Litwit Lounge discussion

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

Comments Showing 651-700 of 2,082 (2082 new)    post a comment »

message 651: by Banner (new)

Banner Well Reggia it so happens that audible.com had the first book in that series (no 1 Ladies Detective Agency) on sale the day of your comment. I was on the fence deciding to buy it or not and you pushed me over. I really have got to stop looking at the "daily deals"


message 652: by Werner (last edited Nov 04, 2013 02:26PM) (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, I think the comment you're replying to was actually by Banner. (But you're right; I have a feeling that hanging out on Audible.com would tend to greatly increase the to-read list, not reduce it! :-) )


message 653: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments On my most recent trip to our local bookstore, Hearthside Books, I found that for a limited time, the owners had decided to make some of the many advance review copies they receive from book publishers available for free to their customers. Om the strength of a glowing review from a lady in the Book Review Exchange group, I snagged a copy of The Screaming Staircase (Lockwood & Co, #1) by Jonathan Stroud , the first volume in the new Lockwood and Co. series by Jonathan Stroud (whose previous work I've heard of but not read). I started on it this weekend, and I'm enjoying it so far.


message 654: by Angela (last edited Nov 18, 2013 08:49PM) (new)

Angela Nova (angelanova) I am currently reading Off-Topic: The Story of an Internet Revolt


message 655: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Here's the link to the Goodreads description for the book Angela mentioned, in case anyone is interested: Off-Topic The Story of an Internet Revolt by G.R. Reader . It's on my to-read shelf, as well.


message 656: by Angela (new)

Angela Nova (angelanova) Charly wrote: "Angela, is that fiction or fact? sounds interesting."

Good question. I think readers will need to answer that one for themselves. (:


message 657: by Angela (new)

Angela Nova (angelanova) Werner wrote: "Here's the link to the Goodreads description for the book Angela mentioned, in case anyone is interested: Off-Topic The Story of an Internet Revolt by G.R. Reader. It's on my to-read shelf,..."

Excellent! Thank you for posting this link.


message 658: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Thanks Angela and Werner, it looks like an interesting read.


message 659: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Despite being in the midst of a bunch of other books, I started reading Off-Topic: The Story of an Internet Revolt. It's been very informative and more enjoyable than I expected. I'd be interested in hearing others' thoughts when they get through it.


message 660: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Just took a peek at Off-Topic, I may be back to finish it as well.

For now, I have begun Count of Monte Cristo with hopes of finishing sometime in January.


message 661: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments I just finished reading The Signature of All Things and highly recommend it for fans of historical fiction. Here is my review:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 662: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments The book I'm currently reading doesn't appear in the Goodreads database. It's Wreaths of Empire, which I'm beta-reading for the author, Andrew Seddon, who's a Goodreads friend of mine (and a long-standing Internet pen pal dating back to the days before Goodreads). This particular book is a science fiction novel, set in the same far-future, human-colonized galaxy as his Iron Scepter, but about fifty years after the events in the latter book.


message 663: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Didn't know Andrew Seddon wrote sci fi. Will be interested to hear what you think of it.


message 664: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Yes, Janelle, that's the genre where he got his start, although he writes some historical fiction as well. I can't do a formal Goodreads review of Wreaths until it's actually published and entered in the Goodreads database; but when I finish it, I'll try to post a comment here with my reaction.

I'm glad to hear that you know about his work at all! He's not as well-known as he deserves to be.


message 665: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments I've only read one of his novels, the one set in Roman times. I've never seen any other novels by him, but I'd made the assumption that he stuck to historical fiction. I enjoyed the novel I read by him, but not enough to seek him out. But I do love reading Christian sci fi, so I'll have to look at his other books.


message 666: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Earlier today, I sent you a couple of recommendations for science fiction books by him, Janelle!


message 667: by Janelle (new)

Janelle (janelle5) | 755 comments Thanks Werner, I got a notification about the books, but haven't had a chance yet to check them out.


message 668: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments You're welcome, Janelle!


message 669: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments Here is my review of For Whom the Bell Tolls, which I read recently and will never forget. It really blew me away:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 670: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments For the past fortnight and more, I've been beta reading a couple of unpublished novels, both by Goodreads friends, which aren't listed in the Goodreads database, so I haven't had any titles to post here. Yesterday, however, I started on two that I can post: Paradise Revisited by Shane Joseph , by yet another Goodreads friend, Shane Joseph, and Iron Bloom (Legend of the Iron Flower, #1) by Billy Wong . (Actually, I started the latter late Thursday night, but noted it as "currently reading" after midnight.)

