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Constant Reader > What I'm Reading - July - August 2021

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message 101: by Gina (new)

Gina Whitlock (ginawhitlock) | 2282 comments Ken wrote: "spoko wrote: "Just finished Madeline Miller’s The Song of Achilles, which I liked a lot. I had wanted to read Circe, but haven’t yet gotten around to it. Read this one instead, than..."

I am also mystified about their high ratings. I read both books and they were good but not what I would consider outstanding.


message 102: by Joan (new)

Joan | 1120 comments Gina wrote: "Ken wrote: "spoko wrote: "Just finished Madeline Miller’s The Song of Achilles, which I liked a lot. I had wanted to read Circe, but haven’t yet gotten around to it. Read this one i..."

They’ve been on my TBR list for quite awhile; I’m starting to think they deserve to be removed.


message 103: by Sue (new)

Sue | 4513 comments I really liked Circe but never wrote a review. I do plan to read Achilles at some point too. I enjoyed reading the story from Circe’s viewpoint as I had read The Odyssey not very long before.


message 104: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments I, too, enjoyed CIRCE, very much and ACHILLES less so.


message 105: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 1910 comments Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee An Indian History of the American West by Dee Brown
Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee – Dee Brown – 5*****
Subtitle: An Indian History of the American West. Brown’s interest in the history of the American West took him to many resources that were previously ignored in crafting the official textbooks from which millions were taught American history. This work is one attempt to correct the information so many thought they knew. Brown relates the systemic plunder of Native lands region by region, tribe by tribe, battle by battle, broken treaty by broken treaty. It is a very personal account. And it is heartbreaking.
My full review HERE


message 106: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments Mary wrote: "SEVENEVES by Neal Stephenson. This is a fascinating story and I was eager to continue reading it. I thought the epilogue, however, was unnecessary. I would have been more satisfied with the ending ..."
Mary , I finally finished Seveneves after many interruptions. I liked the arc of the story and how just when you had forgotton about certain last minute happening at the time of the apocalypse they come back to pull the story together. The other thing that struck me was his preoccupation with jargon and how good he was at coming up with names and words for things. At some point in time try another of his.


message 107: by Sheila (last edited Aug 18, 2021 03:22PM) (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments One of the interruptions mention in my previous post has been the virtual talk for the Edinburgh Book Fest. The one by Richard Flanagan was excellent, making me add his latestThe Living Sea of Waking Dreams to my to be read list. He had been working on a completelly different novel when those terrible Australian fires started last year, it propelled him into this one instead. He speaks very well about cimate change and clearly has had first hand experience of fires on this scale, his description of their impact, of 'fire freeze' was incredible. If you've seen the movie Day After Tomorrow where bodies instantly freeze in extreme bad weather, think similar but with total desiccation - horrific.


message 108: by Sue (new)

Sue | 4513 comments Sounds fascinating, Sheila.


message 109: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments Sheila, I loved ANATHEM. I’m definitely now a fan.


message 110: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma BOX 88 by Charles Cumming, a former secret service recruit himself, describes the mixed-up world of international intrigue.

We may know who the enemy is, but with so many 'agencies' of spies today, nobody is quite sure who the bad guys are. Great read!
BOX 88 by Charles Cumming 4.5★ Link to my review of Box 88


message 111: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Keep the dream alive! This little book is a great introduction to Martin Luther King Jr.. It's part of an excellent series to inspire little kids (and their parents!).

