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Feeling Nostalgic? The archives > Your next/current read?

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message 651: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 1106 comments Agrees with Stacia.


message 652: by [deleted user] (new)



Hey Ms. Petra, Jim, RA, Kevin, Gus, Larry and any other sports fans I may have missed - get your hands on this one. The author references the Stooges IN THE FIRST PARAGRAPH and then it's onwards and upwards from there.

Re: Dock Ellis's acid-fueled no-no. If you were keeping score that day, his name on your scorecard probably appeared as "Ellis, D."

The 70's... What a larf!


message 653: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments So you're warned off it for life? For several months? You're going to read one Bellow and that's the end of your quota?

I can't plan that far ahead.

Good recommendation, Clark...


message 654: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments i finished the girl who played with fire today. reading the book i had the constant urge to rewrite it. if larsson was still alive and i was his editor i'd yell at him real loud and then force him to write his next novel without using the words 'suddenly,' 'discover,' 'realize' or any synonyms of those words. the plot on the other hand was great, this is a book that's hard to put down.


message 655: by Jim (new)

Jim | 6484 comments Thanks for the tip Clark, will look for it.


message 656: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) I agree, J(anine).


message 657: by Natalie (new)

Natalie (aquariusnat) I'm about to start Nobody's Fool . I really liked the Paul Newman movie , hopefully the book will be even better .


message 658: by Jaye (new)

Jaye  | 180 comments Leslie wrote: "Looking forward to reading Atwood's The Year of the Flood. I just finished one of her early novels Surfacing and absolutely loved it! It's interesting to see how her e..."

thank you for this interesting link.


message 659: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments Natalie wrote: "I'm about to start Nobody's Fool . I really liked the Paul Newman movie , hopefully the book will be even better ."

I like that one, along with a couple other of his earlier books, but his last couple sucked.


message 660: by Jaye (new)

Jaye  | 180 comments i liked The Hunger Games. while reading it, i asked myself if i really want to invest more time in these books. terrifying government laws seep in slowly.
also, i realized that if Katness and Peeta called each other by shortened names they'd be
Kat Pee


message 662: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Jaye wrote: "also, i realized that if Katness and Peeta called each other by shortened names they'd be
Kat Pee "


Ha! I hated the name Katniss because it sounded like cat piss to me, so this makes sense.


message 663: by ms.petra (last edited Jan 18, 2011 04:06PM) (new)

ms.petra (mspetra) The Word Made Flesh: literary tattoos from bookworms worldwide
although I have none myself, the whole tattoo thing is fascinating to me. I saw a show channel surfing the other night and this guy was tattooed over every inch of his body (I find that hard to believe...wink, wink). his entire face, even his eyelids, the soles of his feet, wow.... why does someone do that?


message 664: by Brittomart (new)

Brittomart Petra, I love that "wink wink."


message 666: by Brittomart (new)

Brittomart I tried reading that book. Lord, did I try.


message 667: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24778 comments Mod
Yeah well I'm not giving it 110%. I'm at about 89%.


message 668: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24778 comments Mod
Lobstergirl wrote: "Brief Interviews with Hideous Men."

I'm done with this. There were parts that were interesting, and parts that weren't. I'm not a fan of that style of writing, really. Or literary postmodernism in general. I seriously doubt I'll read any more of his fiction.


message 669: by Brittomart (new)

Brittomart I stopped at the part with the depressed person.


message 670: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24778 comments Mod
Southern Fried Britt wrote: "I stopped at the part with the depressed person."

I thought that had very interesting insights into depression, but it was definitely overlong.


message 671: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)


message 672: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24778 comments Mod
Currently reading Freedom.


message 673: by ms.petra (new)

ms.petra (mspetra) Life:Keith Richards I am about 3/4 of the way through and this is a surprisingly good memoir.


message 674: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments elizabeth gaskell - wives and daughters

i haven't made a lot of progress the last few days, but i just had a deadline today so i should have some more time to read.


message 675: by Heidi (new)

Heidi (heidihooo) | 10825 comments Lobstergirl wrote: "Lobstergirl wrote: "Brief Interviews with Hideous Men."

I'm done with this. There were parts that were interesting, and parts that weren't. I'm not a fan of that style of writing, ..."


I listened to the audiobook in my car, and it cracked me up! David Foster Wallace seems to elicit the sort of response that one might expect from a politician - they really love his writing or they really despise his writing. I'm in the love camp, myself.