Shane's book is a collection of mainstream short stories, descriptive fiction set in the contemporary or near-contemporary world. This is my first exposure to his work (it's drawn me in so far!), and he was kind enough to offer me an ARC in exchange for my honest review. While I don't read as much of this type of fiction as I do the speculative variety, I like it when it's well done, which this is; and the unusual setting (Sri Lanka, where Shane was born) is interesting and off the beaten track.

Iron Bloom author Billy Wong is a member of my Action Heroine Fans group here on Goodreads, which is how I came to know his work. This novel is the opener for his swords-and-sorcery fantasy series, Legend of the Iron Flower, featuring female warrior Rose Agen. I've never read any of Wong's novels, but I've mostly liked his short e-stories, and encountered and very much liked Rose in that format with Bad Milk (Side Stories of the Iron Flower) by Billy Wong . That made me interested in snapping up a limited time free offer of the e-book for my Kindle app, but that won't be a substitute for the print book; if I like it, I'm committed to buying a paperback copy to keep!


message 671: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Given my liking for supernatural fiction, you'd think I'd have explored the urban fantasy field much sooner and more fully; but before this year, I hadn't read in it very much. This past year, though, I've enjoyed several UF reads, and just started another, Moon Called (Mercy Thompson, #1) by Patricia Briggs , the opening volume in Patricia Briggs' Mercy Thompson series, following the adventures of a shape-shifting heroine. The book was a recent kind gift from a friend in another group.


message 672: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, I read Mutiny on the Bounty back in junior high school, and really liked it; hope you did, too!

I've had to wait awhile, but I've finally started the last book of Suzanne Collins' Hunger Games trilogy, Mockingjay (The Hunger Games, #3) by Suzanne Collins . The mixed reaction to this volume from series fans has me approaching it with much curiosity (and some trepidation!).


message 673: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments Finally, here is my review of The Book Thief, one of the three best books I read in 2013 - and, in fact, one of the best books I have ever had the privilege of reading:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 674: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, a couple of my friends (whose judgment I often agree with) gave five-star ratings to all three books of the Hunger Games trilogy. So I'm not automatically expecting to dislike Mockingjay just because some folks did.

Yes, some trilogies are really bound very closely together, and could be read and reviewed as one work. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings (which was originally written as one long book; the publisher made him split it into more manageable units) is a good example.


message 675: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, one of my Goodreads friends does the same thing with series books! There's a lot to be said for that approach, especially if it's a short series (like a trilogy or quartet) that has a beginning, middle and end, rather than a very open-ended one that can go on indefinitely.


message 676: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Some other novelists --Hardy, Faulkner, and Norah Lofts come to mind-- also set all or much of their fiction in one fictional location or area, but vary the characters that they follow in particular parts of the corpus. The reader comes to appreciate the familiar setting.

Series longer than four books are usually built around a particular character(s) that readers like and want to spend more time with, and whose circumstances can allow for an open-ended series of episodic adventures. I can appreciate that approach (though I don't try to read all of the extant books back-to-back, either!) Of course, I also used to read encyclopedia sets, as a kid (I was a weird child.... :-) ).


message 677: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Good points, Charly!


message 678: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments Here is my review of The Pillars of the Earth, which I found to be a real page-turner, even though there were a lot of pages to turn!

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 679: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments I just finished The Age of Innocence, which I really really enjoyed and will review soon, plus Collected Poems: Edna St. Vincent Millay, which I also gave four stars. My review is here:

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Now I'm onto The Bean Trees and Orphan Train.


message 680: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Having just finished Mockingjay, I'm looking ahead to taking part in a common read of David Weber's On Basilisk Station (Honor Harrington, #1) by David Weber for February in one of my other groups. Rather than start another novel in the meantime, I'm reading short stories from the collection Sword and Sorceress XIX by Marion Zimmer Bradley ; come Feb. 1, I can finish whatever story I'm reading and put the book aside for later. I'm a big fan of the Sword and Sorceress series. (This is one of three volumes that were assembled from material already submitted when founding editor Marion Zimmer Bradley died.)


message 681: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments I'm reading the lastest installment from the Sunday Philosophy Club, The Forgotten Affairs of Youth. There seems to be less "story material" and more ethical philosophizing than previous ones but I'm enjoying it nonetheless.


