The Next Best Book Club discussion
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What are you reading?
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Sharon
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Feb 24, 2013 12:05PM

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Good to hear Sharon, I have this one on my list to read.


LOVED this book! Got to meet the author during his book tour and I have a ..."
::jealous:: ;) :) How awesome to meet the author *and* have him sign a book. Really cool and fantastic. :) :)



I loved Me Before You from beginning to the end. It's a very complex novel. It is well-written, heart-breaking, gripping and deeply moving. I cried my eyes out several times while reading this book. I don't think I've ever cried this much while reading a book before! This novel deals with the topic of euthanasia and could have been really depressing but it's a credit to the skill of the author that she makes the book so readable. This is a thought provoking story and, whatever you feel about assisted suicide, it will make you think about how you would cope if suddenly all your choices and decisions were taken away from you and you had to rely on others to do everything for you. I gave this book 4.5 Stars!
My full review is here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Now I'm a couple of chapters into




It was so scary! for me it was the most memorable book by D Koontz/"
I agree, it was one of his better & most memorable works!



Cheers,
Aaron


I'm very excited to start this book and report back.
Mr. Tustin has already had several book signing and will be in the Memphis, Tennessee area this weekend March 2, 2013.

Be sure to follow it up with The Man in the Wooden Hat ... a "sort of" sequel.




I read that last year and loved it. Wait till you read the end!
I'm only reading one book at the moment, Love at Absolute Zero



Salvage the Bones– Jesmyn Ward – 3***
As the novel opens, a hurricane named Katrina is forming in the Gulf of Mexico and will threaten the Mississippi coastal town of Bois Sauvage, home to the Batiste family – Claude (a widower) and his four children: Randall, Skeetah, Esch and Junior. There is much here that should make a gripping work of literary fiction. I generally love books like this, but this one left me feeling decidedly “meh.”
Link to my full review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I agree totally about Willa Cather. There is a glow and a melancholy about My Antonia that's not replicated anywhere else. I reread The Professor's House last summer--it's a perfect airplane book....
Shelley, http://dustbowlstory.wordpress.com

I just started to reading Divergent by Veronica Roth and also currently reading The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness. So I have a lot to read!


Set in Dubai and Cape Town this certainly is a book where the author with her affinity for place will transport you to another world. Not only will your mind be taken on a journey to physical places, but your soul will go on a journey to, as the book's theme is that age old battle between fate and freewill. The guiding theme is wrapped up in a psychological thriller which thinks out the box, never mimmicks and always surprises. The author takes us on leisurely tours of the City State's night spots and its haute cuisine; we rub shoulders with the beautiful and rich but we never travel far from that naqging question of destiny and the price you have to pay to change it. The work builds up to a tense and truly novel conclusion. All in all a cracking debut with some very good stuff going on in there.
I highly recommend it:)

I wish I was discussing this with a group. I'll be finishing this in the next day or 2. Maybe I'll get the followup on Kindle.



The Old Man and the Sea
I enjoyed this book. At 127 pages, The Old Man and the Sea was a quick read. I managed to read the entire novel in just under an hour. It was a touching and thought-provoking tale. I admired Santiago's determination and his refusal to let his spirit be broken. I loved Ernest Hemingway's writing style. I thought it was very similar to John Steinbeck's style (who is my favourite author by the way). Although it is a very short novel, the story got quite slow and repetitive in places. It is a good novel but I honestly didn't think it was worthy of the Pulitzer Prize it won in 1953.
My full review is here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Lean Mean Thirteen
I enjoyed this book but I didn't think it was anywhere near as good as the previous instalment, Twelve Sharp. The plot was predictable and virtually nothing happened in it to develop the characters further. I'm getting tired of the love triangle with Joe Morelli and Ranger and I wish Stephanie would finally choose one of them or else dump them both and date someone new! Janet Evanovich has let this go on for far too long and now there's no sexual tension left between the characters.
My full review is here: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Now I'm halfway through


I just finished Divergent by Veronica Roth and am about top start on her next book Insurgent. ALthough I am still reading The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness and as soon as I finish that I am going to start on the next book in the series The Ask and the Answer.
Got a bit of a full plate
Got a bit of a full plate


The Red House Mystery – A. A. Milne
3.5***
Mark Ablett enjoys the life of a gentleman and patron of the arts, filling his manor with guests who enjoy fine dining and the various sports an estate offers. When his prodigal brother, Robert, suddenly returns from his exile in Australia things quickly go awry. Enter the charming Antony Gillingham, who happens to be in the area and quickly becomes involved in the murder investigation.
The author of the beloved children’s books starring “Winnie the Pooh” and his friends turns his attention to a mystery for adults. This is a typical “locked-room” conundrum, featuring an amateur sleuth and a cast of colorful characters. I liked his parallel to Sherlock Holmes. There isn’t a great deal of action but there were enough red herrings to keep me guessing. Like Christie’s And Then There Were None the final reveal comes in the form of a confession – a device that irritates me a little. Still, it’s a quick, enjoyable cozy.


Under the Mesquite - Guadalupe Garcia McCall
5*****
Lupita is the oldest of eight children; born in Mexico, she and her parents immigrated to Texas when she was a six years old. They are a close-knit family and Lupe does all she can as the oldest to help her mother. Like all teens she has to juggle the expectations of her parents, grandparents and teachers against her own passions and fears. When her mother is diagnosed with cancer the illness will forever change the family relationships. Taking on more responsibility as her mother’s illness progresses, Lupita finds solace in writing poetry.
This is a semi-autobiographical novel, written entirely in verse. Garcia McCall says so much with so few words! Her poetry is evocative and restrained, powerful and tender, vivid and elusive, full of sadness and joy, but mostly full of love. One quote:
Waiting for la Muerte to take Mami
is like being bound,
lying face up on the sacrificial altar
of the god Huitzilopochtli
pleading with the Aztec priest,
asking him to be kind
while he rips out my heart.
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