Play Book Tag discussion
Footnotes
>
Trim 2020 Continuation - Announcement, Community, and Chit Chat Thread

😂😂😂😂😂
Oh Jen! I have never heard that one before but describes my past couple of days perfectly!

My March pick is A Place for Us by Fatima Farheen Mirza, and it was readily available at the library, so I'm jumping right to that one for now! About 40 pages in, very good writing so far, and less than 400 pages long. We'll see how it goes. :)


It's depressing, none of the characters are at all likable, the dialogue feels weird, and the incessant descriptions of the nature in the area are driving me bonkers. At the halfway point I feel like I am getting nothing out of it so I am done! Gross, hate this book.

It's depressing, none of the characters are at all likable, the dialogue feels weird, and the incessant descriptions of t..."
Still got it off your shelf! so Hurrah! for that

Link to my review: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...





"
I still have to get to mine from this month! (It will likely be my last book read this month, or I may even push it to the first book for next month, depending how quickly I get through the others I want to finish.)
Anyway, #6 for me is The Book of Joy: Lasting Happiness in a Changing World by the Dalai Lama. I think this is probably a good one to read at this point in time! ;-)

I read that a couple of years back. A good book , but not great. It did educate me a bit and that always counts for something.

And I have it on hold for a Kindle copy from the library. Works out great.

I finished my March book the other day (The Daughter of Time) - 4 stars.
My #6 is The Breaker by Minette Walters.
Can I just say that I'm still loving this challenge? Probably because on my list I don't have any books that fit other ones, so it calms the mood reader in me! :-)
My #6 is The Breaker by Minette Walters.
Can I just say that I'm still loving this challenge? Probably because on my list I don't have any books that fit other ones, so it calms the mood reader in me! :-)


We shall see the last one from this author didn't live up to my hopes so fingers crossed this one will.


We shall see the last one from this author didn't live up to my hopes so fingers crossed this one will."
I've been curious about that one. She was included in his other book, so I wanted to hear more about her.



Will have to see if I can get a copy.

We shall see the last one from this author didn't live up to my hopes so fingers crossed this one..."
Well I shall let you know instead of us both being disappointed this time.

Will have to see if I can get a copy."
I have this on my list still I think, but can't recall which number it is now...



I love working from home but it is just me and my husband and he's pretty quiet so I'm very productive.
Looks like I will be WFH next week as well.

I'm afraid that I fall in the underwhelmed category when it comes to Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis by J.D. Vance. Maybe the time wasn't right for me, but it wasn't riveting nor was it groundbreaking. Maybe it was just too close to home. I grew up on the edge of Appalachia in upstate NY. My once thriving hometown has descended into a permanent depression with many addicted to opiates.
In some ways this reminded me of Educated by Tara Westover because Vance was so clearly out of his element when he attended Yale, but because of his ability to make connections he quickly mended that. Like Westover he grew up in an environment fraught with violence and danger and he overcame it.
I enjoyed his description of his transformative time in the Marine Corps and perhaps the most important passage of the book was about that:
"Whenever people ask me what I most like to change about the white working class, I say,"The feeling that our choices don't matter." The Marine Corps excised that feeling like a surgeon does a tumor. "
I suppose a large part of my problem is that this book felt more like something I should read than something I wanted to read.


maybe change that title to..."the stand-off" Haha


LOL!
Over at LibraryThing, one of my groups with monthly challenges is doing a year-long disaster challenge. The theme for March: Epidemics and Famine.
Books mentioned in this topic
Song of Susannah (other topics)The Reckoning (other topics)
Friends Like Us (other topics)
Women of the Silk (other topics)
Old Sparky: The Electric Chair and the History of the Death Penalty (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen King (other topics)Sharon Kay Penman (other topics)
Imbolo Mbue (other topics)
Isla Dewar (other topics)
Annejet van der Zijl (other topics)
More...
Well I've sucked and not completed one book for anything in the last 2 weeks. Life is being a total cow atm.