The Next Best Book Club discussion
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Revive a Dead Thread
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What are you reading?

Mona, you can get the first two in paperback at target for 20% off, i think that makes them around $12 each. maybe not as cheap as second hand places like half-priced books, but still a pretty good price!


Just began Alice, I Have Been, today while at the pool, and I am hooked! This seems like an intriguing mystery and I am so excited to get back to it!

I have heard mixed reviews on it but since it came in from the library, I'll give it a shot. : )

1) The Millennium series is great!
2) Davis Liss - I read The Whiskey Rebels, and was totally entranced!
As for what I'm reading, I just finished The Sex Lives of Cannibals: Adrift in the Equatorial Pacific and All Quiet on the Western Front. Both were 3-4.5 reads (I wish we could give 1/2 points).
I just started My Splendid Concubine. So far so good...
Just finished "Case of the Missing Servant" and really enjoyed it! Did you know the author is here this week, and will be participating in the group discussion? Check it out and ask some questions!


Never read a Laurell Hamilto..."
I own the first 12 books in the Anita Black vampire hunter series...they had no sex in them until the 4th book...the last one my husband bought as a gift for me, and Anita now NEEDS to have 4 men in bed with her or she's not satisfied! That's Laurell Hamilton's first series...the Merry Gentry books are based almost solely on Merry being the most wanted female in the universe, and all men are willing to share, as long as they get some bed-time with her. I used to eagerly anticipate each new book of hers...no more! I told my husband not to buy anymore, since the last Merry Gentry book I read was a "throw-away" in my opinion, done probably to fulfill a contract or something! Why can't good authors know when their series has "run its course", and move on to a new one?



Saw the movie more recently and thought it was pretty cool. Better than I'd been led to believe. More focus on Holmes' fighting skills, but that's not untrue to the book - just more emphasized. Holmes the character is, let's face it, a total dick, and Downey doesn't shy away from that at all.
Cool project, anyway!


Downey's joined Daniel Day Lewis and Meryl Streep in the pantheon of people whose movies I'll probably watch even if they look really stupid. Tropic Thunder was what did it for me.

Currently reading Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict

Ok, thanks, BJ Rose. I'll read that first and decide. I read The Handmaid's Tale and loved that. I also heard that 1984 was a good dystopian novel.

Description:
"Growing up in Westfield, New Jersey, with a father who loved wisdom and ran an SAT prep business in a home crammed with books, Williams blithely ignored all that in favor of the hip-hop culture he heard and saw on BET. He spent his youth meticulously studying and imitating images of cool and thuggishness and listening to music that glorified misogyny, violence, and bling. The objective was to be "authentically black," despite his white mother and erudite father. He modeled the thug life with a hair-trigger temper that led to fights and a ghetto-fabulous girlfriend, living on the margins of drug dealing. At Georgetown, he continued the cool persona until he began to gradually face up to evidence that it would lead to failure and that a more interesting life might be available to him. Only then does he acknowledge the gift of his father's efforts to get him to appreciate the value of being able to truly and deeply think for himself. This is more than a coming-of-age story; it is an awakening, as Williams blends Dostoyevsky and Jay-Z in a compelling memoir and analysis of urban youth culture."
I feel like someone ought to clue this dude in to the fact that hip-hop is the single most influential force on language and culture in modern times, and the best of the rappers - like Jay-Z - are creating works so lyrically complex that they'll stand up to the best poets. And I mean that. There's a lot of b.s., misogynist, violent rap out there, but there's also some stuff our children's grandchildren will literally be studying in college.

Daniel Day-Lewis is similar, but I did NOT enjoy Nine. I don't know if I just didn't get it or what. I think I went expecting Chicago and thought the music and plot were quite a bit far below that.


I stopped reading them around book 10 or so. Didn't like the direction they were clearly headed for.


Claire, I finished BNW this morning, and think the 2nd half of the book was much better than the first. I thought 1984 was better than BNW, but IMO Orwell was building on Huxley's previous work. I actually got a scarier message out of Orwell's Animal Farm; more of that changing-history scenario can be seen in today's politics & society, altho 1984's Big Brother is scary enough!
I copied this from Wikipedia: good comparison of Brave New World & 1984:
Social critic Neil Postman contrasts the worlds of Nineteen Eighty-Four and Brave New World in the foreword of his 1985 book Amusing Ourselves to Death. He writes:
"What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny "failed to take into account man's almost infinite appetite for distractions." In 1984, Orwell added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we fear will ruin us. Huxley feared that our desire will ruin us."


1984 is better written. BnW is great at the start, but then just falls apart in the end. 1984 is captivating from start to finish.

Hilarious!

I know we read Animal Farm in high school but I can't remember (it was so long ago -lol) if we read BNW or 1984. I'll give it a try since I have it on my
TBR (BNW). Thanks for all your input.


I just finished The Truth about Lord Stoneham and am ready to move onto Vows, Vendettas, and a Little Black Dress,.

Being an author has it's perks, Carrie came to Winchester saturday and brought me a copy, I wonder what she is making of my book.
all the best Paul Rix [oldgeezer:]

Thanks for your comments Marti. I'm only about 10 pages in so far so can't really comment yet. I'm looking forward to getting into it more.

i started The Magicians by Lev Grossman tonight, and i'm loving it so far!! hoping it stays this good and doesn't venture into cheesey-world.

You and me, Alex. I could watch RDJ sit in sackcloth for 2 hours and yet be entertained. However, I'm of his generation, and watched with horror his hard times. He was a breakout actor at the time, and it was so hard watch him circle the drain. What a wonderful comeback he has had.


I found myself in need of the next book between Sat night & Sun morning and couldn't make a decision on what to read. I just couldn't wait any longer to read The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest (I was taking a small break after "...Played With Fire"). The download took a whole 30 seconds - thank you Amazon Kindle! Of course I attempted to read just a page or two (at 5:30am) and got sucked in for an hour or so of reading in sheer bliss...even with my eyes half shut!
BTW, glad you're feeling better, Marti!!

Whipping through Vows, Vendettas and a Little Black Dress. Kyra Davis has a twisted sense of humor!! I love it. I liked this line. Leah got up and tripped on Marcus's area rug, causing her to "accidentally" hurl her empty shot glass across the room. [pp108:]

I started last night on Laxdæla Saga, but the Introduction is freaking 40+ pages long. I'm only about halfway through the Intro right now. Ready to get into the meat of it!


Her books up to and including Obsidian Butterfly were really entertaining. After that, they became porn. Bad porn.
I tried a few of them but eventually they got rid of the plot entirely and just focused on the sex. blah. Its sad that she ruined a good series and a really strong, independant, well-written female character
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If I ever find any of the trilogy USED, I'm buying it.