The Seasonal Reading Challenge discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
GETTING TO KNOW YOU
>
<closed thread>What are you currently reading?


A Man Called Ove – Fredrik Backman – 5*****
What a joy this book is! Backman peoples the novel with an assortment of quirky characters, who form a community, and despite himself, Ove joins with them. I laughed aloud so often, and I felt for Ove’s. I also rejoiced at his triumphs, and marveled at his strength of character. I worried about him and cheered him on. I absolutely fell in love with Ove.
LINK to my review





Still reading:
Circle of Friends
Starting:
Notorious Nineteen - audio
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
The Gravity of Birds
Invisible Cities
From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava
Questionable Behavior


The Jesus Cow – Michael Perry – 4****
When a calf is born on Christmas Eve with the distinct face of Jesus on his side, bachelor farmer Harley Jackson knows he’s in for a struggle. Michael Perry is known for his nonfiction essays on life in small-town Wisconsin; this is his first novel. Perry has a gift for describing people and situations; he makes the ridiculous totally believable. I am reminded of Carl Hiaasen, but with more heart. There are a few scenarios that really stretch credulity here, but on the whole I enjoyed the novel and we all need a little light entertainment now and again.
LINK to my review

Reading the first of two books alphabetically that I checked out of the library on January 28, 2017. The Bach Reader: a life of Johann Sebastian Bach in letters and documents, edited by Hans T. David and Arthur Mendel, is an IMN Rebound hardcover of the revised (1966) edition of a book originally published in 1945. I am on page 300 of 474, which includes two biographies, a listing of his works, letters and documents written and received by Bach, a Bach geneology, criticism of the man and his music, an appendix, a supplement, a bibliography, and an 11-page index.
Jim


Reading:
Circle of Friends
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
The Gravity of Birds
Invisible Cities
From Baghdad, With Love: A Marine, the War, and a Dog Named Lava
Questionable Behavior
Started Early, Took My Dog
When the Killing's Done
The Fire


Death Masks – Jim Butcher – 3.5***
I like this series mostly because I really like Harry. I love his puns and his self-deprecating humor. I like that he’s a decent guy who inflicts violence on the bad guys, and generally behaves like a gentleman. However, as I continue the series I find the plots more and more formulaic, although this installment has a few plot twists and some characters that lend additional interest.
LINK to my review


Days Of Awe – Lauren Fox – 4****
This is the kind of character-driven novel I really enjoy. As Isabel reflects on past events and her relationships with best friend, daughter, mother, and ex-husband, the reader comes to know her. I felt her confusion, pain, loss, loneliness, but also her joy and hope for the future.
LINK to my review





On Back Burner:
Circle of Friends
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
The Gravity of Birds
Reading:
Questionable Behavior
Started Early, Took My Dog
When the Killing's Done


Exodus – Leon Uris – 3.5***
This is an epic novel covering the history of the Jewish people’s efforts to return to Palestine and form an independent state. I felt that Uris couldn’t make up his mind whether he was writing an epic romance, a war novel or a history of the formation of Israel. It certainly made me think. And I’m glad I finally read this novel.
LINK to my review



On Back Burner:
Circle of Friends
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
Reading:
Questionable Behavior
Starting:
The Diary of a Young Girl
A Change in Altitude
The Gravity of Birds


One Plus One – Jojo Moyes – 3***
Four different characters tell the story: Jess, Ed, Tanzie (Jess’s daughter) and Nicky (Marty’s son and Jess’s stepson). This resulted in a slow start, while all the characters were introduced and the central conflict developed. The book jacket promises “an irresistible love story.” I don’t know about “irresistible” but it’s an enjoyable contemporary novel.
LINK to my review


I'm in a reading slump...started several but...I think it might be because two of my groups are quarterly and ending in the next week.
On Back Burner:
Circle of Friends
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
The Diary of a Young Girl
A Change in Altitude
Reading:
The Gravity of Birds
Border Prey


The FitzOsbornes in Exile – Michelle Cooper – 3***
This is book two in a series about the royal family of the fictitious island nation of Montmaray. It’s a fast read, an easy young adult novel about the beginning of World War II. The British social class of the late 1930s is described well, including the debutante season. I liked this one better than the first in the series. The characters are better developed, and I enjoy reading about strong, resourceful, intelligent young people.
LINK to my review

Circle of Friends
Reading:
The Gravity of Birds
Border Prey
The Love Goddess' Cooking School
The Diary of a Young Girl
A Change in Altitude
I hope to finish these this month.


Nothing To Do But Stay – Carrie Young – 4****
The subtitle is “My Pioneer Mother,” and much of this memoir features Young’s mother Carrine Gafkjen Berg. But this is really the story of a family’s experiences in the early 20th century in North Dakota. Rather than a strictly chronological order, the book is divided into chapters by subject. All are full of wonderful, loving descriptions of life on a settler’s farm, some funny, some touchingly poignant.
LINK to my review


The Quiet American – Graham Greene – 3***
This has been cited as the quintessential book about Vietnam, especially the conflict begun with the French war. I don’t know if I would agree, but it’s definitely a good book about what was happening in the country during the mid-1950s. The reader gets some inkling of the politics of the era, but is more consumed by the personal drama of these two men and the Vietnamese woman they both say they love.
LINK to my review



