The Next Best Book Club discussion
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What are you reading?
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Leslie T.
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Aug 22, 2010 01:45PM

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Wow. That's like the best decision ever. Both of those are awesome books.



I had a bit of trouble concentrating on Good Omens in the middle, too. Just keep at it, because the end gets ridiculously funny.

Started The Bell Jar to get some more of my TBR-cupboard cleared out of the way this summer.
Does anyone know if Rebel Angels improves on aGaTB?

I certainly thought it did. By then I was used to first person present in her book, and there wasn't all the exposition on who Gemma was and what was going on. I couldn't stop reading it, especially at the end.

I got the Boy Who Harnessed the Wind for my son. Sick of him complaining about his internet limitations. Hope the book will make him more grateful. (Ha!) It's now in both of our TBR pile.

Good to know Caity. I'm not usually a second-chance sort of person when it comes to books, but I was sort of on the fence about aGaTB.
Rachel wrote: "I'm about halfway through Good Omensbut having trouble concentrating on it. I picked up Day by Day Armageddon, which is going a little smoother for me. I think it's the ..."
I had the same problem with Good Omens, Rachel, but I may one of the few people who hasn't found a favorable Gaiman.

Ha ha! It definitely puts things in perspective. An inspirational story! Hope he (and you) enjoys it!


And what'd you think of American Psycho? I thought it was stupid and immature, but it's been a while since I read it.
Shay, Wind's a good book to try to get your kid into reading on...how old is he? It was comic books that got me into reading, for what it's worth. I moved smoothly from Batman to Tom Sawyer.



Shame that manga hasn't managed to cross him over to novels. "It's all make believe so what's the difference from one book to the next" - uh, that argument applies to manga too, wth? Tell him he can damn well read some nonfiction then. :) Ah well, I guess that proves that all kids are different. I bet he'll come around eventually.
You know what the awful part is? This statement: "Only old people and girls read books." I've read studies; he's actually kindof right. Women read an average of nine books a year; men read two.

This reminds me of one of my brothers. Growing up he never liked reading so my Grandma in hopes of luring him into it promised to pay him $1 for every book he read one summer. My Mom would have to sign off on the list of what he read so he wouldn't lie. However, much to my Grandma's dismay, in order to be fair she had to include me, an avid reader, within this scheme as well. The bribery worked a little for him (he read more than usual) but I blew the competition out of the water. I earned some nice cash (for a kid) and never again did they attempt this form of bribery. Ha!




Are we to assume that you want to risk another pregnancy? Must be a good book!
Ha! No, can't say that was my intention! Just that maybe it's time to read the book while not being pregnant and overly emotional about everything!


Jen Lancaster is hysterical. Hope you like it!

Ha, Patricia, my parents did not believe in fairness. They tried to cajole my brother into reading, while trying to make me put down the books and go outside and do things.
Shay, if you're son reads manga, that's half of the battle won already! I was always a bit of a contrarian and always responded better to knowing I had the open option to doing _____, rather than being ordered/instructed into it.

Have managed to clear some off my list as well:
The Angel's Game - Liked a lot, better than The Shadow of the Wind but that was probably because TSOTW had made me a little more familiar with his style and the plot tie ins between the two were intriguing to me.
Beatrice and Virgil I also liked this second book better than the first. It was shorter and more self-contained but also managed to be both charming and horrible at the same time.
I then moved on to some lighter fare:
Duma KeyBest SK I have read in a while.
Lost SoulsWorst DK I have read in a while (which is saying something) - this smacked of major publishing incentive to wring every last drop out of this series...
Then I picked up It Must've Been Something I Ate which, while the writing is just okay, contains some truly mouthwatering food descriptions. I am still working my way through this though because I got a little distracted by...
The Hunger Games and Catching Fire which I rampaged through in the space of a few days once I realized last week that they had finally become widely available as ebooks. Am now back to It Must have been Somthing I Ate until tomorrow when Mockingjay comes out.
I also read The Passage somewhere in there which I found very readable if very derivative of Stephen King, Dean Koontz and Michael Crichton all lumped together.
Sorry for the long post. I resolve not to spend so long away from this thread at one time again...

Yeah, I'm not sure there are enough. Another ten or twenty words should do the trick.
And Mary, I JUST got a copy of The Art of Devotion via UPS a few minutes ago. Glad it was good! I'll be reading it at the beginning of September, but I need to get through Citizens of London: The Americans Who Stood with Britain in Its Darkest, Finest Hour first. I think I'm on page 30. I started I think 6 days ago.
It reads like a textbook.

this sounds really interesting...my senior year of college i had to take a 400 level language course to fulfill my linguistic requirement, and i took a History of English Language class. it was so freaking hard, but i loved it and everything i learned in it. hardest "B" i ever earned!

I RARELY re-read books at all, never mind right away (I can think of one other book I did this with), so this is something.
But in the meantime I'm going to pick up something else, The Center Cannot Hold. Not a happy book either, but at least it's straightforward memoir. (I assume, anyway).

I just finished Guernsey Literary .....and really enjoyed it! I hope you like it.!

Going to start The Red Thread. short time from the library.

If he weren't like me in so many other ways, I would wonder. You brought up a good point and I asked him why he would read manga and not other make believe books. He replied that most fiction does not feature girls with big racks in tight clothes. Plus violence. I'm so glad I was not ever a 12 year old boy.

I just had this huge conversation about Flowers in the Attic. It's a terrible book; all the readers I know read it when they were 12. Your son is on the right track, because he's reading.

The next step, however, is possibly the hardest, because the next step is finding something ELSE they'll like and getting them to continue reading beyond just Twilight or manga. While there's nothing wrong with reading those books, literacy isn't going to improve if that's all anybody ever reads.

It definitely has its frustrating 'why am I reading this?' moments, but if you stick with it it gets interesting again.


Alex-that's the fact I always use to justify my need for yet another book! I seriously hope it's true though. It's weird, I have always assumed that because I love to read and have tons of books at home and that because I read to my kids, take them to the library on a regular basis etc that they will be readers but I guess that's really no guarantee.
I feel your pain Shay. Have two boys and I feel like I'll be clueless about what they will want to read when they hit 12 or so. I feel like I'd know what to buy for a girl but I have no idea what's out there for boys when they get past Harry Potter. I guess I have some time to figure it out since they're 4 and almost 1. They'll probably want to read Manga too-oh well. It's better than nothing!

I just finished Guernsey Literary .....and really enjoyed it! I hope you like it.!"
I'm over half way thru it and so far I really like it.

I've been collecting books for my kids from before they were born. The funny thing is that my son is a great reader- he read the first Harry Potter when he was six, read at a tenth grade level at 9, now reads at a college level. All without really reading or liking to read. He will read non-fiction, especially non-fiction of the useful sort (technical manuals). I had to do a newsletter so I gave him the disk and manual for Publisher, and all of the content for the newsletter. Two days later, he handed me a USB drive with my proof of the newsletter.

Caity I hope that you enjoy Art of Devotion.



Thanks, El, I hope I enjoy it - I haven't read Tipping the Velvet but heard that it is very good also. Have you read Fingersmith? Looks like its going to be the group read for Sept. - if you haven't read it, join in -you'll be in for a treat!



Cheers, Alex - just found the info...but no Kindle edition (yet)! :-(((

I've seen at least one edition of Wuthering Heights that's got "Bella and Edward's favorite book!" stamped on the cover. So I guess somebody's trying, at least.
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