Unputdownables Book Club discussion
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Wallace
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Jun 24, 2010 08:54PM

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You're the second person who has told me they are re-reading HP... maybe you all are onto something. :)
I felt like I was having a dry spell too (not really getting engaged in reading) and was just revived by reading The Hunger Games. Have you read it?
I felt like I was having a dry spell too (not really getting engaged in reading) and was just revived by reading The Hunger Games. Have you read it?


Raymond wrote: "I have not read the hunger games but have been intrigued and waiting to get my hands on a copy. I recently read The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks. I expected soooo much mor..."
I read it years and years ago (before the movie) and it didn't really capture me either. I think the movie was far better.
LemonLinda wrote: "I am reading Citizen Washington by William Martin. The premise is that Washington has just died and one of his compatriots/adversaries is trying to "get the goods" on h..."
It's fictional or not?
I read it years and years ago (before the movie) and it didn't really capture me either. I think the movie was far better.
LemonLinda wrote: "I am reading Citizen Washington by William Martin. The premise is that Washington has just died and one of his compatriots/adversaries is trying to "get the goods" on h..."
It's fictional or not?



That sounds really interesting. Adding it to my To-Reads list!
Fiona wrote: "Nadia wrote: "Right now I'm just not in the mood to read any of the books in my TBR pile, so I've been rereading HP and the Deathly Hallows. I'm hoping it gets me out of my reading funk."
I want to re-read HP as well! Feel free to make yourself a reading list in that section if you want to add more books... I know you read a lot. Raymond -- you too! Let me know if you have any trouble and I can hep you both.
I spent ..."
Zoe wrote: "I'm 100 pages into A Reliable Wifeand I'm having mixed emotions about it. The story is interesting and compelling and I want to read ahead to see what happens next. However, I don'..."
I do remember LemonLinda saying she didn't really care for it. DO you ever give up on books, or do you always read them all the way through?
I want to re-read HP as well! Feel free to make yourself a reading list in that section if you want to add more books... I know you read a lot. Raymond -- you too! Let me know if you have any trouble and I can hep you both.
I spent ..."
Zoe wrote: "I'm 100 pages into A Reliable Wifeand I'm having mixed emotions about it. The story is interesting and compelling and I want to read ahead to see what happens next. However, I don'..."
I do remember LemonLinda saying she didn't really care for it. DO you ever give up on books, or do you always read them all the way through?


I've become a little more like that. i used to put a book down if I didn't like it, and now I give it a bit more of a chance. But if I really don't like it, I won't make myself read it. We all have such long TBR lists it's hard to keep spending time on a book that you aren't into when there are so many waiting to be read.

The Tortilla Curtain is on my list to be read this Fall! Will look forward to hearing what you think.
I added The Unit per your review.
I added The Unit per your review.









Okay, I am dying for a book like that but I have a friend who said I won't like it because it is too scary/creepy and now I am hesitant. I guess I could try it and just return it if it's too much (after September, of course, which is book buying ban month for me).
You ladies make a good sell though!
You ladies make a good sell though!

For now, I put it down for a while, it's hard reading that almost-800 page book, written in small print, for so long and realizing I've only turned a few pages. It reads fast, but that's a lot of text to take in. So I picked up The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd.

Wallace, you will enjoy it - creepiness and all! I'm hoping you give it a chance. I think you will like it.


It's on my list, thanks ladies! :)
Right now I'm reading Full House by Janet Evanovich. It's my first book by her and it is wonderfully mindless reading. Such a good book for when you don't want to concentrate too hard and want things light and fluffy.
Right now I'm reading Full House by Janet Evanovich. It's my first book by her and it is wonderfully mindless reading. Such a good book for when you don't want to concentrate too hard and want things light and fluffy.

I'm on to The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart (I think this may be his debut novel). I'm also listening to Let the Great World Spin on my iPod and enjoying it tremendously. I didn't like it at first, but it's fast becoming a favorite.

Miss GP wrote: "Just finished To the End of the Land. Well written but s-l-o-o-o-w. Definitely not a page-turner.
I'm on to The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart (I think this..."
I hear Let the Great World Spin is a fabulous book. The hype scares me off, so you will have to report back when you are finished and let us know what you thought.
I'm on to The Wake of Forgiveness by Bruce Machart (I think this..."
I hear Let the Great World Spin is a fabulous book. The hype scares me off, so you will have to report back when you are finished and let us know what you thought.
Zoe wrote: "Has anyone read The Northern Clemency? I'm about 70% through it and it is SLOOOOOOOW! Amazon awarded it best book of '08, but I really don't see it. It's one of those that I'm jus..."
I've never even heard of it! Good luck getting through it!
I've never even heard of it! Good luck getting through it!





You will love this book if you are at all interested in WWII. It is unusual because it is told from a little known look at the women who were caught between the Nazis and the Jewish communities and how they handled the turmoil. I haven't written my review yet because I just finished it this morning and I'm still "mulling" it over in my mind. I'll post my review here when I do it and it will be without spoilers.


Sorry, I listed WWI but you knew what I meant. I have edited my post. Thanks.



Up until I read Those Who Save Us by Jenna Blum I never considered the shame and the secrets that most of the German women who were caught between the Nazi's and the turmoil concerning the treatment of the people in the Jewish communities and the concentration camps. To make matters worse, the ones that were lucky enough to escape those horrors, after the war, by marrying American soldiers, and immigrating to the United States were usually ostracized by their American neighbors just for being a non Jewish, German woman in that time period.
This captivating story is brilliantly told in flashbacks about Anna and her daughter. Floating between Anna, who did what she had to during in early forties Germany to survive the war and her daughter Trudy, the narrator, born as a result of that war, Jenna Blum tells a fascinating tale, with the present in 1997 Wisconsin in a book you can't put down. I read this novel in one and a half days while reading late in the night until my face fell in my book.
Enlightening as well as extremely entertaining Those Who Save Us is my new all time favorite history thriller. Blum is working on her next novel set also in Wisconsin and I will be on the look out for it!
Books mentioned in this topic
Those Who Save Us (other topics)Those Who Save Us (other topics)
Romeo and Juliet (other topics)
To the Nines (other topics)
Fall of Giants (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Emma Donoghue (other topics)Sue Monk Kidd (other topics)
Justin Cronin (other topics)
William Martin (other topics)
William Martin (other topics)
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