Tournament of Books discussion
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2015 ToB Competition Discussion
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Janet
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Jan 16, 2015 08:12AM

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Just bought All the Birds Singing as an audio book. Wish I had seen your post about Redeployment first. It was my other choice. Glad you are enjoying it as a listen.

Oh funny, I just got "All the Birds Singing" with my other Audible credit... so that one is next on the list. You'll have to let me know how it sounds.

For people struggling with A Brief History of Seven Killings, I think the initial confusion is deliberate. Reminded me a bit of reading 100 Years of Solitude, and realizing I'd have a much better time if I surrendered to the confusion and let the river of language carry me along. Eventually things come together. Also, it's outstanding (but still confusing) on audio.



Anyways, I came on here to see what others thought of it. Will have to check out the article that was posted.
I did enjoy All the Birds, Singing and really enjoyed how it finished.




Jess, I think your feelings are completely understandable. I feel a little that way about An Untamed State, not that I've experienced anything like Mireille has, but the book feels ultra-personal somehow, as if I'm gonna feel bruised if people discuss it critically or without empathy. The power of literature, I guess, especially when it strikes close to our own experiences.


I'm so impressed that this is a debut novel for Will Chancellor. I think I read it took him 11 years to write it and he had some really interesting ways of getting into the story during that time. I reminds me that Smith Henderson took 10 years to write Fourth of July Creek, another outstanding debut novel for the year. It will be interesting to see what these two writers produce going forward when they have the pressure of publishing a second novel to deal with.


Are you the reason I can't get these books from Phoenix Public Library? lol
An Untamed State was my favorite book of the year. I'm a 60 years old female. So gender may be a factor.
On another topic, I listened to everyone's advice and chugged along on The Bone Clocks. About two thirds in now and no turning back.


An Untamed State is probably my favorite of all I've read so far. That book is powerful and raw. I am a 33 year old female with small children so definitely able to identify in some ways I suppose. It was just intense yet the breaks Roxanne Gay gives the reader jumping back in time kept me from falling totally apart while reading it. I don't cry often reading but that book brought me to tears two or three times. I still want to read Bad Feminist just haven't found time yet.




Anyway. Moving along -- I'm about 1/3 of the way through Adam, and while it's a perfectly easy read, I am again puzzled by its inclusion in the tournament.

You're not the only one, Ellen. I, too, finished Wittgenstein Jr with a WTF?


With all respect to Emily St. John Mandel, I do not see in that book what she saw in it.


I read St. John Mandel's review, and although I understood what she was saying, it still didn't help me understand or like Wittgenstein Jr any better.

"If an artist is good, nobody else can do what he or she does and therefore all comparisons are incoherent. Only the mediocre, pushing forward a commonplace view of life in a commonplace language, can really be compared, but my wife thinks that 'least mediocre of the mediocre' is a discouraging title for a prize[.]"


I agree but so far many of the books are bewildering to me. When I finished THE SILENCE ONCE BEGUN, I finally got the point, but the book seemed to have too many words (a la AMADEAUS) for the story.

I don't know if this is the app you're referring to, but I use the Android Kindle app on my tablet, I currently have over 400 books downloaded to that device, and Amazon hasn't deleted anything.

If so, send me a PM, and I'll give you my e-mail address. Thanks.

Not sure if it's the same.. was your app free? I just use mine on a regular old browser on a laptop, so it's probably different by format anyway. I know I shouldn't be reading too many BOOKS on a computer screen anyway.

I swear by my paperwhite, the screen doesn't hurt my eyes at all and I find it's the perfect size & price. No bells and whistles though (means no distractions from e-mail, facebook, goodreads... which I am completely fine with).

Yes, the app I use was free from the Amazon app store.

Oh nice, was hoping the app would keep more than 10. :D


Exactly my feeling.
Except that I think WJ is just like everything else that that author has written, whereas (if I recall correctly) HW was a first novel? Or first adult novel? Or something? Somehow that makes a difference to me.


Started Adam this morning and feel like it is everything that Eleanor and Park wasn't. But it's early going and my thoughts might change.
Next up: Silence Once Begun then Annihilation for the finish. That leaves WJ unread for this year's tournament because I refuse to buy it, especially after what's been said here.

Um...what? I don't remember this at all. Like I said -- I remembered nothing of the book two weeks later, and certainly not anything resembling this comment!
I finished Adam, and again, had that kind of WTF? response to it; it struck me as middling YA with a lot more sex added, and the whole premise kind of annoyed me. If it had been funnier and less... queasy, I might have liked it more. I do think there's a way to make the same premise funny without ridicule. And I still just can't help feeling that there were dozens of more worthy books on the longlist and/or published last year. I ... just don't get it, like with Wittgenstein Jr.
Anyway. Started An Untamed State yesterday. I've been resisting it for a year, ever since it was published and people here started reading it and commenting favorably, mostly because the whole horrible happenings in a chaotic and/or war-torn 3rd world country theme is not one I gravitate to -- but I have to say, the first fifth of the book has me totally hooked. Her writing is fabulous. The violence is, indeed, hard to stomach, though.


oh, that's such a shame, allyson! i finished My Brilliant Friend the other day and quite liked it. i jumped right into reading the 2nd book, The Story of a New Name, and i'm liking it more than MBF.

I agree with Jennifer - A Brave Man takes a while to get into, but it gets much better - for me it was around the 40% mark. Have you already read Station Eleven and All the Light we Cannot See? If not, I'd say go with one of those for a better chance of enjoying what you're reading.

Thanks - I'm going to push on through. I have read Station 11 and All the Light. I've been crazy busy and my reading has been in fits and spurts. I'm dedicating this evening to getting back into the groove!
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