, in discussions in the pulp fiction fan group I belong to here on Goodreads). But a modern-day book you might like, inspired by the same character, is Doc Wilde and the Frogs of Doom. Here's the link to my review: www.goodreads.com/review/show/55464353 .


message 627: by Nicole (new)

Nicole | 1752 comments It's only September and 'creepy' is going around. ;) I'm reading Hide Me Among the Graves.
Glad you're able to balance author friendships and reviews, Werner. Sometimes those can be tricky.


message 628: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Callista, I know exactly what you mean! I don't automatically read books by friends; I only do it if I think I might like them, and I've never had to rate a friend's book with less than three stars. So far, I've never had anyone upset at me because they weren't happy with a review, though I've had author "friends" who unfriended me when they realized I wasn't going to run out and buy their book(s). For some time, I've also followed the practice of warning a friend if my review would be less than four stars and would include significant negative points as well as positive, and offer to refrain from doing a review if they'd prefer that (I've had one who took that option!). I think that's only fair, especially when they've been kind enough to give me a copy of the book for free. But I'd never give a friend's book a glowing review that I didn't honestly believe in.


message 629: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Interesting thoughts, Werner.


message 630: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments The Lady in the Loch by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough is a book that's been on my radar ever since it was published (I read reviews in the library trade journals), and that's been high on my priority list for reading ever since I snagged a copy a couple of years ago on BookMooch; but I just got a chance to start it this weekend. Set in early 19th-century Scotland, it features a young Sir Walter Scott as the main character, in a heady brew of Scots history and lore. So far, I'm thoroughly enjoying it!


message 631: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Hi Werner! I've enjoyed my Scottish tales from that era... looking forward to seeing your review.


message 632: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Still working on 100 Years of Solitude... somewhat of an unusual book but at least I can boast I read it, lol! I have a couple other books sitting on the bed in my TBR (to be read) pile. ;)


message 633: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments Reggia wrote: "Still working on 100 Years of Solitude... somewhat of an unusual book but at least I can boast I read it, lol! I have a couple other books sitting on the bed in my TBR (to be read) pile. ;)"

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!


message 634: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Reggia, I think the Scarborough book will be a pretty quick read, so I'm expecting to have my review up by the end of the month!


message 635: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Reggia, I posted my review of The Lady in the Loch last night. Here's the link: www.goodreads.com/review/show/33319353 .

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!


message 636: by Banner (new)

Banner In the middle of The Book Thief. Very engaging story.


message 637: by MichelleCH (new)

MichelleCH (lalatina) | 165 comments Banner wrote: "In the middle of The Book Thief. Very engaging story."

Banner- One of my favorites.

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


message 638: by Banner (new)

Banner MichelleCH wrote: "Banner wrote: "In the middle of The Book Thief. Very engaging story."

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.


message 639: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments I'm current reading and enjoying Jane Eyre. It's my second read through, the first being 10 years ago.


message 640: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Ok , thanks Charly


message 641: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments The book I'm currently reading out loud to my wife Barb is The Empty Crown (Twelve Treasures, #1-3) by Rosemary Edghill , an omnibus volume of the first three novels in Rosemary Edghill's Twelve Treasures fantasy series. It's been sitting in my massive to-read piles ever since I got it from the Science Fiction Book Club back in the 90s; so I thought it was about time we read it!


message 642: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, as you can tell, I'm not Reggia (she's much better looking!); but nonetheless, I think I've got this thread set so it will always appear first in the folder. Whenever you want to do that, just click on the edit link at the top of any given thread. At the next screen, check the box to designate the topic as "important." That's one of the privileges you have as a group moderator.


message 643: by Banner (new)

Banner I'm finishing The Forgotten Garden a very interesting historic fiction. The story is about an abandon little girl in Austria in 1913.


message 644: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Glad I could help, Charly!


message 645: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Today my friend Jackie and I started on a buddy read of the first novel in the Kate Daniels urban fantasy series, Magic Bites (Kate Daniels, #1) by Ilona Andrews , by Ilona Andrews. We've heard a lot of good things about this one!


message 646: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments I haven't yet decided... start something new... or retrieve a book from the abandoned pile... headed to the library first so we'll see!


message 647: by Banner (new)

Banner Reggia, this is my constant search for as well....the next book. Once I'm into a book, I relax. But when it's over I always have trouble deciding what is next.


message 648: by Banner (new)

Banner I have too many books in my "to read" list. I find that I put books there that I may not be planning on reading to soon, but I don't want to forget about them.


message 649: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Me too, Banner


message 650: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Banner, there are times when I want to still savor a book.. it's as if I feel disloyal to pick up another one too quick.

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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