Books on the Nightstand discussion
What Are You Reading: May 2011


I picked this one due to its appearance at this year's Tournament of Books. The dysfunctional family at the center of this book definitely has a Franzen-ness to it.


It's a review copy of a collection of short stories and I have to say it's the most bizarre thing I've read in a long time. I'm not too sure what to make of it if I'm honest. I have to keep going back and re-reading stories (they're only a couple pages long each) because of how crazy they are. It's making me smile though.
I'm always so impressed when someone remembers to start a new thread for the month. Thanks, Eric!
I'm also impressed when the first three books mentioned are books that I've never heard of! :)
I'm also impressed when the first three books mentioned are books that I've never heard of! :)


Of Human Bondage and

The Blade Itself on my Kindle. I love Of Human Bondage; I can't believe that I haven't read it before now. The Blade Itself is good so far, but I've been disappointed by a few grammatical/spelling errors. I am also listening to Small Favor




I also started reading Still Alice


Your podcasts have been wonderful. Enjoyable and informative. What could be better?

Sharman wrote: "I love keeping a journal about the books I have read. Do you have any resources about writing journal entries? I've been writing title, author, book summaries, and my feelings/opinions about the ..."
Thanks, Sharman! Great idea on the journal -- maybe someone here has some recommendations!
Thanks, Sharman! Great idea on the journal -- maybe someone here has some recommendations!
Goodreads itself is my reading journal.

http://www.amazon.com/Moleskine-Passi...

I agree with Eric - Goodreads itself provides the room for reviews/thoughts on books I've read. It's not 'hold in your hand'-able, but sure keeps track of everything in one place.
I'm about 50 pp in 'City of Thieves.' Great writing, compelling story so far . .





Finn
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America
Little Bee
East of Eden
Summer and the City
Pretty in Plaid: A Life, a Witch, and a Wardrobe, or, the Wonder Years Before the Condescending, Egomanical, Self-Centered Smart-Ass Phase
My Fair Lazy: One Reality Television Addict's Attempt to Discover If Not Being A Dumb Ass Is the New Black; Or, A Culture-Up Manifesto
Mini Shopaholic
Naturally Thin: Unleash Your SkinnyGirl and Free Yourself from a Lifetime of Dieting


I recently re read it, after having read it 40 years ago LOL!!! Loved it even more now that I have a much better idea of true love & passion...

I keep a written journal as well. My dad did also starting in 1958 and ending with his sudden death in 2003. It is one of my prized possessions and gives me insight into some of the reading he enjoyed. Although he only kept track of title and author by year, it is fun to see some titles repeated indicating favorites as well as reoccuring authors who were once discovered, repeatedly reappear.


I am reading Romeo and Juliet to help my daughter with her Grade 9 online English course. Shakespeare is sooooo much easier to understand 35 years after high school! For myself, I just started Slouching Towards Bethlehem: Essays, part of my 11-in-11 reading challenge, where I am reading the 11 oldest books on my reading list. I "met" Joan Didion when I suggested The Year of Magical Thinking for my book club. I loved her style and the medical detail (no one else in my club did!). After trying Play It As It Lays, I thought I'd rather read her nonfiction. Several of my book club members, slightly older than myself, said they remembered reading and enjoying her magazine pieces.








I suspect what I really should be doing is finishing up my semester in grad school. But suddenly, late at night, quiet house, and a big juicy stack of books - I am not in the mood to study right now!

Welcome Angela- I just finished "Ape House". I was underwhelmed.
Joanne wrote: "I "met" Joan Didion when I suggested The Year of Magical Thinking for my book club. I loved her style and the medical detail (no one else in my club did!)"
Joanne, Joan Didion has a book coming out this fall that will be a follow-up to The Year of Magical Thinking -- it's about the death of Joan's daughter. Haven't read it yet, but it's coming close to the top of the pile.
Joanne, Joan Didion has a book coming out this fall that will be a follow-up to The Year of Magical Thinking -- it's about the death of Joan's daughter. Haven't read it yet, but it's coming close to the top of the pile.
Angela wrote: "Hello everyone! Been part of this group, though never posted before...I am in the midst of reading
, as well as
and finally I ..."
Hi Angela, so glad to see you unlurking! As your reward, I absolve you from not studying (but just for a while!).


Hi Angela, so glad to see you unlurking! As your reward, I absolve you from not studying (but just for a while!).
Mark wrote: "This is my first posting over here! I've been bad. I recently finished "Swamplandia", which I thought was very good. I'm currently reading "The Redbreast" by Jo Nesbo, a Scandinavian crime thriller..."
No excuses, stop being bad and join the conversation.
I really like Nesbo's Snowman, to be published in June, I believe.
No excuses, stop being bad and join the conversation.
I really like Nesbo's Snowman, to be published in June, I believe.





Thanks Anne! I didn't know that Didion had written a follow-up book. The Year of Magical Thinking was fascinating.


Oh, you're so cruel, Ann. I'll just add that to my list, "Two Gazillion Books I Can't Wait to Read"!!

LOL! That's how I felt after the retreat, put perfectly!!

I am probably lazy, but journaling is why I am on Goodreads! I love waiting until I've read the book to check other people's comments. I also love connecting to a new book through their suggestions. I give you props for being a traditionalist.

I am also in the midst of Triangle which is a slow read - - it isn't very long, but I am finding I have to be careful as I read it.



Hi Marly,
I just recently discovered BOTN, and I've been lurking here since, but I thought I'd speak up and answer your question. I've read The Little Stranger. It's the only Sarah Waters I've read, and I don't read much horror, but I really enjoyed it. I loved the ending!

