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

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message 2051: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Although I've read two or three poems by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911), back in the 90s, when I was homeschooling our girls (the only one I actually remember is "Bury Me in a Free Land"), I've never read any of her prose. Her 1892 novel Iola Leroy, or, Shadows Uplifted (Dover Literature African American) by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Iola Leroy, or, Shadows Uplifted has been on my to-read shelf for several years, and now I've finally begun reading it, as part of my project of reading more literature by writers of color.


message 2052: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments I finished Sense and Sensibility, and now I'm on to Mansfield Park.


message 2053: by Reggia (last edited May 23, 2025 12:51PM) (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Great, Vickie! I just finished The Geometry of Holding Hands, and am also beginning Mansfield Park. :-)

Not familiar with those books, Werner, but I was also homeschooling in the 90s -- good times! (Yes, I had to throw that in!)


message 2054: by Werner (last edited May 24, 2025 10:55AM) (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Didn't know you were a fellow homeschooler, Reggia; virtual fist bump!

Barb are I are continuing our reading of the Avenging Angels series by "A. W. Hart" (which is a house pen name used by multiple authors) with Overturned Heart by A.W. Hart Overturned Heart. It's actually the twelfth, and final, series installment, so we're reading it quite a bit out of order. I wanted to find out whether the romantic arcs for our main characters that were begun (or in Sara's case, potential) in the first book really come to fruition. :-)


message 2055: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments Finished Mansfield Park yesterday and today I started Northanger Abbey. Trying to get through all these Austen books. 😊


message 2056: by Laura (new)

Laura B | 81 comments Vickie wrote: "Finished Mansfield Park yesterday and today I started Northanger Abbey. Trying to get through all these Austen books. 😊"

Northanger Abbey is my favorite Jane Austen book. I hope you laugh as much as I did; parts of it are hysterical.


message 2057: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments Good to know, thanks!


message 2058: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments With family coming soon for an extended visit, I wanted my current read to be a short one; and I'm also interested in expanding the very scanty amount of contemporary general fiction I've read over the years. (I've tended to be more drawn to older classics.) So I opted for Dead Poets Society by N.H. Kleinbaum Dead Poets Society by N.H. Kleinbaum. (It will also fit into a challenge I'm doing in a couple of groups.) Although it's a movie novelization, I've never seen the original film myself.


message 2059: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Although the novella Wolf Moon by Ed Gorman is incorporated in its entirety in the anthology that I'm currently reading, A Century of Great Western Stories, the fact that it was originally published by itself in book format seemed to me to entitle it to be counted (and reviewed) as a read in its own right. (The book pictured above was bulked up by the addition of another Gorman story as a bonus; that's apparently what explains the much higher page count.)


message 2060: by John (new)

John | 13 comments See What I Have Done, historical fiction approach to the Lizzie Borden murders from rotating perspectives.


message 2061: by Laura (new)

Laura B | 81 comments I have started the first of the Brotherhood of the Black Tartan series, Suffering the Scot. There are four more books to this series, and if I like the first one I think I will finish the series.


message 2062: by Laura (new)

Laura B | 81 comments Suffering the Scot was somewhat of a disappointment to me, so I'm not going to continue on in the series. I decided to the first book of a different series, Rescuing Lord Inglewood (Inglewood, #1) by Sally Britton Rescuing Lord Inglewood by Sally Britton. This is a part of the Inglewood series.


message 2063: by John (new)

John | 13 comments Nearly finished with Liquid Rules: The Delightful and Dangerous Substances That Flow Through Our Lives, a very approachable science book, structured around author's experiences during a long-haul flight.


message 2064: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Hi everyone! Still reading Mansfield Park... and several intermittent nonfiction books.


message 2065: by Reggia (new)

Reggia | 2533 comments Well, I finished it today. Since it's my second reading, I'm not sure how to add it to my "books read" so that it counts for my yearly challenge. When I tried to do so, it brought up the date of last reading (2010) and I don't want that to disappear. Any advice? It must be possible, as I've seen multiple books on my list before (not done on purpose, lol).

So for now, I'm perusing the shelves trying to decide what's next.


message 2066: by Laura (new)

Laura B | 81 comments Reggia wrote: "Well, I finished it today. Since it's my second reading, I'm not sure how to add it to my "books read" so that it counts for my yearly challenge. When I tried to do so, it brought up the date of la..."

On the book's description page, select "edit my activity" under the picture of the book to the left side of your screen (this is on the desktop version). Then at the bottom of "edit my activity" page, which will show your review and previous activity, select "add date read". Fill in the blanks. Then select "save."

I do not know how to do this on the mobile app. Sorry.

