Books on the Nightstand discussion
What are you currently reading - October 2010

Gack! My parents took me to see the original movie when it came out and was being sold as a true story of flies and demons and seeping bloody walls and Emily the pig and a family running for their LIVES in the middle of the night. I was 9. For the record, never take your 9 year old to see something like that. The book didn't affect me as much when I read it as a teen maybe because this was well after the whole story was debunked.
One of the real victims of the story was Jay Anson himself who was snookered by the Lutz's and somehow never saw any profit from the book. Or that's what I heard on a podcast about it recently.
Vanessa wrote: "Gack! My parents took me to see the original movie when it came out and was being sold as a true story of flies and demons and seeping bloody walls and Emily the pig and a family running for their LIVES in the middle of the night. I was 9. For the record, never take your 9 year old to see something like that. The book didn't affect me as much when I read it as a teen maybe because this was well after the whole story was debunked.
One of the real victims of the story was Jay Anson himself who was snookered by the Lutz's and somehow never saw any profit from the book. Or that's what I heard on a podcast about it recently. "
Did you know it's still being sold as "Non-Fiction?!"
Even though I know it was de-dunked later on, the damage had already been done to my poor little Catholic pysche! I think what I'm experiencing now is a sort of sensory recall.
If you happen to remember what podcast that item about Jay Anson was, I'd love to hear it...
One of the real victims of the story was Jay Anson himself who was snookered by the Lutz's and somehow never saw any profit from the book. Or that's what I heard on a podcast about it recently. "
Did you know it's still being sold as "Non-Fiction?!"
Even though I know it was de-dunked later on, the damage had already been done to my poor little Catholic pysche! I think what I'm experiencing now is a sort of sensory recall.
If you happen to remember what podcast that item about Jay Anson was, I'd love to hear it...

http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4020
No mention of Anson's royalties though. I know the show I listened to had a male and female host and I can't remember what it was. I could be thinking of his suing for royalties for the many film sequels but I thought I had heard he didn't make money off of the book (and also admitted late in life that it was a hoax.) BTW, the second movie which is a prequel scared me more than the first one.
Also, I see the freaky demon pig was called Jodie, not Emily. And despite the story being debunked for many years, the debate is still unsurprisingly alive and well on the nets.
Yesterday I finished Persuader by Lee Child.
This first-person tale is a strong entry in the series. Child's Reacher books can always be counted on for hard-ass action, but this one shows a new hard-boiled artfulness to Child's approach, capturing the bittersweet tinge of tenderness that lies in the heart of every tough guy, and serving up some terse prose that, in a couple of action sequences, will make a fan of the genre laugh with delight.
Here's one: "I caught him with a wild left in the throat. It was a solid punch, and a lucky one. But not for him. It crushed his larynx. He went down on the floor again and suffocated. It was reasonably quick. About a minute and a half. There was nothing I could do for him. I'm not a doctor."
Reacher is at his best when his emotions are engaged. Particularly those emotions that require vengeance, and the dark thrill of taking out the baddest guys. The ones who can't be suffered to live. And that's what we get here. Reacher in full avenging mode.

This first-person tale is a strong entry in the series. Child's Reacher books can always be counted on for hard-ass action, but this one shows a new hard-boiled artfulness to Child's approach, capturing the bittersweet tinge of tenderness that lies in the heart of every tough guy, and serving up some terse prose that, in a couple of action sequences, will make a fan of the genre laugh with delight.
Here's one: "I caught him with a wild left in the throat. It was a solid punch, and a lucky one. But not for him. It crushed his larynx. He went down on the floor again and suffocated. It was reasonably quick. About a minute and a half. There was nothing I could do for him. I'm not a doctor."
Reacher is at his best when his emotions are engaged. Particularly those emotions that require vengeance, and the dark thrill of taking out the baddest guys. The ones who can't be suffered to live. And that's what we get here. Reacher in full avenging mode.



Hm. Maybe a prefence in book format runs parralell to that of phones. Kindle or actual book? iPhone or Blackberry? Touch screen or no? Just saying.
@ Vanessa: Hi! I'm not dead! Just busy! lol Sorry to hear you found a book that made you anything but happy. Sadly, there are books like that. I dind't realize it either till I picked up my first lemon. A therapy session was required afterward, much crying and claims of "I didn't think this was even possible! How could this happen?" went on. lol

In my teens a group of us from school decided to go to the cinema (a certain recipe for poor viewing choices!). It was Amityville 3D!!!! Thankfully I remember almost nothing.

http://skeptoid.com/episodes/4020
No mention of Anson's royalties though. I know the show I listened to had a male and female hos..."
Skepticality has a male and female host , Derek and Swoopy. Maybe that is the podcast you listened to.


I think that happens to everyone. There are only so many leisure hours available after work or school. I go through phases where all I want to play casual games or watch movies or knit. I only feel a twinge of guilt when I am going through an extended non-reading phase and my book blog sits neglected.