On Back Burner:
Circle of Friends
Reading:
A Change in Altitude
Lord of Misrule
Left Neglected
Letters to the Lost
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame


Old Dogs – Donna Moore – 3***
A pair of seventy-something-year-old ex-hookers turned con-artists scheme to steal two antique be-jeweled Tibetan dog statuettes. But they are not alone in wanting those dogs. This is a comic crime caper that reminds me of Donald E Westlake or Carl Hiaasen. The characters are outrageous, the plot is ridiculous, but the whole package is great fun to read.
LINK to my review


The Minor Adjustment Beauty Salon – Alexander McCall Smith – 3.5***
I rarely get past book four or five in a mystery series, because they become formulaic for me and I lose interest. But this series is a wonderful exception. As in most of the books, there are two cases the Ladies work on in this 14th installment, but the real focus of the series is on the relationships between the characters. Fans of the series will find most of the characters they have come to love present.
LINK to my review





Reading:
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame - buddy read
A Great Deliverance
Circle of Friends
Planning to start 5 new ones tomorrow (library books with a 3/13 and 3/15 deadlines), as I will have completed this week's buddy read section 3 days early and the other two do not have soon deadlines.


Under the Wide and Starry Sky – Nancy Horan – 2.5**
This work of historical fiction tells the story of the relationship of Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne and Robert Louis Stevenson. Once again Horan turns her attentions to a man who was difficult to live with, and a woman who was conflicted about her life with that man. It should have been interesting, but this book somehow failed to capture me. The best part was their lives in Samoa, only about 100 pages in a nearly 500-page book.
LINK to my review

The Harmony Silk Factory
The Jungle Books
Emma
Farthing
Black Beans and Vice
Blue Lily, Lily Blue


Deeper Than the Dead – Tamy Hoag – 3.5***
Set in a California town a few hours from Los Angeles, in 1985, Hoag’s thriller begins when four children stumble upon the partially buried body of a woman while playing in the woods. Hoag writes a tight, suspenseful tale. The action is fast-paced, and I was completely captivated from beginning to end.
LINK to my review

The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared
The Invisible Bridge
What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions
The Mothers
Since it will be a cold, dreary weekend, I hope to finish at least one and get through at least Part III of The Invisible Bridge.


The Vicious Vet – M.C. Beaton – 3***
Book two in the popular Agatha Raisin cozy mystery series. I was not a fan of the first Agatha Raisin book, but she’s growing on me. One of the review blurbs calls Agatha “a glorious cross between Miss Marple, Auntie Mame, and Lucille Ball, with a tad of pit bull tossed in” (St Petersburg Times). I’m beginning to see that combination here, and I’m starting to appreciate the humor in Agatha’s character.
LINK to my review


Station Eleven – Emily St John Mandel – 4****
The snow falling on Toronto gives the city a peaceful look, but the hysteria caused by a spreading plague that kills within days cannot be stopped. Dystopian or postapocalyptic novels are really not my thing, but I found this novel quite interesting. Mandel moves back and forth in time, and from character to character, keeping the reader off balance.
LINK to my review





Reading:
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame - buddy read
Circle of Friends
Blue Lily, Lily Blue
The Good Husband of Zebra Drive


A Fierce Radiance – Lauren Belfer – 2.5**
Well this sounded much more interesting than it wound up being. I definitely enjoyed some aspects of the novel. I like reading medical histories, and the race to develop a procedure to mass produce penicillin was an important effort in World War II. But, Belfer included a romantic subplot, as well as broken family ties, a murder, and other elements. There is just too much going on between the covers of this book, and I never got caught up in the story.
LINK to my review


Started:
Common Sense: The Call to Independence
God Game
Acceptable Loss
Continued Reading:
The Hunchback of Notre-Dame - buddy read
Circle of Friends
Blue Lily, Lily Blue
The Good Husband of Zebra Drive


The Dog Stars – Peter Heller – 3***
I am not a great fan of post-apocalyptic novels. And yet, here I am reading another one. Heller’s writing is both poetic and spare, with short sentences that come at the reader like staccato gun fire. This gives the novel a feeling of impending danger, of uncertainty and fear. I wanted to rush through it, and yet, I wanted to take my time to understand what was happening and how these characters were dealing with this different world.
LINK to my review


Voyager – Diana Gabaldon – 3***
Book three in the popular Outlander series. This isn’t great literature, but the series is fun to read. This installment delves more deeply into the supernatural, which I thought detracted from the central story.
LINK to my review


Chestnut Street – Maeve Binchy – 3.5***
Binchy does a great job of giving us a picture of a neighborhood in this collection of short stories. Characters come in contact with one another, interact, leave, and return. Binchy’s characters seem like real people; I recognize many of them though I live in Wisconsin and this is set in Dublin.
LINK to my review
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Opposite of Everyone (other topics)Small Wonder (other topics)
I, Alex Cross (other topics)
Fox & I (other topics)
On Gold Mountain: The 100-Year Odyssey of a Chinese-American Family (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Gill Paul (other topics)Elizabeth Peters (other topics)
Rainbow Rowell (other topics)
Liam Moiser (other topics)
Barbara Mertz (other topics)
More...
Still reading:
Pretend You Don't See Her
Déjà Dead
Looking for Salvation at the Dairy Queen
The Prince and the Pauper
Circle of Friends