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The Next Best Book Club discussion

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Revive a Dead Thread > What are you reading?

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message 22201: by Jamaie (new)

Jamaie | 66 comments Susanna wrote: "Just started The Year of the Flood last night. Very interesting."

Did u also read Oryx and Crake? Both books are awesome!!!~ 5 stars on both from me!


message 22202: by El (new)

El I finished Doctor Zhivago this morning (love love love) and have just plowed through about half of Irving Stone's Lust for Life. It's not that great in my opinion, but it's a quick and easy read. Probably what I need right now.


message 22203: by Kaion (new)

Kaion (kaionvin) Reading The Adventures of Tom Sawyer &Persuasion, plus rereading some Fruits Basket.


message 22204: by Paula (new)

Paula | 1098 comments El wrote: "I finished Doctor Zhivago this morning (love love love) and have just plowed through about half of Irving Stone's Lust for Life. It's not that great in my opinion, but i...

Glad you liked "Doctor Zhivago" El. It's a favorite for me and I watch the movie whenever it's on. Very good also.



message 22205: by Emily (last edited Sep 05, 2010 03:25PM) (new)

Emily  O (readingwhilefemale) | 140 comments Kaion wrote: "Reading The Adventures of Tom Sawyer &Persuasion, plus rereading some Fruits Basket."

Yay for Persuasion! I finished it recently and absolutely loved it.

In other news, it looks like I'll be putting Room on my TBR list.


message 22206: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Jamaie wrote: "Susanna wrote: "Just started The Year of the Flood last night. Very interesting."

Did u also read Oryx and Crake? Both books are awesome!!!~ 5 stars on both from me!"


LOVED both of these. I keep hoping there will be more to come of this series.

I've just started Wuthering Heights
and so far I really like it.


message 22207: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
Emily, I am happy! I think you will really really like it!


message 22208: by Madeline (new)

Madeline | 293 comments Carol (Kitty) wrote: "I loved both of those book. One I liked even better was The Haunting of Hill House."

I had no idea that story was originally a book! I really loved the 1963 film version when I was in high school. The 1999 remake was terrible, but that original version to me is classic! Now I'll have to find the book.


message 22209: by Carol (new)

Carol It is a great book I was going to see if everyone wanted to read it in October.


message 22210: by southpaw285 (new)

southpaw285 I am currently reading A Town Like Alice by Nevil Shute, which if from the 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die list.


message 22212: by Kaion (new)

Kaion (kaionvin) Hmm Cait, I love Curious Incident, and while The Dead Fathers Club has surface similarities, I don't think it's remotely on the same level.


message 22213: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
Yeah Cait, I really liked The Dead Fathers Club - it's a current day spin on the story of Hamlet.... The narration was great.


message 22214: by C. (new)

C. (ispeaktroll) I'm currently reading Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang by Chelsea Handler and Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer.


message 22215: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
CHeri, Eating Animals is a disturbing, upsetting documentation of what happens to our food before we find it on our plates. Turned me off of meat for a week straight. (I know that doesnt sound like much, but for me to not eat Chicken or Tuna or Turkey for an entire week is HUGE)


message 22216: by Vonney (new)

Vonney Young (ysgillen67) | 75 comments On my one and only day off from the po, when I should be vacuuming, doing laudry, washing windows, I downloaded "Freedom" by Jonathan Franzen and read the first chapter. Not only that, but I had already started at the bottom of my TBR pile, pulled out Sigrid Undset's "Kristin Lavransdatter", and read well past the Introduction and on into The Wreath. Both books are captivating and well-written as far as I can see. "Freedom's" first chapter is full of wit and hilarious lines, and the other book is quite simply, charming. I need to exercise lots of self-discipline, set both aside, clean the house, then devour both books, one at a time.


Susanna - Censored by GoodReads (susannag) | 1736 comments Jamaie wrote: "Susanna wrote: "Just started The Year of the Flood last night. Very interesting."

Did u also read Oryx and Crake? Both books are awesome!!!~ 5 stars on both from me!"


No - I went looking for Oryx and Crake, which I think we have, but it seems to have gone walkabout. I really enjoyed Year of the Flood, though.


message 22218: by Mary (new)

Mary (madamefifi) | 358 comments I am reading The Book of Dead Birds: A Novel. It's been MIA, having been accidentally shelved with a bunch of already-read books, so I was excited to find it yesterday while dusting. Almost like finding money while doing laundry!


message 22219: by Marti (new)

Marti (marjay) | 985 comments I really enjoyed The Year of the Flood also. It was a great read....