Author Mª Isabel Sánchez Vegara has produced an amazing library of these.
Martin Luther King Jr. by Mª Isabel Sánchez Vegara 5★ Link to my review of MLK Jr with several illustrations.


message 112: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments Mary Anne wrote: "I recently finished The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Dare. It's a very good book, but I recommend the audio version, which helped me get through the dialects."
I liked this one too


message 113: by Sheila (last edited Aug 20, 2021 09:58AM) (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments Just finished listening to the audio verion of fellow Scot Jenni Fagan's debut novel from 2012 entitled The Panopticon. A Scottish grime novel somewhat in the vein of Trainspotting, with great voice for the first person narrator, a child of the care system. My review


message 114: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments A very quick and thoroughly satisfying and enjoyable read which I highly recommend - New Zealand author Maurice Gee's In My Father's Den, see My Review


message 115: by Bella (Kiki) (new)

Bella (Kiki) (coloraturabella) Sheila wrote: "Just finished listening to the audio verion of fellow Scot Jenni Fagan's debut novel from 2012 entitled The Panopticon. A Scottish grime novel somewhat in the vein ..."

That sounds interesting, but I've yet to recover from the horrors depicted in SHUGGIE BAIN.

Since Elizabeth George's 21st "Inspector Lynley" novel has been delayed till January 2022, I'm rereading IN PURSUIT OF THE PROPER SINNER and really enjoying it.


message 116: by Ken (new)

Ken | 448 comments It's not often I'm current (the day I was born, the obstetrician said, "Here's an old soul!"), but I managed to read one of this year's Booker short listers, The Promise.

If you're considering it and canvassing for opinions, my review is as follows (your click)...


message 117: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 1910 comments Kitchen Confidential Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly by Anthony Bourdain
Kitchen Confidential – Anthony Bourdain – 3.5***
Subtitle: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly. This is a wonderful memoir, as well as a bit of a tutorial, a travelogue, and a warning of what NOT to do. Bourdain is honest, profane, funny, enlightening and engaging. As a plus, he narrated the audio version himself.
My full review HERE


message 118: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 11087 comments Book Concierge wrote: "Kitchen Confidential Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly by Anthony Bourdain

Kitchen Confidential
– Anthony Bourdain – 3.5***
Subtitle: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly. This is a wonderful memoir, as well as a bit of a tuto..."

I read this when it first came out. Loved it! Never order fish on a Tuesday!


message 119: by Ken (new)

Ken | 448 comments After the book came out, they changed it to Wednesday.


message 120: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8235 comments I remember the New Yorker article by Bourdain that started it all. I loved it but could somehow never get into Kitchen Confidential. My son, who is a chef and a foodie but rarely a reader, loved it however. In fact, he loves everything associated with Bourdain.


message 121: by Sheila (last edited Aug 22, 2021 12:36PM) (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments Kiki wrote: "Sheila wrote: "Just finished listening to the audio verion of fellow Scot Jenni Fagan's debut novel from 2012 entitled The Panopticon. A Scottish grime novel somewh..."

Kiki, I'm doing them in the opposite order, so I've yet to Read Shuggie past a browse of the first chapter.
Scots literature does have a "grime" face, post -Irvine Welsh through to current times which reflects the social deprivation and realted problems that much of the country faces, including its historical drug problem emflamed by flooding very cheap smack (less than the price of a beer/cigarettes/coffee ) on which today manifests itself as one of an aging addict population and of the highest level of drug related deaths in the world see https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotlan... .

I am however looking forward to read Fagan's third and most recent, just out this year, novel Luckenbooth, I'll post about it once I've read it to let you know how it goes


message 122: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments PattyMacDotComma wrote: "I loved Akwaeke Emezi's debut novel, Freshwater, but I think other readers will enjoy The Death of Vivek Oji more than I did. Love, sex, acceptance..."
I liked Freshwater too, and have Death of Vivek Oji to read which actually was the first one of here I bought.


message 123: by Sheila (last edited Aug 23, 2021 03:36PM) (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments I just read Costa Book of the Year 2020(https://www.costa.co.uk/behind-the-be...) winner Monique Roffey's The Mermaid of Black Conch. Enjoyable listen. My review(Corrected)


message 124: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Sheila wrote: "I just read Costa Book of the Year 2020(https://www.costa.co.uk/behind-the-be...) winner Monique Roffey's The Mermaid of Black Conch. E..."

