Books on the Nightstand discussion
What are You Reading October 2014?
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Finished listening to
The Painter and started listening to
Frank Einstein and the Antimatter Motor: Book One I LOVE Jon Scieszka. I will never out grow his books.



I am curious if your apathy for "The Bone Clocks" is because you are listening to it rather than reading it? It is such a complex tale, with characters who are introduced, then disappear, only to pop up hundreds of pages later (and several of the characters were imported from earlier Mitchell novels). I seldom use the "X-Ray" feature on my Kindle, but I found it useful with "The Bone Clocks" and I think that it deepened my appreciation for the architecture of this novel.

Tomorrow, though, Station Eleven is being delivered. I'm obnoxiously excited as Susanne has loved this book.

Finished listening to
Frank Einstein and the Antimatter Motor: Book One started listening to
Playing with the Enemy: A Baseball Prodigy, World War II, and the Long Journey Home which my husband listened to a few weeks ago and really liked even though he's not a baseball fan. I am, so...



You are generous. I wouldnt give it more than two sta..."
Was



In honor of October and all things spooky, I decided to read several ghost stories. So far, I've only had time for one novel, In the Shadow of Blackbirds by Cat Winter. I have a couple more from the library on my shelf, although at this point they will get read in November!
I also recently read Laura Lippman's mystery After I'm Gone and Karen Joy Fowler's We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves. Some of you may know the plot twist in that book, the revelation not too far in that the narrator's missing sister is a chimpanzee, and that her removal from the human family where she was raised for 5 years has left lasting scars. About a month ago, I read a nonfiction book about experiments raising chimps with humans to study their communications ability, and I just had to follow that with a fictional take on the same idea. While the chimps were the focus of the nonfiction account, the novel centers mainly on the humans. Even if one of the members is a bit "different," it's still very much a story about a family.


Then I read Mary Ann in Autumn. I love the Tales of the City novels, but this was the first time I read one and recognized what I perceived as Armistead Maupin's limitations as a writer . . . which sounds incredibly condescending. Yuck. At any rate, these books do seem to have a formula (introduction of disparate characters, mystery, weaving together of previously disparate characters), and I think this was the first time that it felt really labored to me.
After that was Oryx and Crake for my book club. It was entirely compelling. The only other Margaret Atwood book I've read is The Handmaid's Tale, which I liked very much, but this was very different.
Now I've started the audiobook of The Paying Guests. It was a little slow to start, but the writing is so rich that it's carrying me along. I have begun reading the book between times I am in the car listening to the audiobook. (Side note: I can't recommend Juliet Stevenson as a narrator highly enough. This is the second reading of hers I've listened to after Persuasion.)




I thoroughly enjoyed it!!"
So did I! It was rather charming, don't you think?
I started listening to
Playing with the Enemy: A Baseball Prodigy, World War II, and the Long Journey Home

Books mentioned in this topic
Playing with the Enemy: A Baseball Prodigy, World War II, and the Long Journey Home (other topics)The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)
The Ocean at the End of the Lane (other topics)
Bad Feminist (other topics)
The Book of Unknown Americans (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Jonathan Odell (other topics)Edgar Allan Poe (other topics)
Mikal Gilmore (other topics)
Anne Tyler (other topics)
Lawrence Wright (other topics)
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I hope you enjoy Station Eleve..."
I love novels set in extreme weather..not sure why...