Constant Reader discussion
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What I Just Put Down, and what I just began


Just started reading Bryson City Tales by Walt Larimore, M.D. It's already hard to put that one down!

I just started The Story of A marriage by Andrew Sean greer. It's new - my library just got it in this month. I'm only a few pages in, but so far so good.
Sherry and theresa, if either of you are interested in Gertrude Stein and Alice B. toklas, I highly recommend a short non-fiction book by Janet Malcolm called Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice. Parts of it were excerpted last year in the New Yorker and I read the book either late last year or early this year and found it very interesting.

Al, I think I read that excerpt in The New Yorker - about how Gertrude and Alice basically ignored WWII? They came off as not very pleasant eccentrics, rather similar to how they are portrayed in Salt.
Theresa
I had put aside in despair the very wordy Casanova in Bolzano by Sandor Marai, when after 100 pages there was still no semblance whatever of dramatic tension. I have now picked it up again after a recommendation to keep on going, and have just read through a 60-page monologue. Sixty pages! But finally, with only 70 more pages to go, the climax has been reached and I am looking forward to reading how the conflict is resolved. This book has to now have the world record, for having 223 pages of wordy preamble before finally catching at least this reader's attention. It had better be good! :)

Next up for me is Plague of Doves by Louise Edrich. I haven't read her before either and am looking forward to it.
Theresa: I will have to check out The book of Salt. Two Lives delves further than the excerpt in the New Yorker so the portrayal is not quite as unsympathetic.

Jane

If I remember correctly, there were a ton of parallels between the life of the french author and that of anna, claire and coop. it was almost as though she was using the researched life to put her own life story in perspective.

I don't see the parallels, to tell you the truth. The only thing they had in common was where they both lived and the fact that they knew the gypsy family.
Jane

I don't remember it so well and I know a lot of people felt the way you did that the last part didn't really fit, but I do recall both Anna and the french author had strong first loves that seem to haunt them as they grew older. And in general, i remember thinking their childhoods had a lot in common in terms of the way they dealth with other people. Sorry I can't be more helpful or insightful. His books can leave a lot of unanswered questions, for instance "coming through slaughter" told part of the legend of Billy bolden in new orleans, but also improvised a lot.
Al




The one thing about reading this book that was really odd for me was the fact that a couple of the later chapters in the book were short stories in The New Yorker over the past couple of years and I had read them both. It was very weird for me for some reason. Haven't we all read a short story and wondered more about the main character? Well this was a unique situation as I inadvertenly had learned all about her and never made teh connection that she was that person until I got to the part I had read before. It was so strange - I felt like a spy or a voyeur into her life in a bad way - I am not sure why I had such a strong reaction to it. I'm curious if anyone else has ever experienced this. I've experienced it before with short story writers and essayists like Jhumpa Lahiri, George Saunders, Ian Frazier and Nora Ephron - but somehow in those incidences I didn't have the same feeling - likely because the pieces were more intact.
Sorry to be so long-winded, but it is so great to have a forum to address these reading issues.
I'm just starting Pictures At A Revolution by Mark Harris. It's an in-depth look at the 5 movies that competed for Best Picture in 1967 and all about their impact on the movie industry, an epic battle between old and new hollywood. As a movie person, I am really excited about reading it.




The thing that was particularly strange about The New Yorker stories that were incorporated into The Plague of Doves is that they didn't happen until very late chapters in the book, so it was very unexpected (for me) and what a rare thing to know all about a character and then realize they were actually someone you had met before and not realized it - almost like when movies play with time like in Pulp Fiction or Memento.
I'm still enjoying Pictures At the Revolution - a non-fiction book about the five movies that competed for Best Picture in 1967. The author is Tony Kushner's husband - I did not know that ahead of time - and it seems that has allowed him great access for really interesting interviews with a lot of the key players like Mike Nichols and Warren Beatty. For me the book reinforces what a genius Mike Nichols is - it is hard to believe his first Hollywood experience was making Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton at the height of their "it couple"ness! It is also fascinating to read about the folks who were considered for the cast of Bonnie and Clyde and The Graduate.
I just picked up Edward Docx Pravda, and 62 pages in I can say that I absolute, completely recommend it..... esp. for any of you that adore adore adore gorgeous writing. (Plot and characters are amazing, too)


I am about to start a little bit of fluff called What a Girl Wants by Liz Maverick. Should be a fast read.


Theresa

Not sure what's up next, perhaps Lost City Radio. Or perhaps not . . .
Theresa



I expect authors like David Sedaris, Ian Frazier, George Saunders, Nora Ephron, etc. to have their latest books filled with essays that originally appeared in the New Yorker. I was however, most surprised to read an author who writes novels and realize chapters had previously been published in the New Yorker.


Now reading Stegner's "Angle of Repose", which is very different from the idea I had of it. Good writing, kind of like Agee's "Death in the Family" in style only. I like it so far.



I just finished The Names by Don Delillo - just in time for the CR discussion that starts tomorrow. There is a lot to talk about with that book!
I'm debating about what to start to next. I have a pile from the library of mostly new stuff - has anyone read Human Smoke or The Lazarus Project?

I also need to read the Madonnas of Leningrad before my book club Thursday night. That means I'll have to set aside Joby and I'm not so sure I can do that. Do any of you struggle with the fact that the books are NOT going anywhere?

I just started Samantha Hunt's The Invention of Everything Else. So far it's wonderful.

I just started The Names by Don DeLillo. A little late for the discussion, but I won't let that stop me. So far I like it a lot.

The Madonnas of Leningrad is turning out to be a very good read as well. It is about a woman who worked in the Hermitage Museum in Leningrad during WWII and worked to protect the art. Now elderly, she has dementia and her vivid memories are of that time- and the works of art that she memorized when she had to pack it all away. It is a first novel by a Seattle author, Debra Dean. It helps that it is pretty short too- only about 225 pages. I read half yesterday when I had told myself I would read 50 pages a day this week. I'll probably finish after work today.


Jean K.


The Jonsberg's book went on way too long. It needed to be shortened by quite a bit. You just lost interest after awhile.
Dracula was so different than I expected. I very much enjoyed it, but it was very different. It had a real religious undertone and people I thought lived died and visa versa. Just goes to show don't assume.
I just started Cripple Creek Bonanza by Chet Cunningham; a history of the gold rush days of Cripple Creek, Colorado.
Also just started Gambit by Rex Stout; a Nero Wolfe mystery. I love Nero Wolfe, he's so sarcastic.
I'll have to check out Madonnas of Leningrad it does sound interesting.

I have a hankering to read some Thomas Hardy after that, though I may try to fit in one of our upcoming discussion selections in the interim. I have read most of Hardy's books, the only major works I have not read are Far from the Madding Crowd and The Woodlanders. I am leaning to reading the first, but welcome any advise or comments from those who have read either?
Theresa

Books mentioned in this topic
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Beloved (other topics)
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (other topics)
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)Roger Zelazny (other topics)
Edgar Rice Burroughs (other topics)
Last before Wao I finished Poor People by William Vollman. A bit of a rumination on poverty, what it means both objectively and subjectively. Vollman traveled the world and reports back his own impressions, and what the "poor people" he encountered had to say about their own condition. A bit heavy on the self-conscious self questioning at times, but always a pleasure to read Vollman's wonderful writing.
I just started The Book of Salt by Monique Truong; about a Vietnamese cook employed by Gertrude Stein in Paris in the 1930s. No idea if it is based on reality. The writing style is a bit toooo lyrical for me, but not so much that I want to put it down. Has anyone read this?
Theresa