Sheila, your review link goes to the book page. (I look forward to seeing what you think of Vivek Oji.)


message 125: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma I loved Michael Ondaatje's much lauded Warlight, which begins in London, 1945. Bomb flashes were what lit the way for those sneaking around during curfews - criminals, spies, and kids.

Terrific read!
Warlight by Michael Ondaatje 5★ Link to my Warlight review


message 126: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments PattyMacDotComma wrote: "Sheila wrote: "I just read Costa Book of the Year 2020(https://www.costa.co.uk/behind-the-be...) winner Monique Roffey's [book:The Mermaid of Black Con..."

Thanks for the heads up Patty. Here is the link https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... and I've edited the post


message 127: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 11087 comments PattyMacDotComma wrote: "I loved Michael Ondaatje's much lauded Warlight, which begins in London, 1945. Bomb flashes were what lit the way for those sneaking around during curfews - criminals,..."

Warlight was our Reading List discussion a couple of years ago. https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


message 129: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 1910 comments Friends Like Us by Lauren Fox
Friends Like Us – Lauren Fox – 3***
I really enjoyed this exploration of friendship and the choices one makes as one matures. I remember close friends I had in my twenties … I have witnessed (and been part of) break-ups that hurt so badly you wondered how you would ever survive. And I recognized how a best friend can say just the right thing to help you through what you believe to be the darkest moments. So, the relationships between these people and their emotions were completely relatable to me.
My full review HERE

--------- * * * * * * * * --------

The Secret Life of Violet Grant (Schuyler Sisters #1) by Beatriz Williams
The Secret Life of Violet Grant – Beatriz Williams – 3.5***
Williams uses a dual timeline and dual narrators to tell this story of Vivian Schuyler, Manhattan socialite and wanna-be advertising exec in 1964, and her aunt Violet Schuyler Grant, who endured an unhappy marriage to pursue her dreams of scientific research in 1914 Europe. I was quickly engaged and continuously interested in this story line. While I’ve grown tired of the dual timeline that is so popular these days with historical fiction, I thought Williams did a very good job of using this device.
My full review HERE


message 130: by Mary Anne (new)

Mary Anne | 1990 comments Here's a nice article about Louise Penny for all her fans here:
https://www.chatelaine.com/living/lou...

I just finished #16, All the Devils Are Here.


message 131: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments Mary Anne, I’ve saved the link to the article for later. I’ve become a Penny fan since I discovered her as a result of comments about her books on Constant Reader. This morning on my walk I started A Rule Against Murder, her 4th I think.


message 132: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments Cormac McCarthy’s BLOOD MERIDIAN, narrated by Richard Poe. This is a wonderfully written book. Although books like this are not my usual reading taste, I’m glad I decided to read this one. It is the second Cormac McCarthy book I’ve read. I enjoyed it so much I think I’ll read another of his one of these days. Suggestions?


message 133: by Tom (new)

Tom | 396 comments Mary, my favorite Cormac Mc is Suttree. It actually has some humor in it — if you can imagine CM cracking a smile.


message 134: by Sheila (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments Mary, I need to read more McCarthy, but I'd recomend No Country for Old Men


message 135: by Sheila (last edited Aug 27, 2021 07:08AM) (new)

Sheila | 2160 comments I've just rushed headlong into reading Jon McGregor's most recent book Lean Fall Stand after hearing him online speak on Monday afternoon at the Edinburgh Book Fest . It is excellent, I'd highly recommend it. Here is my review


message 136: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma I've enjoyed all of the Cormac McCarthy I've read, although I know he's not for everyone. You do have to be prepared for some rough and ready scenes!