Right now I am reading The House at Riverton. It has captivated me already - oh oh and I have stuff to do today that doesn't include being drawn into a book.


message 22220: by PDXReader (new)

PDXReader I started Portrait in Sepia by Isabel Allende yesterday, and I'm already about a third of the way through. Really enjoying it.


message 22221: by Jeane (new)

Jeane (icegini) | 4891 comments Read 1/20 of India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy, still very interesting. Also started an italian book, detective-mystery kind. The exciting part for me of this is that the book is written by someone from the village where my boyfriend comes from and his family still lives and it take splace in that same village. I spend all my holidays there (short and long) and am so excited to read a story happening there and recognizing streets, bridges and the way people live there! The book is 'il mistero della bara' by lorenzo bosi.


message 22222: by Jane (new)

Jane | 221 comments I have just finished Strangers by Anita Brookner and was blown away. What an author. I'm buying this one so I can read it again and again. And looking forward to reading some more of hers.


message 22223: by Alisha Marie (new)

Alisha Marie (endlesswonderofreading) | 715 comments I finished Tell No One and while the pages flew by, I thought that it had too many plot twists, so I gave it three stars. Now I'm going to start The Perks of Being a Wallflower.


message 22224: by Natalie (last edited Sep 06, 2010 12:44PM) (new)

Natalie Baer | 182 comments ReadingTrans-Sister Radio by Chris Bojhalian - I am amazed at the variety of social prejudices that he can write about. This is about a transexual man who has surgery. It could be creepy but it's not. I'm still rereading Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America by David Hackett Fischer - the four great migrations to America between 1630 and 1750.


message 22225: by Mary (new)

Mary (madamefifi) | 358 comments I've had Albion's Seed in my Save-To-Buy-Later cart at Amazon for a while now, Natalie! You're giving it a reread so it must be good, huh?

::prepares to move Albion's Seed to Buy It Now cart::


message 22226: by Claire (new)

Claire (clairebear8) | 514 comments Carol (Kitty) wrote: "It is a great book I was going to see if everyone wanted to read it in October."

Sign me up, Carol, I would like to read it.


message 22227: by Sasha (new)

Sasha Jeane, keep me posted on your feelings on Life After Gandhi. Looks interesting.


Susanna - Censored by GoodReads (susannag) | 1736 comments Albion's Seed is excellent, and well worth a read (or re-read).


message 22229: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
Finished A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True - it was ok. not great but not horrible either. kinda meh.

Now I am reading Tinkers. The author, Paul Harding, will be at BKBF this Sunday. Hope they are giving the authors time to sign books!! I have high expectations for this one!


message 22230: by Marti (new)

Marti (marjay) | 985 comments Lori are you liking Tinkers?
... I read the first few pages and just didn't feel the love... I have put it aside for a couple of days.

I am a little more than half way through The House at Riverton. I am really enjoying the book... It is like a story an old friend tells you after seeing you for the first time in years - going back and forth in time to fill in holes that you might have missed and sharing what she knew then without trying to give too much away but not doing it well..


message 22231: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
Im about 30 pages in right now and I do, I like the writing style. I am a fan of the stream-of-consciousness no-punctuation-marks run-on-sentence writers. And Tinkers appears to have a good mix of all of those.


message 22232: by Carol (new)

Carol Lori wrote: "Finished A Long, Long Time Ago and Essentially True - it was ok. not great but not horrible either. kinda meh.

Now I am reading Tinkers. The author, Paul Harding, wil..."


Lori the book was fantastic and I am jealous.


message 22233: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 10647 comments Mod
I am glad to hear you liked TINKERS. you know, it is not too late for you to come to BKBF!!! (wink wink)


message 22234: by Emma (new)

Emma | 100 comments Vonney wrote: "Emma, I found their website: www.hachettebookgroup.com/features/my...
The author is Trenton Lee Stewart and lives in Little Rock, Arkansas. So far, there are 3: the one you ha..."


Thank you for the info! The site looks so cool! I was surprised to hear he's from Alabama, there is such a British feeling to his writing. I think the words and grammar sound so influenced by British english. Interesting. This series is also making me want to read the Lemony Snicket/Series of Unfortunate Events books. I read the first few when they came out and I was younger, but I never went on. I hope there are going to be more than three of this series.
We went camping this weekend and I could not stop thinking about sitting down to read this! I highly recommend to everyone!


message 22235: by Cait (new)

Cait (caitertot) | 604 comments Oh, I forgot to mention that I recently finished Ape House by Sara Gruen (terrible) and have now started Freedom by Jonathan Franzen (yay!).


message 22236: by Esther (last edited Sep 06, 2010 08:14PM) (new)

Esther (eshchory) | 575 comments Marti wrote: "I am a little more than half way through The House at Riverton. I am really enjoying the book....."

