Constant Reader discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Constant Reader
>
June: What Are You Reading?
message 151:
by
Tango
(new)
Jun 10, 2010 01:34PM

reply
|
flag

Kat -- when you finish Lost City Radio do look for the constant Reader discussion among the discussions section lists on the book's page


Heather, I saw a French film by that title over 10 years ago. Perhaps Isabelle Adjani? Really liked it, but didn't think of looking for the novel. Thank you, I will now!
I finished The Aeneid this morning. I didn't like the battles, almost all unknown names to me and no way to keep straight who's with who. Some of the other chapters I did like. Later today I will be starting Pan. I'm really looking forward to reading another Hamsun.


Anyway, I was intrigued because it has a similar opening scenario to my book: A college student with no clear view of their future grapples with the implications of a sudden death in the family. I've only just started, but I'm anxious to see the direction this author takes. I'll keep you posted.
(Plus, the .99 price on Kindle made it tough for this cheapskate to pass up.)

The first two games were terrific. Ties!
Now I can read, until tomorrow.

What an intriguing story!

What an intriguing story!"
It is and it was a fascinating story, more because it is true.


Great! That's in my TBR stack. I love the Inspector Lynley mysteries.


The second half of the book focuses on Paulson and Bernanke trying to keep things from disintegrating while the clock kept ticking. Curiously absent from the story is the President, who doesn't seem to have been at all active.
Overall a pretty good story. Admittedly, this might be a little better for those who know some of the basic technical things about leverage, markets, and bonds.

Gabrielle: I am also excited about the slimness of Miss Brodie :)
Marialyce: I read Henrietta Lacks this spring. It was an incredible story. I loved the first half of the book but was disappointed with the second half - especially the afterword. I felt like the author threw in all kinds of issues that she had wanted to raise within the story but didn't and that somehow left a really bad taste in my mouth. I can't explain or even figure out why it bothered me so much, but for that reason I have not been as gung-ho about recommending it to folks. But I do think it is a story people should know about.
I just finished American Subversive: A Novel - it is a thriller about a blogger and a political activist. Fast paced, very au courant, it was fun. Mostly I was impressed with the ending - the author really tied things together in a way I did not think he would be able to pull off. There's a bit of a Bret Easton Ellis, so if hearing about rich young people in NYC bothers you - you might not enjoy it.
I'm now reading Elegy for April: A Novel. It is a fast read, but I am starting to wonder if these characters and settings have run their course for Benjamin Black.


glad you enjoyed Stoner. How would you compare Starting out in the evening to Breakable You?

Let me think on this.
I just read your review of Breakable You. I actually agree with your take on the first half being much better than the second half. However, for some reason I still thought it was a good book. I guess the good overrode the not so good. I am finding bits of Starting Out in the Evening to be so insightful that I can't put it down - and then kind of slog through a few pages. But I do think that some of the slogging may be necessary. Not sure - will get back to you on this.


Not making much progress right now. New job, moving in mid-July, no commute time, so I'm just conceding that I may not be actually reading much until August.


Laura, an educated woman who thought she was destined to be an old maid teacher, is courted by a nice man and marries, but finds he wants to farm and they move to a 200 acre farm in the Mississippi Delta with his misogynist, racist father. When her husband's brother and his black friend return after WW2, the trouble starts after they've been used to the way things were in Europe and find they have trouble living under the racist rules in Mississippi.
Marge

I am also loving it. I dont' know what all the smacking is about, but I think Morton is totally under appreciated. But I usually like non-mainstream books anyway. More than half way through - I think Morton has an amazing grasp of personalities, motives, society and the life of the artist. Love it.








That edition of War and Peace has been calling to me lately. I really want to make the time to read it. I'm finishing up The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie today.



Josephine Tey: Long ago, I read her The Daughter of Time and thought it was excellent. It is a "mystery" in a way, in which a 20th century hospital-bound "sleuth" tries to figure out whether Richard III really killed off his nephews. A different sort of mystery, but very well done.

I don't understand why someone/company who made money off Henrietta Lacks cells didn't pay the family a decent amount of money even if legally they didn't have to.

did You read The Big Short by Michael Lewis
if You did how did it compare to The End of Wall Street?



That clinches it I must read more of her books.


I've got the movie reserved at the library. I didn't know it was a movie.Thanks!

I love Harry Hole!


I have,Carol, and I interviewed the author, Alan Brennert for my literary blog. It's a terrific book, but depressing in spots as well. Brennert is one person who made the transition from screenwriter to novelist well.

This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (other topics)Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life (other topics)
Wolf Hall (other topics)
Nemesis (other topics)
Wolf Hall (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Walker Percy (other topics)Rebecca Skloot (other topics)
Alexandre Dumas (other topics)
Alexandre Dumas (other topics)
Rebecca Skloot (other topics)
More...