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What books are you reading now? (2024)

I've got the following books on the go: the litfic The Italy Letters full of stunning sentences; Liars which is utterly compulsive - and am trying my first Bridgerton novel for switch off reading - anyone read them?



Isherwood is fab
I’d not considered the parallels with Aunt. I’ll have to ponder that one. Both firm favourites though
I’d not considered the parallels with Aunt. I’ll have to ponder that one. Both firm favourites though
I’ve not read Bridgerton, or even heard of it RC but that cover is sufficiently off putting that it would take a lot to persuade to overcome that instinctive reaction

😱

😱

Me too. Mr Norris I felt had shades of Aunt while Goodbye to Berlin was more melancholy.
Here was what I thought (2017): https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

What Do I Know?: Essential Essays
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and Comet in Moominland, the first of two reads for a mommin-themed reading event on the blog
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Nigeyb wrote: "I’ve not read Bridgerton, or even heard of it RC but that cover is sufficiently off putting that it would take a lot to persuade to overcome that instinctive reaction
😱"
Wow, not heard of Bridgerton? It's not often I get to gasp at someone knowing less about films and TV than me! It's been all over Netflix for the past three seasons. Not my usual matter either but it's so adorable I'm giving the book a go.
😱"
Wow, not heard of Bridgerton? It's not often I get to gasp at someone knowing less about films and TV than me! It's been all over Netflix for the past three seasons. Not my usual matter either but it's so adorable I'm giving the book a go.
I've got access to Netflix but don't really watch anything on there
I'm not watching much TV at all these days and when I do it tends to be something on iPlayer or MUBI
I'm not watching much TV at all these days and when I do it tends to be something on iPlayer or MUBI

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Alwynne wrote: "I finished Sarah Moss's My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir centred on her experiences of an eating disorder that disrupted her teens and then resurfaced during her forties in the middle..."
Sounds good - I must have missed this on Netgalley.
Sounds good - I must have missed this on Netgalley.

I didn't think the initial use of metaphor/symbolism really worked, she's far more convincing when her writing is more grounded/concrete but overall I thought it was very effective. I enjoyed her dissection of her childhood favourites - made me want to read some Arthur Ransome which was unexpected. I also found her account of her recent hospitalisation surprisingly powerful, I was shocked by the attitudes of the psychiatric staff she encountered though: one even told her she was 'choosing to be ill' which seemed incredibly inappropriate and a bizarrely outdated response to anorexia.
Alwynne wrote: "...and a bizarrely outdated response to anorexia."
Wow, yes! I think she sometimes tends to over-writing in her fiction as well but this is still one I want to read.
I'm currently reading Manguso's Liars and agree it's addictive. So many red flags that she let's go...
Wow, yes! I think she sometimes tends to over-writing in her fiction as well but this is still one I want to read.
I'm currently reading Manguso's Liars and agree it's addictive. So many red flags that she let's go...

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

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

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
G wrote: "Well I finished The Ministry of Time. To my great delight, it turned out not to derivative after all."
Great review - I also lost the plot a bit towards the end and was also listening to the audio. I liked the way, too, it's fun while still dealing with serious questions.
Great review - I also lost the plot a bit towards the end and was also listening to the audio. I liked the way, too, it's fun while still dealing with serious questions.
Alwynne wrote: "I finished Rachel Kushner's Creation Lake"
Yes. yes. yes! There's something about Kushner's women that just click with me: they're cool chicks but complex too, and in different ways.
Yes. yes. yes! There's something about Kushner's women that just click with me: they're cool chicks but complex too, and in different ways.

I've read Liars by Sarah Manguso, a book that Alwynne previously recommended here, and a blood-pressure-raising account of a toxic marriage.
One thing that struck me is the continuities between this and what we've said about Celia Fremlin's domestic commentary...
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6695408120
One thing that struck me is the continuities between this and what we've said about Celia Fremlin's domestic commentary...
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6695408120
I finished The Time of Cherries, a classic of Catalan literature, by Montserrat Roig. I was impressed by the writing technique but a little underwhelmed by the story:
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6556982426
I'm currently also reading The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020 by Rachel Kushner.
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6556982426
I'm currently also reading The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020 by Rachel Kushner.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I've just finished The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000–2020, essays from Rachel Kushner, one of my favourite contemporary writers:
www.goodreads.com/review/show/4996305954
www.goodreads.com/review/show/4996305954


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

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


Great, although can't guarantee you'll like it, think it's one of those Marmite titles!