I recently discovered The House at Riverton in a box of books someone gave me. I hadn't heard of it before but it has cropped up several times on GR.


message 22237: by Carol (new)

Carol Lori wrote: "I am glad to hear you liked TINKERS. you know, it is not too late for you to come to BKBF!!! (wink wink)"

I wish I could go.


message 22238: by Emma (new)

Emma | 100 comments I LOVED the House at Riverton and Kate Morton's sophomore novel The Forgotten Garden is my all time favorite book. She has a new one coming out in November that you may want to check out if you like House at Riverton. Enjoy!


message 22239: by Sasha (new)

Sasha Yeah Cait, I just read a not-so-hot review of Ape House in the Times; I've read some others along that line too. People don't seem crazy about that book. I keep being tempted by it because, like, apes! and then warned off.


message 22240: by Jamaie (new)

Jamaie | 66 comments When you get a chance, pls. read Oryx and Crake as it is the book that comes before The Year of the Flood. While they both stand on their own...one stems to the other.

Susanna wrote: "Jamaie wrote: "Susanna wrote: "Just started The Year of the Flood last night. Very interesting."

Did u also read Oryx and Crake? Both books are awesome!!!~ 5 stars o..."



message 22241: by Carol (new)

Carol I am reading an old oneThe Maltese Falcon


message 22242: by Paula (new)

Paula | 1098 comments Alex wrote: "Yeah Cait, I just read a not-so-hot review of Ape House in the Times; I've read some others along that line too. People don't seem crazy about that book. I keep being tempted by it because, like,...

I had someone in another group that I'm on get the book and read it all within 24 hours. She loved it! She is going to send it to me to read. I'm hoping I'll like it. : )



message 22243: by Matt (new)

Matt Sinclair (cflames55117) Finished The Remains of the Day last week for this month's discussions. Also most of the way through Fingersmith for the other discussion this month, so in a few days, I'll be good to go.


message 22244: by Joanie (last edited Sep 07, 2010 01:19PM) (new)

Joanie | 714 comments Cait wrote: "Oh, I forgot to mention that I recently finished Ape House by Sara Gruen (terrible) and have now started Freedom by Jonathan Franzen (yay!)."

I'm sorry to hear that Cait. I love Water for Elephants and was looking forward to Gruen's next one.

I finally finished The Passage and flew through Blockade Billy. I'm still listening to Wicked which I'm ready to be done with. I'm also reading Mockingjay and I just started Fingersmith. If only I didn't need to work-I'd make so much more progress!


message 22245: by Susanna (new)

Susanna (jb_slasher) About to start Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets. It seems sometimes re-reads are an eye-opening experience. #1 was better than I remembered so I hope this will be a continuing trend with the other books in the series :)


message 22246: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Susanna wrote: "About to start Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets. It seems sometimes re-reads are an eye-opening experience. #1 was better than I remembered so I hope this will be a continuing trend with the..."

I love re-reading the Harry Potter series. I just finished The Goblet of Fire and getting ready to start the Order of the Pheonix.

I am also just getting started on Thirteenth Tale and still working on Wuthering Heights both of which are very good so far.


message 22247: by Joel (new)

Joel (joelevard) Lori wrote: "CHeri, Eating Animals is a disturbing, upsetting documentation of what happens to our food before we find it on our plates. Turned me off of meat for a week straight."

Only a week? ;) I read it in March or April and haven't had meat since (save maybe two or three times when it was either unintentional or I knew it was as "ethically" sourced as possible).

I don't think I'll ever eat chicken again, certainly not factory farmed chicken. Of course, it helps that I was leaning vegetarian already and my girlfriend is a vegetarian (and likes to cook).


message 22248: by Natalie (new)

Natalie Baer | 182 comments Last night I did a quick inspection of How the Mind Works, the first and last section of each chapter, not interested in reading more although I've read other of his books. Also laid down The Lives of a Cell: Notes of a Biology Watcher. Tomorrow I'm taking an armload of books to my favorite Used Book store and come home with who know what?


message 22249: by Mary (new)

Mary (madamefifi) | 358 comments I'm reading The House of Mirth. It's quite good, can't believe I've avoided Edith Wharton for so long.


message 22250: by Carol (new)

Carol Mary wrote: "I'm reading The House of Mirth. It's quite good, can't believe I've avoided Edith Wharton for so long."

I am waiting to finish it for another group I am in. I am about half way through it. I was enjoying it si I can't wait to get back to it.


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