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What are you currently reading?

Thanks, Werner. I think I'll ask that question at the GR group called: "What's The Name of That Book???". The link is:https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/...


Yes, a member there called "Lobstergirl" has helped me out several times. https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/1...
She's one of the moderators of the "What's The Name of That Book???" group. Next to her moderator picture, it says "sniffing sharpies". Something else to research. :)


Yes, Janelle, that's the story! Thank you. My records show that I watched a film version of the story back in 2009. Here's the IMDb link:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0221859/?...
"The Canterville Ghost" (1997) (TV Movie)
"An American millionaire moves into an historic and imposing mansion, which comes complete with its very own eccentric ghost."
Adapted from The Canterville Ghost by Oscar Wilde .]
Thanks very much!


Hi Werner. It's funny how our memories work. I don't know why I remembered the stain, but I'm glad I did. Perhaps the film version helped set that part in my memory bank.




Where is that thread so I can help out? Have read both Oliver Twist and The Pickwick Papers by Dickens this year, so I could add them both. Does Trollope count as a classic? If so I have read another of his Barsetshire Chronicles series this year.

Since I'm expecting to receive a review book in the mail anytime now, and want to start on it ASAP once it arrives, I deliberately wanted to choose a book that would be short and quick for my current read. So I selected






Sounds interesting, Werner. I'm going to try it. Something different for me, with the graphics as well as the text. And if Jackie liked it as well, it must be good.





Started "Pax" and "The Siege Winter."
The former is a tween book recommended by my son: emotional and powerful, and rather thought-provoking. Alternating narration by a tween boy, and a fox who is his friend- but no magic/no talking animals.
The latter is harder to describe: a complicated 10th century historical fiction novel, set in England; but not your average names-and-dates, kings and nobles, damsels in distress, hurray for feudalism story. The main characters are mostly strong-minded women, but vulnerable (a traumatized eleven year old who becomes a talented archer; a clever-but-irritable teenaged chatelaine who's faced with a siege and a horrendous unwanted husband). I'm not minding a few historically-inaccurate details, because the story is very engrossing.




Reggia, here's the link to my review of that book: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... . (I gave it four stars, which is higher than my usual three-star rating for a non-fiction book.)



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Nov. 16, 2016 - This book combines graphics and text alternately. An interesting approach. It's holding my interest because of good story-telling, even though the plot seems simple so far.
Nov. 21, 2016 - I finished this book a few days ago. It held my interest but the ending was a bit strange. I guess that's the surprise for the reader to find out. (view spoiler) . I suppose if I read the story over again, it might have more meaning for me now that I know the ending. However, there would be less suspense. Suffice it to say that I kept wondering who the little girl in the graphics section was. Even at the end, it took a while for me to digest the information.
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My complete review is at: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Personally, I liked the way the two storylines weren't brought together until near the end of the book. For me, the element of mystery and guessing was part of the book's appeal.

Werner, thanks very much for the correction. I'll fix my review. Now I realize my mistake. It's true that the element of mystery kept the story interesting. I just wish I were more clear on the developments. The explanation at the end was a lot for me to digest. It was in italics and that seemed to make it harder to read.

No problem, Joy! (I catch typos in my own reviews at times, too, despite my efforts to proofread. :-) )

The words "he said" and "she said" also mix me up when dialogue is written without making clear which character is talking. My pet peeves! :)





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










Alternate histories/worlds are a favorite sub-genre of mine, and Turtledove has pretty much been the crowned king of that branch of fiction for decades. So it's surprising --and inexcusable-- that I've never before read any of his work in this field! (I did read one of his short stories once, but in a totally different genre.) So this one has been on my to-read shelf, and regarded as an eventual must-read, for ages. I've read good things about it in friend's reviews, so I have high hopes for it.

Currently reading Hidden, book #5 of the Alex Verus mage series.


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Hi Werner. I've searched my records but it seems that I haven't read _The Turn of the Screw_. However, I remember a similar suspense story in which there was a stain on a rug which they weren't able to remove. Does this ring a bell with you?