Keep going!!!!



Hi, Marly! I recently finished The Elegance of the Hedgehog also, and I liked it, too. There's a lot to think about in that book. I must admit it took me a while to get into, but once I did, I enjoyed it.
I would like to read The Little Stranger soon, also. It's on my list after listening to the older episode on scary books for Halloween.








I'm reading Jane Eyre too, Ann! I am only about 100 pages in, but its good so far. For me its a little slower reading with the language.


I'll be on to The Paris Wife and Moveable Feast--
so happy my book club takes a summer break so I can do
my "beach reads" --first up will be "Literacy and Longing in L.A."--how did I miss that? --Nancy


Busy, busy month!

Finished "Nothing to Lose" by Lee Child.
In the last Reacher book, "Bad Luck and Trouble", Reacher meets up with the remnants of his old unit. All of them had moved on into careers. Reacher is essentially a glorified hobo who move on from one adventure to the next, without forming any permanent attachments. One of his old comrades asks him what he's running from. As is his wont, "Reacher said nothing".
Now comes "Nothing to Lose". I can only conclude that either Lee Child had an off year and couldn't write a Reacher consistent with his previous appearances, OR Reacher is bottoming out and is in need of an intervention. The Jack Reacher in the previous novels is a taciturn hero. The one in "Nothing to Lose" is belligerent and reckless, and has probably committed some form of manslaughter against innocent people.
Does he uncover a criminal conspiracy? Yes? Does he kick ass and foil it? Yes. But what sets him off on his destructive course is his own ego. He enters Despair, Colorado, a town that is less than welcoming to outsiders, and gets the bum's rush. Reacher doesn't take this disrespect lightly, and resolves to go back to Despair. He convinces himself that something is going on there that is not on the up-and-up.
I don't want to spoil the plot, so I won't go into the things he does that are so out of line. Just bear in mind that I'm starting for fear for his sanity.
Others have criticized this book on the ground that Reacher has all of a sudden become political. I don't think this is true. Ever since the early days he's been distrustful of the government and military brass while maintaining his sympathies to the common grunt. His experiences in "The Enemy" were pretty disillusioning, and I can see the common thread.
Another observation: in my review of "Bad Luck and Trouble", I remarked on how Reacher is always "butting" stacks of paper together. Well, paper-butting fans, I'm sorry to tell you that Reacher doesn't butt any paper in this outing. No. He's started butting rocks together. Maybe in the next book he'll butt scissors together for the trifecta.

In the last Reacher book, "Bad Luck and Trouble", Reacher meets up with the remnants of his old unit. All of them had moved on into careers. Reacher is essentially a glorified hobo who move on from one adventure to the next, without forming any permanent attachments. One of his old comrades asks him what he's running from. As is his wont, "Reacher said nothing".
Now comes "Nothing to Lose". I can only conclude that either Lee Child had an off year and couldn't write a Reacher consistent with his previous appearances, OR Reacher is bottoming out and is in need of an intervention. The Jack Reacher in the previous novels is a taciturn hero. The one in "Nothing to Lose" is belligerent and reckless, and has probably committed some form of manslaughter against innocent people.
Does he uncover a criminal conspiracy? Yes? Does he kick ass and foil it? Yes. But what sets him off on his destructive course is his own ego. He enters Despair, Colorado, a town that is less than welcoming to outsiders, and gets the bum's rush. Reacher doesn't take this disrespect lightly, and resolves to go back to Despair. He convinces himself that something is going on there that is not on the up-and-up.
I don't want to spoil the plot, so I won't go into the things he does that are so out of line. Just bear in mind that I'm starting for fear for his sanity.
Others have criticized this book on the ground that Reacher has all of a sudden become political. I don't think this is true. Ever since the early days he's been distrustful of the government and military brass while maintaining his sympathies to the common grunt. His experiences in "The Enemy" were pretty disillusioning, and I can see the common thread.
Another observation: in my review of "Bad Luck and Trouble", I remarked on how Reacher is always "butting" stacks of paper together. Well, paper-butting fans, I'm sorry to tell you that Reacher doesn't butt any paper in this outing. No. He's started butting rocks together. Maybe in the next book he'll butt scissors together for the trifecta.

I just read

This is my first time reading Jennifer McMahon and really enjoyed myself.
The book is one of those page turners where you can't wait to find out what happens.
If you're interested I reviewed this title on my blog and can be found here: http://wp.me/pTRJE-5j
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Finished Spider-Man: Blue by Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale.
Jeph Loeb is one of the luckiest guys in the world. His reputation is largely based on several comics projects he did with artist/master storyteller Tim Sale. He has parlayed his success into a number of other high profile projects and is now the executive in charge of Marvel's television wing.
This comic looks back to the flowering of the love affair between Peter Parker and Gwen Stacey. In the lore of Spidey, Gwen is his one true love, even though he later famously married Mary Jane Watson (this marriage was subsequently undone--long story). Gwen tragically died, thrown off a bridge by the Green Goblin.
This book was diverting and beautifully drawn, but only competently written (which is the best you can say about the best of Loeb's work). It doesn't even come close to capturing the depths of longing and emotional highs that reading those long ago tales by Stan Lee, John Romita Sr., Gil Kane, and Gerry Conway still produces.
If you want to read the story of one of the great tragic romances in superhero comics, find yourself some reprints, conveniently bundled in the more expensive, full color Marvel Masterworks volumes, or the cheaper, black and white Essential Spider-Man "phone books".