Reading the 20th Century discussion
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What books are you reading now? (2024)

Thanks for the encouragement, think they would make good autumn reads...as the night's are already drawing in...

I do think portion sizes are key, although friends tell me green tea makes a difference, but the jury's out on that. Although I do drink a lot of it as well as matcha variations.
Has anyone read Reunion by Fred Ulhman?
I was somewhat surprised that my real-life book group came up with something I'd never ever heard of!
I was somewhat surprised that my real-life book group came up with something I'd never ever heard of!


I was somewhat surprised that my real-life book group came up with something I'd never ever heard of!
[bookcover:Reunion..."
I read it a few years back. As usual, I can't remember much detail but I do know it is a surprisingly powerful read for such a slim volume. I feel you will enjoy it (if I can use 'enjoy' in relation to such a dark topic).
Thanks, Martin. Possibly I found this a bit less powerful than you as it's a bit slight in view of the Nazi shadow over Germany but I can see how making it a story about two teenage boys makes it accessible. I think I'd have loved it as a teenager when we were doing GCSE History.
Oh dear, another IRL book group where I'm a bit on the fence!
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6766021598
Oh dear, another IRL book group where I'm a bit on the fence!
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6766021598

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

I've just finished Between Them by Richard Ford (am away on holiday so can't share link on the phone ). It's a rare memoir about the ordinary lives of his parents where nothing extraordinary happens . As their only and , by then , unexpected child he is between their constant , reliable and generous love for each other which flows over the brim to include him .
I particularly liked his choice to tell their stories separately ; two people to whom something transforming happened but who were ultimately individuals. This enabled him to record to the background and he just a facet , albeit an important one , of their life stories .
It's a quiet memoir and articulated aspects of my own childhood, standing witness to a couple whose love is the undramatic catalyst for each others joy .

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I've just read Mammoth by Eva Baltasar, the third part of a triptych: she's such a compulsive author but it's hard to say what this about! Utterly compelling voice, all the same.
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6767711047
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6767711047

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Alwynne wrote: "I finished Sarah Manguso's semi-autobiographical Liars A superb, unputdownable account of one woman's experiences of an abusive marriage."
This is one on my radar so delighted to see your 5 stars.
This is one on my radar so delighted to see your 5 stars.

This is one on my radar ..."
Great, I really like her writing, from first coming across a copy of her memoir The Two Kinds of Decay a few years ago. I like her lack of sentimentality, and her willingness to admit to her own flaws. And her work is packed with memorable scenes/lines.

What a fantastic novel. It really stands up"
Brill, so pleased you still liked it!

She's a writer I have a lot of time for, although I thought this was the weakest entry in the trilogy, possibly because I found some of the underlying arguments hard to stomach. Still very much worth reading though, so get where you're coming from.

This is making me wonder if Greene ever wrote any fully developed female characters. And whether he wrote any women who were not crabbed and unpleasant. I've only read a little of his work, and that was 40 years ago.

Not in my experience, although some are overly idealised. I suspect he had a rather conventional madonna/whore complex.

Alwynne wrote: "Not in my experience, although some are overly idealised. I suspect he had a rather conventional madonna/whore complex...."
I really enjoyed the character of Aunt Augusta in Travels with My Aunt. While she may have been in Alwynne's "madonna/whore" category, I thought that as a very entertaining 75 year-old she made for an "unconventionial" rather than "conventional" example of one.
I also enjoyed the character development of Sarah Miles in The End of the Affair. But I'd argue that Sarah is the opposite of the "madonna/whore" as her story arc has her character development as more of a "whore/madonna."
Admittedly, though, while both Augusta and Sarah play pivotal roles as the catalyst character in their respective novels, the main protagonist of each novel was the male narrator.
Alwynne wrote: "I found some of the underlying arguments hard to stomach. Still very much worth reading though,"
On Mammoth: I certainly found it uncomfortable in places: the cats! The shepherd! The reconnection of sex and reproduction and all that involved. But Baltasar has a knack of writing such interesting, provocative, unexpected narratives, I'm just carried along.
I still have Permafrost to read.
On Mammoth: I certainly found it uncomfortable in places: the cats! The shepherd! The reconnection of sex and reproduction and all that involved. But Baltasar has a knack of writing such interesting, provocative, unexpected narratives, I'm just carried along.
I still have Permafrost to read.
G wrote: "I am listening to The Ministry of Time. It's fun"
It's indeed huge fun and the audio had me smirking and giggling!
I hadn't picked up the Graham Greene reference but he's a pet hate of mine as some already know. And yes, one bone of contention is his writing of women. Don't even get me started on The End of the Affair! One of my worst book experiences ever 🤮
It's indeed huge fun and the audio had me smirking and giggling!
I hadn't picked up the Graham Greene reference but he's a pet hate of mine as some already know. And yes, one bone of contention is his writing of women. Don't even get me started on The End of the Affair! One of my worst book experiences ever 🤮
Other opinions are available
GG is something of an RTTC fave, RC not withstanding
Agree his ability to write women is perhaps not a strength
However Travels with My Aunt is, I think, an example of a book with a well written female character. I'd have to reread to be 100% sure but my memory is that Aunt Augusta is full formed and completely convincing. Five star review here....
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


GG is something of an RTTC fave, RC not withstanding
Agree his ability to write women is perhaps not a strength
However Travels with My Aunt is, I think, an example of a book with a well written female character. I'd have to reread to be 100% sure but my memory is that Aunt Augusta is full formed and completely convincing. Five star review here....
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



I've had mixed experiences with Greene. I've loved some and disliked others. The Human Factor has been my favourite so far and I quite liked The End of the Affair, even if the ending was a little odd!




I've finished my latest book group choice....
The Buddha of Suburbia (1990)
by
Hanif Kureishi
It really stands up
Five star review....
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
5/5

The Buddha of Suburbia (1990)
by
Hanif Kureishi
It really stands up
Five star review....
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
5/5




At the moment I'm not sure why it's thought of as a classic.
I struggled with Memoirs of Hadrian which surprised me. One of those books I've always felt I should go back to but can't say I have much enthusiasm.

It saddens me that I couldn't read it along with the group.

Ditto, definitely on my list of feel-I-ought-to-like rather than actively liked novels.

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

GG is something of an RTTC fave, RC not withstanding
Agree his ability to write women is perhaps not a strength
However Travels with My Aunt is, I thi..."
It's one of my favorite of Greene's novels.

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



https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I've been disappointed by every Greene novel I've read, and his portrayal in The Love Charm of Bombs just confirmed my opinion of him as a man whose vision not only didn't rise above his times, but wasn't even average.
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Wonderful story by Annie Proulx in the 8-15 July Fiction issue. “The Hadal Zone” https://www.newyorker...."
I don't really get Sally Rooney either...I find her novels a bit dull and overly detailed.