I have read the first 4 of the Sergeant Cribb series and the first 4 of the Diamond books
I just finished the latest Donna Leon, A Refiner’s Fire: amazing she's kept this long-running Brunetti series still relevant and enjoyable:
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6827257004
www.goodreads.com/review/show/6827257004

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

I kept wondering what Jacqueline Rose thought about it as, presumably, the commentary on family/ancestry relates to her background/childhood too. It's quite an odd piece and some of the attitudes made me a bit uncomfortable - not all by any means - but I imagine some observations/elements wouldn't get past a contemporary editor.
Ha, well if Gillian's anything like Jacqueline, there'll have probably been some robust conversations, I expect! Sounds like that family has nurtured two formidable women. Have put this on my TBR as a result of your comments.

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

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
I've started an ARC of My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir by Sarah Moss - it's very easy to get drawn into.

Great, I struggled a bit with the opening chapters, I'm not comfortable with that kind of use of symbolism, but found that that fell away as her story unfolded - I found some of the later chapters really powerful. In some ways it ended up feeling more like a thematically-linked collection of essays than a conventional memoir - which was okay with me.

Link to my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Glad you found so much to enjoy in that context free snippet
I'm holding back on any judgements until I can understand how it fits with the rest of the book. Given I love EC I'm sure it will be another great read
I'm holding back on any judgements until I can understand how it fits with the rest of the book. Given I love EC I'm sure it will be another great read


I'm holding back on any judgements until I can understand how it fits with the rest of the book. Given I love EC I'm sure it will be a..."
I really enjoyed it, completely hilarious. I frequently get sucked into mindless scrolling through reviews, online Reddit posts, MN threads, find the voices/perspectives fascinating. She captured those aspects of online culture brilliantly.
Alwynne wrote: "I struggled a bit with the opening chapters, I'm not comfortable with that kind of use of symbolism"
On My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir: do you mean the cutesy names, 'Owl', 'The Jumbly Girl'? I'm finding that irritating but really like the critical inner voice and the idea of the wolf. I'm not far in and in lots of ways it's a conventional childhood of gendered pressures and repressed female rage - all of which I completely buy but not startlingly original so far. I like the style in which it's written though.
On My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir: do you mean the cutesy names, 'Owl', 'The Jumbly Girl'? I'm finding that irritating but really like the critical inner voice and the idea of the wolf. I'm not far in and in lots of ways it's a conventional childhood of gendered pressures and repressed female rage - all of which I completely buy but not startlingly original so far. I like the style in which it's written though.

On My Good Bright Wolf: A Memoir: do you mean the cutesy names..."
Yep those and the interjections/critical inner voices spread throughout. I found the post-childhood sections the most interesting by far.
Alwynne wrote: "Yep those and the interjections/critical inner voices spread throughout. I found the post-childhood sections the most interesting by far."
Good to know there lots to look forward to - my reading has been very bitty the last couple of weeks.
Good to know there lots to look forward to - my reading has been very bitty the last couple of weeks.

Good to know there lots to look forward t..."
I think mine's been rescued by reading a selection of fairly short books, so it looks as if I've read a lot more than I actually have! Clark and Rose are very short, the Smith much less complicated than most of her others, and I raced through Greenwell.
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Alwynne wrote: "Not in my expe..."
I enjoyed Travels with my Aunt too. I felt some shades of this book in Isherwood's Mr Norris Changes trains.
Of Greene I also liked Our Man in Havana and TQA; also to an extent the Confidential Agent which I discovered only as a result of the film (Lauren Bacall and Charles Boyer) and read immediately after.