message 137: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Strange Bliss: Essential Stories is a collection of six of Katherine Mansfield's excellent, quirky short stories. People are just as selfish and awkward and silly today as they were when she was writing.
Strange Bliss Essential Stories by Katherine Mansfield Link to my review of Strange Bliss


message 138: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Apples Never Fall is the latest from Aussie author Liane Moriarty. It's a family tree of tennis players, the kind of varied group of characters she's so well-known for. I wish I'd liked it better.
Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty Link to my review of Apples Never Fall


message 139: by Ruth (last edited Aug 28, 2021 04:58PM) (new)

Ruth | 11087 comments The Vixen. So improbable as to be laughable, butI didn’t find it funny either.


message 140: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8235 comments I usually like Francine Prose, Ruth, but I had my doubts about this one.


message 141: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 1910 comments This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger
This Tender Land – William Kent Krueger – 4****
Krueger references both The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and Homer’s The Odyssey in this epic adventure set in America’s upper Midwest during the Great Depression. Krueger is a marvelous storyteller, and he keeps the plot moving with a variety of incidents. The travelers show intelligence, resourcefulness, and tenacity. They are also children - immature and prone to misunderstanding or misinterpretation of information they gather. And, of course, they are vulnerable. I loved watching them grow, both individually and in their relationships, through these experiences.
My full review HERE


message 142: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments Mary Anne, taking some “me time” this afternoon. Just read the article you posted about Louise Penny. I enjoyed it a lot and appreciate knowing more about her and the connection of the Gamache character to her life; it will enhance my pleasure in reading her books. Many thanks.


message 143: by Sue (new)

Sue | 4513 comments Mary, I’m glad you mentioned that. I want to read that. I have the whole series ahead of me and everyone I know likes it.


message 144: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan is a little gem that tells a big story. Excellent!
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan 5★ Link to my review of Small Things Like These


message 145: by PattyMacDotComma (new)

PattyMacDotComma Family is the first in Owen Mullen's new Glass Family series. Two crime families vie for supremacy, but don't think the Glass siblings are the good guys!
Family (The Glass Family #1) by Owen Mullen Link to my review of Family


message 146: by Mary (new)

Mary D | 77 comments Kadir Nelson’s HEART AND SOUL: The Story of America and African Americans. Technically, this book is considered juvenile historical fiction because the history of blacks in the USA is told by a 100-year old fictional character and is intended for young readers. It is excellent. Debbie Allen’s narration is wonderful and is about 1-1/2 hours long. I have recommended it to my grandniece and her brother.


message 147: by Bella (Kiki) (new)

Bella (Kiki) (coloraturabella) Sheila wrote: "Kiki wrote: "Sheila wrote: "Just finished listening to the audio verion of fellow Scot Jenni Fagan's debut novel from 2012 entitled The Panopticon. A Scottish grime..."

Thank you for that information, Sheila. Since I've discovered so many Scottish ancestors, I've become very interested in Scotland's literature. I always loved its landscape.


message 148: by Bella (Kiki) (last edited Aug 31, 2021 02:17PM) (new)

Bella (Kiki) (coloraturabella) Tom wrote: "Mary, my favorite Cormac Mc is Suttree. It actually has some humor in it — if you can imagine CM cracking a smile."

My favorite of his, too.

I finally was able to finish my rereading of Elizabeth George's IN PURSUIT OF THE PROPER SINNER and loved every second of it. She really is the most superb mystery writer, and I love her characters.


message 149: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 1910 comments Death and Judgment (Commissario Brunetti, #4) by Donna Leon
Death And Judgment – Donna Leon – 3.5***
Book # 4 in the Commissario Brunetti mystery series, set in Venice, Italy. This was definitely one of the darker works in this series. As usual, the Commissario relies on his wife for advice and comfort, but his daughter insists on helping and that gets uncomfortable very quickly. Leon crafts a good mystery, with enough clues keep the action moving forward and a logical solution. It’s a series I’ll continue reading.
My full review HERE


message 150: by Lynn (new)

Lynn | 2335 comments I've just opened a new thread for Sept-Oct and am closing this one to new posts. Please continue your discussions in the new thread.


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