Now I'm reading a middle grade novel called Horns & Wrinkles by Joseph Helgerson. I am only 28 pages in and so far it is cute.


But don't feel too guilty that life has gotten in your way of reading. At least your able to be around books, to bad we aren't able to absorb their stories from simply being around them without listening to the audiobook format.

I definitely felt the same way, although I did muscle through the whole book. Very disappointed, one of those books that I can't believe I paid full price for the hardcover.



I didn't know Ethan Frome had been banned. When you finish let me know, because I have some thoughts that would be spoilers for anyone who hasn't read the whole book. At first I didn't think I'd finish because the beginning is so slow but I persevered and am glad I did.

If I had paid for the book, I probably would have worked my way through the rest of it. Luckily it was a library book, so I was much more willing to just take it back and move on to something else.

Hey! No worries, I didn't think you were dead :)
White Noise isn't the first lemon I have read. I was kind of afraid I wouldn't like it. It was a book club pick so I was being a team player. We'll have a spirited discussion at least. I know one other member hated it the first time he read it and he's STILL reading it again for book club.
(thanks to the likes of Goodreads and Amazon tho, I read much fewer lemons these days. If I see several bad or mediocre reviews, I am much less likely to select the book.)

Just when I think I'm the only one that knows those shows.
I kind of think it wasn't Skepticality but I don't remember what show it was. I don't listen to that show often, just because it's so long.

Just when I think I'm the only one that knows those shows.
I kind of think..."
I don't listen to Skepticality a lot but I listen to several podcasts made by their friends.
When Derek had his brain meltdown the podcast was mentioned constantly so I tried it when he got better.
I do like both Derek and Swoopy's voices which is very important to me if I'm going to be regularly listening to them for an hour or so.


I'm now reading a lesser known Steinbeck called The Moon Is Down. It's propaganda he volunteered to write for WWII under the auspices of the OSS but it's really thoughtful and well-written. It's the story of an unnamed country (probably Denmark or Norway) that is conquered by a suspisciously German army (although they also are not called by name.) It got a lot of flack when it was published in 1942 because Steinbeck made many of the conquerers sympathetic and ordinary people. Which was exactly the point of course.
The book was a huge hit in occupied Europe and sales from it were used to fund resistance movements in France, the Netherlands, Denmark and Norway. I had no idea until I read that in the preface. It's a shame that story is largely forgotten.

I had a long weekend and so I grabbed The Hunger Games and snuggled up on the couch. Well, my long weekend turned into an obsession. I finished The Hunger Games and Catching Fire. Couldn't put them down. The warnings about not picking those up unless you have nothing to do is right! I will be picking up Mockingjay after work. Also, wanted to say if it wasn't for BOTNS and this forum I would have never picked these up, thinking it's not what I typically would read or enjoy, but I have enjoyed immensely. So thank you, thank you, thank you!
The Hunger Games did distract me from my library books which are due soon and I can't renew - as other people have holds on them, so I gotta get moving on these... The Handbook for Lightning Strike Survivors: A Novel, Villain, and The Tower, The Zoo, and The Tortoise: A Novel. But I am pretty sure there will be nothing that can get in my way of starting Mockingjay tonight.
I started listening to Matterhorn: A Novel of the Vietnam War yesterday. That is really Bronson Pinchot?? Doesn't sound like Balki at all!
About halfway through The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and have to have Snow Flower and the Secret Fan read for my library's book discussion next Tuesday. Since I'm parked in the library all day trying to get support for our upcoming levy, I'm hoping to get a lot of reading done in between "customers".
About halfway through The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and have to have Snow Flower and the Secret Fan read for my library's book discussion next Tuesday. Since I'm parked in the library all day trying to get support for our upcoming levy, I'm hoping to get a lot of reading done in between "customers".


I finished Steinbeck's The Moon Is Down which was extraordinary. It's a piece of propaganda he volunteered to write for the OSS in WWII but it's so much more than that. Apparently it was sneered at by critics in this country but in Europe it was beloved. The sales of it funded resistance efforts in occupied Denmark, Norway, France and the Netherlands. The story of the book is as inspiring as the book itself.
Now I'm reading The Monkey House which is a sort of literary mystery set in Sarajevo during the Bosnian War. I picked it because Martin Cruz Smith raved about it and I just got off of a kick reading his Arkady Renko novels.

Tanya wrote: "I've just started listening to The Amityville Horror (by Jay Anson; narrated by Ray Porter.) I have to tell you that when I was 11 years old, I read this book and it scared me immediately and scarred me for life. Now that I'm older, I find I'm no less affected. This morning I was seriously wondering where my rosary beads had got to!"
I finished it THE AMITYVILLE HORROR yesterday. The opening of the book (a letter from a priest) had me take a deep breath; but by the end, it was hard for me to remember why I had been so severely traumatized by the book. Well, yeah, I was 11 years old. And a devout little Roman Catholic. And I happily thought the eczema on my hands was the beginnings stages of stigmata... But still! Tonight I'm going to watch the 1979 movie. Soooo, when I next write about how I'm waking up at 3:15 every morning again, you can remind me of what a brave grown-up cynic I posed as the night before!
I finished it THE AMITYVILLE HORROR yesterday. The opening of the book (a letter from a priest) had me take a deep breath; but by the end, it was hard for me to remember why I had been so severely traumatized by the book. Well, yeah, I was 11 years old. And a devout little Roman Catholic. And I happily thought the eczema on my hands was the beginnings stages of stigmata... But still! Tonight I'm going to watch the 1979 movie. Soooo, when I next write about how I'm waking up at 3:15 every morning again, you can remind me of what a brave grown-up cynic I posed as the night before!