This is how I've done it in the past. I hope this helps!


message 2067: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments Yes, you should be able to add the new dates read. It will keep the original and add the new.


message 2068: by John (last edited Jul 01, 2025 09:38AM) (new)

John | 13 comments Listening to the audio edition of the novel, Beware of Pity. Was a bit daunted at first, but it's going well.


message 2069: by Laura (new)

Laura B | 81 comments I'm also listening to an audiobook narrated by Jessica Elisa Boyd and she is making the story so enjoyable in The Spinster and I (The Spinster Chronicles, #2) by Rebecca Connolly The Spinster and I by Rebecca Connolly


message 2070: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments This month, I'm taking part in another group's common read of Lyrical Ballads by William Wordsworth Lyrical Ballads (1798) by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, although I've started late. As the first major poetry collection in the Romantic style to be published in England, this book has a landmark significance in British literature, despite its relatively short length. (I'm reading it in the 1969 edition of the Oxford Univ. Press printing, edited by W. J. B. Owen of Canada's McMaster Univ.)


message 2071: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments I just started Persuasion the other day. This is the last Austen book for me, yay! But my goodness, so far the beginning is rather boring and not grabbing my attention at all. Somebody please tell me it gets better!


message 2072: by Bionic Jean (new)

Bionic Jean (bionicjean) | 57 comments Yes, it does Vickie! In fact it's one of my favourites of hers! 🥰

But it is different from the huge middle ones: more contemplative and gentle. A lovely book to complete her too-short life; she was ill when she wrote it.


message 2073: by Vickie (new)

Vickie (bookfan4ever) | 19 comments Okay, good to know. Thanks Jean!


message 2074: by Bionic Jean (new)

Bionic Jean (bionicjean) | 57 comments You're welcome Vickie. I hope you end up loving it too!


message 2075: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Earlier today, Barb and I started reading the latest installment of the Barks and Beans Cafe' mystery series by Heather Day Gilbert, Knight Brew (Barks & Beans Cafe Cozy Mystery) by Heather Day Gilbert Knight Brew, which will bring us up to date with the series. Since I've read nine of them so far, I've mentioned these books frequently on this thread. :-) This particular one is set against the backdrop of a Renaissance Fair taking place in our series setting, Lewisburg, West Virginia.


message 2076: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Although I've read novels by both Charlotte and Emily Bronte, Anne is the only one of the three sisters whose work (until today) I hadn't sampled. So, to remedy that neglect, today I started reading her first novel, Agnes Grey by Anne Brontë Agnes Grey (1847). The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (which is on my to-read shelf) is generally regarded as the superior of the two; but at present, I want a shorter read, and wanted to "save the best for last." :-)


message 2077: by John (new)

John | 13 comments I've recently started Cabaret Macabre, third in the Joseph Spector mystery series. Recommended for those who are interested in locked room puzzles.


message 2078: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments Another group I'm in is doing a common read of And the Shofar Blew by Francine Rivers And the Shofar Blew (2003) by Francine Rivers during the month of August, and I'll be taking part. But since I'll be out of town visiting family from Aug. 1-5 (and I don't take my personal reading along with me on vacations, where the object is to spend time interacting with people I don't often see), I went ahead and started on it a bit early, so as to keep up better.


message 2079: by John (new)

John | 13 comments About halfway through The Fortnight in September, which I feel others here might like. Framework of the same family holiday (destination) for many years, ageing is a part of life.


message 2080: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments My Goodreads author friend Liane Zane kindly sent me a paperback ARC of her latest supernatural fiction/paranormal romance novel, Helsing Demon Slayer (The Dragon's Paladins, #1) by Liane Zane Helsing: Demon Slayer, which arrived on the same day I finished reading my preceding book; so I was able to start it immediately! It's meant to be the opening book of The Dragon's Paladins, a spin-off series from her earlier trilogy, The Elioud Legacy.


message 2081: by John (new)

John | 13 comments I really liked the Victorian crime novel The House on Vesper Sands, so am listening to its recent sequel The Naming of the Birds. The usually gruff, impatient Inspector is actually quite patient with his sidekick (from whose point of view the story is told).


message 2082: by Werner (new)

Werner | 2693 comments The novella Benito Cereno by Herman Melville, published serially in 1855, is currently a common read in another group I'm part of; I'm joining in, and started reading it yesterday. (I'm reading it from the 1969 collection Great Short Works of Herman Melville, edited by Warner Berthoff.) This will be the third longish fiction work by Melville that I've read (I've also read and appreciated his short story "Bartleby the Scrivener"), but he's a writer whose work I've wanted to read more of for some time.


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