message 682: by Banner (new)

Banner Interesting podcast on Jo Walton's new book.

http://blog.christianitytoday.com/pod...


message 683: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments The Shack... it's a bit annoying to me but I continue to read so I can argue about it at some future point. :-p


Planning to follow up with The Painted Veil which I inadvertently abandoned a year or so ago.




message 684: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Personally, I liked The Shack, too (rated it as a five-star read, and recommended it to a couple of dozen people!); but I can understand why some readers wouldn't. It's very much a novel of ideas, and that's not everyone's cup of tea.


message 685: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments During the month of March, my Fans of British Writers group is doing Tolkien's The Silmarillion (Middle-Earth Universe) by J.R.R. Tolkien as a common read; so I started on that one yesterday. While I was between common reads last week, I started intermittently dipping into one of the story collections among my mountainous TBR piles, Dark and Stormy Knights by P.N. Elrod . The latter reading, of course, continues my broadening acquaintance with the whole urban fantasy sub-genre.


message 686: by Reggia (last edited Mar 26, 2014 09:12PM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments I finished The Painted Veil, misplaced The Shack while moving and began The Portrait of Dorian Gray as well as a book on walking.


message 687: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments My Goodreads friend Jackie and I just started a buddy read of The Shadow Lamp (Bright Empires #4) by Stephen R. Lawhead , the fourth novel in Stephen Lawhead's Bright Empires series. (We'd previously read the first three together as well.)

Reggia, I liked The Picture of Dorian Gray well enough to give it five stars; but Wilde's Victorian prose and concentration on ideas rather than action doesn't appeal to all modern readers. I'll be interested in hearing what you think of it!


message 688: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Yesterday, having finished The Shadow Lamp, I was ready to start another book; and with perfect timing, Coral Hare Atomic Agent (A WW2 Spy Novel) Inspired by actual historical events by Clive Lee had arrived in the mail. It's a newly-published World War II spy novel with a Nisei heroine, a teen who becomes a U.S. undercover agent. Author Clive Lee is a member of one of my other groups, and generously offered me a free copy when I said his book sounded intriguing. I've barely begun it, but I'm impressed by the writing so far!


message 689: by Reggia (last edited Apr 14, 2014 08:10PM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments I'm rereading A Voice in the Wind as I will be discussing it with a local book club. I rarely do this but it's been many years and I remember staying up half the night the first time around, lol... let's hope I enjoy at least half as much again!


message 690: by Karin (new)

Karin I'm reading The Tipping Point which is better than I expected it to be during the first chapter, Thank You for Arguing which is also better than I expected given how simply rhetoric is being handled here and am in between fiction novels at the moment.


message 691: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Thank You for Arguing LOL, intrigued by the title, Karin, so I had to look this up... looks like an interesting read.


message 692: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments ROFL!


message 693: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Charly, "ROFL" is an Internet abbreviation for "Rolling On (the) Floor Laughing." (Don't worry; I'm very poor at deciphering abbreviations and acronyms myself, and more often than not have to ask for translations! :-) )

Earlier this year, I won a copy of Pulp Heroes - Khan Dynasty by Wayne Reinagel , by Wayne Reinagle. So I finally started on that one over the weekend. It's a homage to the fictional heroes of the Victorian and early-modern pulp magazine eras.


message 694: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments ROFL again! :-D


message 695: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Charly, Charly, lol, my friend. ;-)


message 696: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Okay, okay, giggling aside. I am (inbetween bouts of ROFL) attempting to read Les Misérables.


message 698: by Reggia (last edited May 09, 2014 08:17PM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Interrupting my last read mentioned for Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.


message 699: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Recently, I stumbled onto a free copy of the e-book edition of the action-adventure novel The Lost Continent (The Myth Hunter, #1) by Percival Constantine by Goodreads author Percival Constantine. I've just started reading it intermittently on my Kindle app for PC (because reading that way doesn't fit into my schedule as well as print books do), but if I like it, I'll buy a print copy. (That's a courtesy I feel I owe to the author.)


message 700: by Sally (new)

Sally Howes | 37 comments I just finished A Memory of Light, the final book in a series I've been reading for YEARS. There aren't enough superlatives to describe how much I loved this book - I get teary just thinking about it! 5★ for sure - it deserves many more than just five. I feel quite bereft now that I have no more Wheel of Time books to read, but so very glad and privileged to have read them.

My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


back to top