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What are you currently reading?
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Reggia
(last edited Sep 24, 2010 12:59PM)
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Sep 24, 2010 12:58PM

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Just finished all my Eileen Dreyer books. Very good.
Getting ready for trip to VA to see family. My mother not doing well, but she is 85 and has heart problems and pulmonary fibrosis (can't breathe). I'll be gone 7-17. Looking for a book suitable to take with me (small, one I won't mind losing!, etc.)
Getting ready for trip to VA to see family. My mother not doing well, but she is 85 and has heart problems and pulmonary fibrosis (can't breathe). I'll be gone 7-17. Looking for a book suitable to take with me (small, one I won't mind losing!, etc.)

The Walk
The Passion of Mary-Margaret
Love in the Light of Cholera
The Metamorphosis
...and I laugh because I don't think they are going to get read anytime real soon...
...because here's what should be in my current reading pile for the two local book discussions that take place in October:
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
Frankenstein
Love Hiaasen. Have read most of his stuff. Found Laurie King on my book shelf. She writes like someone sends her mysterious manuscripts and prints them. Mary Russell is protagonist who ends up married to Sherlock Holmes!


Reggia, isn't a to read shelf kind of like a dream shelf? The dreams are always there unless you put a time limit on them.
Yes, that is true! Who knows when I might get to those. My to-be-read pile, though, is a real stack of books (most from the library). I convince myself that I really can find the time for them, that it's a do-able feat -- but it ain't. ;-)
They really act more like close friends, Werner. I'm on the 3rd one A Letter to Mary.

Haven't finished Mansfield Park but must set it aside temporarily for Frankenstein, and also for Twain's fictional biography on Joan of Arc.
My husband is a big Mark Twain fan. He rarely reads fiction (engineer) but likes history and science. He comes in handy when I don't understand something. But he can get irritating when he criticizes the authors for impossible events. Like Donald Westlake in the one where he put ping pong balls in the trunk of his car to rise out of the water. They were going to retrieve stolen stuff from town flooded for reservoir. He is hilarious and really good fun if you are in to that. Met him about 15? years ago at one of our writer's conferences and he was so giving and talking and didn't hide in his room like some do. And at that time he has 95 books out which made him really big time to me. Unfortunately, like too many of my favorite authors, he won't be doing any more writing. Sigh.

Reggia, I'll be interested in seeing your comments about Twain's Joan of Arc book. I confess I tried to read that last year, but it just wasn't grabbing me, so I set it aside indefinitely.


Now concentrating on Joan of Arc, haven't gotten very far and noticed today I was scheduled to work during this discussion, too. Trying to work up the courage to ask boss if I can leave early that day.

I thought we had a topic in here about the last "classic" we read, but I can't find it. Oh, well. I just started reading A Study in Scarlet, my first literary foray into the world of Sherlock Holmes. The recent movie finally made me want to add Doyle to my list.


BTW--I am enjoying Sherlock Holmes! It's different from what I expected.

Being a Holmes fan, I'm glad to hear that you're enjoying your foray into that literary territory!

The Sherlock Holmes movie also sparked my interest in the books, this, despite the fact I fell asleep before the ending. ;)

Okay, Werner, when I finish reading the book, I'll post to the Classics thread...provided I have something worth sharing to say.
A Letter To Mary was very good and not what I expected. Half way thru The Moor. Picked up more authors to check out while in VA with my family, if I remember them.......

Still reading Portrait of Dorian Gray on Kindle, but also started Cross by James Patterson (Kiss the Girls, Along Came a Spider - loved Morgan Freeman in those or any movies.)

I didn't think the Langdon movies were very good, despite thinking, as I read the books, that they might be better as movies. The movie of Angels and Demons left out the most exciting part of the book!

I used to love Norah Loft and read all her stuff years ago. Think I'll go back. Glad you mentioned her.

I wonder why I'd never heard of Nora Lofts until I joined Goodreads...
I'm reading Side Jobs, a book of Harry Dresden (the urban wizard-P.I.) short stories and novellas. Fun stuff.


Didn't they do movies or tv or something with Dean Martin starring as Matt Helm in the 60s? I don't trust my memory.


Started The Passion of Mary-Margaret, and a nonfiction book Plato Not Prozac
Yes Werner, Hollywood is fun and entertainment in 2 hours or less and nothing dull or maybe real in them.
"Don't try this at home. Professional stunt person."
etc.
I finished Dorian Gray. Interesting how ppl talk when there is no TV to watch and are not afraid to express opinions without being shouted down or silenced.
Now reading "The Girl With the Dragon Tatoo" on my kindle and a Susan Kay book (not Legacy) but the 2nd one. English history fiction.
"Don't try this at home. Professional stunt person."
etc.
I finished Dorian Gray. Interesting how ppl talk when there is no TV to watch and are not afraid to express opinions without being shouted down or silenced.
Now reading "The Girl With the Dragon Tatoo" on my kindle and a Susan Kay book (not Legacy) but the 2nd one. English history fiction.


Wet noodle for Charly and his rabbitly bad pun! ;)
LOL I haven't read it. Guess I'll check it out.

the name I couldn't remember was Phantom by Susan Kay.


"A good story well written" how many times have I heard that over the years. And Rule #1 is There Are No Rules. Editors did not want any more kid wizards until Harry Potter came along. (Sorry I've worked with writers too long!) I also think unless you are doing it for a reason, being overly analytical can spoil the experience. Like my engineer husband who says "that can't work"



Does anyone else get overly analytical when they know the gender of the author is different from what one might expect?
Perhaps. It depends on how good of a job the author is doing in portraying the character. Of course, I can only relate that in terms of a male author writing from a female perspective. If it's a credible portrayal, I'll be amazed at first and then forget about it. However, if he's not doing a convincing job then I may find myself being critical. In the latter case, I think of DH Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover or Trinity by Leon Uris.
There are several romance hits that are written by men. And some men get their manuscripts back with a note "work on your female characters" (Norman Zollinger, western awardwinning writer for one).

Men writing of women is a different story of course and I often find women in depth portrayed badly by male writers. Still it is much easier when things along the story line are changing and so are the characters It is better, of course, for someone to write from observation rather than soul searching and psychological investigation, by and large, simply because it is much less susceptible to error.

Funny, but if I'm reading a series in which the male writer does an excellent job of portraying a female character, I get impressed over and over again.
He doesn't write in first person, but I find many of Terry Pratchett's female characters so believably female that I think he should be given an award just for that.
Rhonda wrote: I am extremely critical of female writers... especially when writing of men.
Really? I've been told so much that women can't begin to crack what's inside men's brains and my worldview seems so different than men's that I fuss only about female writers who throw in something so unbelievable that it just screams at me. Like Edward Cullen knowing what Freesia is and what it smells like. ;P

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