Finished Reacher, and it did not disappoint. I'll definitely be grabbing more of these in the future. The end was a surprise to me, and I didn't see most of the twists coming, which is unusual for me- I often ruin books for myself by guessing the ending way ahead of time (for example, The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane).
I also recently finished The Mists of Avalon: Book 4: The Prisoner in the Oak, and it makes me a little sad to leave this audio behind. I enjoyed the story overall, there were parts that were slow and characters that drove me crazy, but that's bound to happen over the course of a story this long. I thought it was very well told, although it seemed to end a bit abruptly.
On audio I have just started The Quickening, and I am super excited to get into this story. There's little that I enjoy more than a good pioneer tale, and this looks to be right up my alley.
I haven't decided what to read next on my nook, although I have 2 contenders, and they are very different... The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements or Room. Probably one, then the other!


I thought I would read the unabridged Count of Monte Cristo next but I can't face carrying it (1200 pgs) and my laptop and etc to work every night on my bicycle. It will have to wait for vacation next month.

I have just started Incarceron which is YA. It is told from two POVs.
One a young man trapped in the living prison called Incarceron.
The other a wealthy young girl living in a distant future where the King has declared that Time has stopped and everyone must live as in the 17th century with technology hidden behind the scenes. Her father is the warden of Incarceron.
So far it is living up to my expectations which were high.


I saw part of that recently on some channel. I have to say the 8 year old Catholic school girl inside of me told me to close my eyes and keep flipping channels. But the adult skeptic prevailed. Barely. As it turns out, it's pretty cheesy now though (don't bother with the Ryan Reynolds remake which is dreadful.)

(btw, does it bug anyone else when a book set in the past doesn't provide dates? Or when it doesn't have maps? I think these might just be weird fetishes of mine.)
I hatched a plan mid-year to read some of the novels that were seemingly omnipresent on adult book shelves when I was a kid that I for whatever or no reason never picked up. So next up is Ragtime.
Just finished The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. If I wasn't so busy with library business, it would [i]never[/i] have taken me a month to finish this. I loved the book from the start - which I did not think was slow. Parts were a bit gruesome, but I couldn't and wouldn't put it down.
Next up - Snow Flower and the Secret Fan.
The library's reserves are starting to gang up on me - I have Sh*t My Dad Say [book:Why We Hate the Oil Companies, One Day, A Journey: My Political Life, Ape House and Juliet waiting for me.
Next up - Snow Flower and the Secret Fan.
The library's reserves are starting to gang up on me - I have Sh*t My Dad Say [book:Why We Hate the Oil Companies, One Day, A Journey: My Political Life, Ape House and Juliet waiting for me.


This first-person tale is a strong entry in the series. Child's Reacher books can always be counted on for hard-ass actio..."
"Dammit, Jim, I'm a doctor, not Jack Reacher."
Maybe I've been watching too many Star Trek episodes.
Eric wrote: "Yesterday I finished Persuader by Lee Child.

This first-person tale is a strong entry in the series. Child's Reacher books can always be counted on for hard-ass actio..."

Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett;
A Little History of the World by E. H. Gombrich.
I am reading Beowulf on the Beach by Jack Murnighan.
Regarding recent recommendations I intend to read in the near future:
Room by Emma Donoghue;
Revolution by Jennifer Donnelly.


So now I'm reading God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything by Christopher Hitchens. It's been sitting on my shelf for a while and I felt like it wanted to be picked up. I also am reading Neon Angel: A Memoir of a Runaway which is Cherie Currie's memoir (she was the lead singer of the Runaways, hence the title.)

I didn't make it through Ragtime, either. I did read Homer and Langley, which was better, but not all that great. I found his writing to be rather cold.


Just finished The Stand. Pure excellence.

Yeah, something about his style didn't excite me. And the stuff I found offputting was making me not want to open the book. I'm ok with flipping through to the end and moving on. I don't know if I really want to read more Doctorow now (although I always kind of wanted to read Billy Bathgate.)
Flora, Witches wasn't one of my favorites but I do love me some John Updike.
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Freedom (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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I've just started listening to The Amityville Horror (by Jay Anson; narrated by Ray Porter.) I have to tell you that when I was 11 years old, I read this book and it scared me immediately and scarred me for life. Now that I'm older, I find I'm no less affected. This morning I was seriously wondering where my rosary beads had got to!