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What I'm Reading OCTOBER 2014
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I wasn't looking for a feel-good film, Rebecca. It's been awhile since I saw it, so at this point I'm guessing, but I suspect I felt the movie was too light on showing us why the character was the way she was--I don't much like characters to be all good or all bad, since most of us are a mix.

I could think of things to nitpick (for instance, in a society where there is time travel, no one has a portable device to communicate and one character spends an inordinate amount of time worrying over missing phone calls)...but the book won me over with great characters and relationships.

I cou..."
Yes, it's technologically dated, and Willis tends to repeat the same details over and over. But that hasn't kept me from reading this book so many times that I've lost count! I always find it gripping, moving, and meaningful.


I really liked that book. Liked the wry subtle humor which offset the horror of the Black Death. One little thing that I wondered about was where, during freezing December weather, they found the rose petals that were strewn around.
I've meant to read Geraldine Brooks' Year of Wonders which was also about the black death, but someone said was more moving than Willis' Doomsday Book. It was based on a true story of an English town which quaranteed itself when the plague came.
Marge

One of my spouse's cousins lives near Eyam, so we "got the tour" and were able to see the places where the food was left for the villagers by kind, and courageous, outsiders. What goes around comes around, and the book is relevant to our own time dealing with Ebola.
Eyam is also near Chatsworth, the residence of the Dukes of Devonshire so, until recently, we gave very liberal Cuz a hard time about having Debo Mitford as a neighbor :)



I wasn't looking for a feel-good film, R..."
A movie can only reveal so much which is why I prefer books...but in both book and movie the character of Barbara Covett is a deeply disturbed woman who latches onto her friends/victims like a leech. There are people in this world who are like that; scary thought! The one I couldn't really understand was Sheba, she seemed to have it all and yet it wasn't enough.
I liked the movie, but the book is better.

Wonderful book. I listened to the audio, performed by Edward Hermmann. Looking forward to the movie coming out at Christmas time.

This is a short non-fiction account of the Black Death which you might be interested in: In the Wake of the Plague: The Black Death and the World It Made by Norman F. Cantor. It is fascinating and really well written.

Ann, shall we keep Year of Wonders in mind for the next round of nominations? It sounds as though there is some interest among others so we may have the making of good discussion.

This Ruth only gave it 2 stars. Here's my review. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8...

Another group I belonged to had a discussion of Stoner about 18 months ago. I was never able to warm up to the main character and my opinion was not popular with the rest of the group. I'll be interested in your final opinion, Kat.
..."
I loved Stoner, in spite of being frustrated by him at times. :)
I reviewed it here... https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Now that I've finished the novel, it seemed such an odd story with such intricate detail, that I wanted to know how the author had thought of it. I also noted from the book jacket that the author had a Swedish mom and an English father.
I googled a bit, and for those who've read the book (or those who don't mind a bit of a spoiler), the answer's here: http://www.npr.org/2014/06/09/3195426...


Evocative, heart-rending, luminous, suspenseful, triumphant – I cannot think of enough adjectives to describe this beautifully written memoir. Allende lays her soul bare on the page as she attempts to write her family history at the bedside of her comatose daughter, Paula. The work moves back and forth from Allende’s history to the events in Paula’s hospital room. It took me a while to get into the book; the writing is very dense. But Allende’s gift for storytelling is evident. Her experiences may be unique, but her reactions are universal.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Larry wrote: "I'm working my way through the Travis McGee novels by John MacDonald. I'm up to the eighth one in the series. This is One Fearful Yellow Eye, and it is set in Chicago, instead of Flor..."
Oh, how I loved those books. I wanted to have a best friend like Travis McGee, I think I wanted to be, who was it? Meyer?
Just finished Patrick Ness: "The Crane Wife"; "In America" by Susan Sontag; "Voices From the Street" by Philip K. Dick.
Also read some wonderful poetry this past month. Mark Halliday, for one, trying to see if my favorite bookstore has a copy of any of his. Carolyn Forche.
Just began this morning "Colorless T....." (I promise to know the title by the time I finish), by Murakami. Amazed to find it just sitting there, untouched, at my little library. When I opened it and heard the paper yield its first fresh stiffness, I knew I was the first to open it. So stirred with anticipation.
Oh, how I loved those books. I wanted to have a best friend like Travis McGee, I think I wanted to be, who was it? Meyer?
Just finished Patrick Ness: "The Crane Wife"; "In America" by Susan Sontag; "Voices From the Street" by Philip K. Dick.
Also read some wonderful poetry this past month. Mark Halliday, for one, trying to see if my favorite bookstore has a copy of any of his. Carolyn Forche.
Just began this morning "Colorless T....." (I promise to know the title by the time I finish), by Murakami. Amazed to find it just sitting there, untouched, at my little library. When I opened it and heard the paper yield its first fresh stiffness, I knew I was the first to open it. So stirred with anticipation.

Thank for the suggestion, Ann. I'll look for that book.
Marge


I never use the notifications feature. I just click on "unread topics" at the top.



Ann, Cantor's book The Civilization of the Middle Ages] was perhaps the first book on the Middle Ages that I read that really gave me some understanding of what those times were like.


This is a beautifully written debut novel that exemplifies “show, don’t tell.” Just as you get to know your neighbors or friends over decades, one event and reaction at a time, the reader gets to know Talmadge over the course of the novel. A man of few words he rarely directly reflects on the guilt he carries over his part in events. Rather, his actions speak to his deep-seated pain and desire to make amends. Coplin also writes with eloquence about the land and the time period. Mark Bramhall does a marvelous job voicing the audio book.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Carol, I am so glad to see that you are reading Someone. McDermott is one of my favorite writers, and tho' I am not Irish Catholic, many of the situations she writes about in her too few books bring back memories of my childhood in PA. I gave the book five stars.

Now that I've finished the nove..."
I also found myself sitting up late into the night as the novel was hard to put down...The mother's story is just so gripping and yet in your heart you know that something is not quite right.....I read the link; to think his real parents inspired the story and in the novel my heart did go out to the mother and the father and the predicament they found themselves in....What a choice for the son!
I really enjoyed this book....Thanks for the link:)

Mary, yes, I found a translation. It's translated by Margaret Sayers Peden. I think I found it used through Alibris.com, but I also just bought it used through Amazon for a friend.


While portions of the block book are well written and thoughtful observers others are simply angry

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Thanks, Sherry, I'll definitely take a look at the discussion when I've finished the book.