Right now I'm reading The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz. I'm really excited about this read. It's this month's read for my book club.


message 676: by Sarah (new)


message 677: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24778 comments Mod
Heidi wrote: "I listened to the audiobook in my car, and it cracked me up"

In the audio version do they pause to tell you when the footnotes are being read, and then read the whole footnote?


message 678: by Helena (last edited Jan 25, 2011 06:59PM) (new)

Helena | 1056 comments Sarah Pi wrote: "Boneshaker"

Just finished Boneshaker

and moved on to:

Reading American Gods and The White Tiger


message 679: by [deleted user] (new)


message 680: by Sally, la reina (new)

Sally (mrsnolte) | 17373 comments Mod
The Jewel in the Crown.


message 682: by Jim (new)

Jim | 6484 comments Helena wrote: "Sarah Pi wrote: "Boneshaker"

Just finished Boneshaker

and moved on to:

Reading American Gods and The White Tiger"


I'm reading American Gods too. I don't consider it his best book.


message 683: by Helena (new)

Helena | 1056 comments Jim wrote: "Helena wrote: "Sarah Pi wrote: "Boneshaker"

Just finished Boneshaker

and moved on to:

Reading American Gods and The White Tiger"

I'm r..."


No, I’m having a bit of difficulty getting through this one. Still enjoyable- but somehow a bit boring? I’m missing his dark humour in this one. I listened to Anansi Boys narrated by Lenny Henry- he did a really great job and in all honesty- had I been reading it I probably wouldn’t have liked it as much as I did.


message 684: by Jammies (new)

Jammies Helena and Sarah, what did you think of Boneshaker? I love that book!


message 685: by Helena (new)

Helena | 1056 comments Jammies wrote: "Helena and Sarah, what did you think of Boneshaker? I love that book!"

I had mixed feelings about it at first. I really liked the story, loved the characters- but I didn’t like the zombie part. I felt like that could’ve been left out, I kind of thought that the zombies detracted from the story a bit. But that’s my personal preference, other than the zombies, I really liked it. I’m planning on reading the next books... if I can ever find Clementine! Loved Lucy O’Gunning :D


message 686: by Heidi (last edited Jan 26, 2011 08:16AM) (new)

Heidi (heidihooo) | 10825 comments Lobstergirl wrote: "Heidi wrote: "I listened to the audiobook in my car, and it cracked me up"

In the audio version do they pause to tell you when the footnotes are being read, and then read the whole footnote?"


Nope. I don't remember that part.

The audiobook is read by a whole slew of famous actors, though. I had fun trying to figure out which one was doing the reading. I'm trying to remember the names of all the readers - Timothy Hutton, Bobby Canavale, Lou Taylor Pucci, Christopher Meloni, Josh Charles... some Brit guy, and for some reason I wanna say Paul Rudd? He may not have been on it. I like his audiobook readings, though. I may have been trying to guess him because I wanted the guy to be him. Then again, maybe it really was him.


Stacia (the 2010 club) (stacia_r) Dragonfly in Amber reminds me that I really need to get to Drums of Autumn at some point. I stalled out after book 3.


Stacia (the 2010 club) (stacia_r) Jammies wrote: "Helena and Sarah, what did you think of Boneshaker? I love that book!"

I read the first half before it became overdue and I took it back to the library. Now that I have the ebook copy, there's no reason not to get back to the book, but other stuff keeps jumping in the way.

It seems like the people I know who've read it are mixed on this one.

I really liked the mom character though. Didn't get much further after the kid took off on his own, so I am sort of curious to know what happened.


message 689: by Natalie (new)

Natalie (aquariusnat) I'm now in the middle of Gulliver's Travels .


message 690: by ms.petra (new)

ms.petra (mspetra) finished Life:Keith Richards today and moving on to another rapscallion Autobiography of Mark Twain


message 691: by JackieB (last edited Jan 27, 2011 05:50AM) (new)

JackieB | 49 comments I am currently reading "Letters from Father Christmas". It's a series of letters which "Father Christmas" sent to JRR Tolkein's children once a year (I suspect they were ghost written). This may seem a curious choice. It was a book club read for December, but my library didn't get it to me until a couple of weeks ago. It cost me £1.10 to order it, which is nearly the cost of a packet of Kettle chips here in the UK, so I thought I'd read it anyway. It's really sweet and charming. I may not make it through to the end, because I have a limited capacity for sweet and charming. My next book is going to be Sacrifice by S.J. Bolton. It was recommended to me by a friend who described it as "wierd but good".


message 692: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments wierd is a weird word.


message 693: by Jammies (new)

Jammies janine wrote: "wierd is a weird word."

And awkward is an awkward word!


message 694: by Jim (new)

Jim | 6484 comments janine may have been pointing out some spelling Jammies.


message 695: by JackieB (new)

JackieB | 49 comments janine wrote: "wierd is a weird word."

I'm going to pretend it's the British spelling.


message 696: by Jim (new)

Jim | 6484 comments I will too then.


message 697: by Jammies (new)

Jammies Jim wrote: "janine may have been pointing out some spelling Jammies."

And I may have been babbling.

Scratch that, I was babbling, but only because I've always found it ironic that awkward is spelled so awkwardly.


message 698: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)


message 699: by Gatorman (new)


message 700: by RandomAnthony (new)

RandomAnthony | 14536 comments Natalie wrote: "I'm now in the middle of Gulliver's Travels ."

I love that book.


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