Constant Reader discussion
Constant Reader
>
Challenges 2015
message 1:
by
Sherry, Doyenne
(new)
Jan 05, 2015 04:52AM

reply
|
flag



Ken Follet - World Without End
The Devil in the White City - Erik Larson
Half Broke Horses - Jeannette Walls
Infinite Jest - David Foster Wallace
Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk - Ben Fountain
Last year I had to struggle to finish all the books for our regular reading schedule. This year I have to increase my reading time.





No, you're right. Not exactly uplifting or hopeful.




Thanks, Barb, I'll look for it.



Sounds good.

I'm glad you enjoyed it. I've been waiting for the audiobook to arrive; now I'll be looking forward to it even more. Several people in my other book group really enjoyed Just Kids as did my DH. Not sure if that one might interest you?

Patti Smith had a small part in Alan Cumming's memoir. How coincidental!

This one has been sitting on my Kindle for a long time. I must have bought it on sale.
Set partially in some Chilean islands, and the parts about Chilean and history and culture were interesting. However, the story seemed forced and I didn't always buy into it. I liked some of her earlier books. Either this is not as good as Allende's other books, or my tastes have changed.

Not to get too personal, but one thing that bugged me was his referring to a character's physical disability/deformity EVERY time he mentioned her. No doubt that it got under my skin particularly because I have the same condition. But he does this with so many of the people he talks about: constant references to some characteristic or label he has attached to them. How many times do we have to be reminded, for example, that his assistant is from Tibet? Or Buddhist? Or short? Or brown-skinned? (THAT really put me over the edge.)
Of course, no one is perfect, and Frank does have some redeeming qualities. And some of his ruminations are well-written and worth thinking about. So in the end I gave the book 3 stars, not being able to give it 2 1/2.




Some people loved the book, some people hated the book. I see that most people that gave it one star didn't get very far into it, which I see as pretty unfair. What I really did think that Ali accomplished was giving us an idea of the person by the way he/she talks. She is very good at dialogue.





Ditto

I'm tracking my fiction in this category too and have read 4 so far. My goal for this is 15. My goal for the non-fiction is 5 books.

And NEVER order fish on a Tuesday.

I thought it was Sunday to never order fish. Maybe that was to buy fish.

He actually said never eat fish at a restaurant on Monday. Here's a link to some info:
http://lifehacker.com/5239687/should-...

In the Skin of a Lion by Michael Ondaatje. An impulse purchase about 10 years ago when I was visiting Toronto, this quintessential Toronto novel did not do much for me. Perhaps my fuzzy head could not deal with the lack of coherent internal chronology (phrase partly borrowed from a GR review!). I could not even figure out what the real "ending" was. Gorgeous descriptions of hideous manual labor, paper-thin characterizations...the poetic prose was not enough for me.
Hunting Badger Much better for my current mood (I admit, I was getting nowhere with the Ondaatje even when I felt fine), true comfort food for the brain. This was a reread of one of my favorite authors, my beloved Tony Hillerman, may he rest in peace. It was great to take a trip to the gorgeous Four Corners Country, if only in my mind.


I have one on my kindle that I bought a while ago and haven't fit in my schedule yet. The review was good as I recall...Spider Woman's Daughter. I'm glad you reminded me of this. I'm adding a reminder to my schedule.
I have a number of Tony Hillerman's books. I kept my favorites when it came time to purge and make room. Now I have to decide what to do about my collection of Nevada Barr!



That book indeed makes one appreciate being where one is. In retrospect I'm not sure I fully appreciated the basic underlying concept of Lolita read in Tehran -- though I read the two books closer together than you have -- maybe I've just lost the overall experience in the fog of time and all the books which have come since. I remember feeling the oppression though.


I just read that part. It reminds me a little bit of how Hitler came to power. Nobody thought the incremental changes would escalate and create the dictatorships that they did in Germany and in Iran. There were lots of bags on lots of heads.
One criticism I have with her writing is that she jumps around in time a lot and the markers of where she is (in time and space) are not always clear. Also she is inconsistent with her use of quotation marks. But overall, the information she imparts is so very important.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Foreign Correspondent (other topics)The Danish Girl (other topics)
Ahab's Wife, or The Star-Gazer (other topics)
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books (other topics)
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
David Ebershoff (other topics)Isabel Allende (other topics)