Around the World discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
2012-2024 Discussions
>
Where in the World Are You?!?! (Currently Reading)
message 551:
by
[deleted user]
(new)
Feb 18, 2012 09:51AM
In a Moroccan prison: Stolen Lives: Twenty Years in a Desert Jail.
reply
|
flag




I picked up RITS free a few days ago for my Kindle. My GR friend Misfit was so kind and told me about it being free at Amazon. I have been waiting to read UT for ages, and if I like this then I can read The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat & Other Clinical Tales as an audiobook! That is suppose to be really good too.
Picking books to read is almost as much fun as reading them. I NEVER have trouble finding books to read!
I have a feeling the latter will draw me more...... Will I end up reading one first?
I just finished Bloodroot. Here follows my review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Yes indeed, the protagonist of Strandloper has arrived in Australia. I also spent my afternoon traveling to quite a number of countries on a steampunk airship with a troupe of belly dancers who are spies for Queen Victoria. Quite preposterous, but fun.





Oman. The best I can do for an author is Rory Patrick Allen. Despite being an English teacher, his writing is quite bad in a number of ways. I'm trying to focus on the content.

I know - I found he was at his crabbiest in Happy Isles of Oceania: Paddling the Pacific. At least there were some moments of hilarity in this one though.

I finished the book last night, so glad I stuck with it. This was a fascinating look at the human experience and how very different that could be if one's surroundings are extremely limited. I thoroughly enjoyed the book and highly recommend it.


How do you like Darko's second adventure? I recently read Wife of the Gods and quite liked it.

I'm loving it. What a great character. I'm staying up late reading it.


I liked Kitchen a lot. I've read quite a few other books by Yoshimoto afterwards.

I liked Kitchen a lot. I've read quite a few other books by Yoshimoto afterwards."
I think I will do so too.


Oh cool. A fellow sufferer. It is a job trying to lose weight. Much more fun gaining it. I went from obsessing over which books to read to obsessing over calories and what foods to eat. Hopefully, I will find a balance.
I'm thinking I'll go with Samuel Cotton's Silent Terror: A Journey into Contemporary African Slavery for Mautitania. It doesn't meet my criteria, but may serve my other purposes (like teaching about human trafficking) better than my other option, Peter Hudson's Travels In Mauritania.

But I'm staying in Africa with The Poisonwood Bible. I know, I know. I'm a bit behind the times with everyone who did it as a group read.





When I was writing my review for The Old Man and His Sons, I saw a lot of comparisons between Bru and Laxness. Apparently Laxness is pretty bleak; has that been your experience?

Now I want to read My Faraway Home, too! I got hooked on reading about jungles when I was maybe 12.


I've also started The Club Dumas, set in Spain.

When I was writing my review for The ..."
Jenny, I wouldn't call The Fish... bleak overall. It shows a good sense of humour and irony. For us, the life in Iceland then and in the circumstances of the narrator would have been bleak, very likely, but for him it was a world that he was happy in, feeling secure, and enjoying the small things in life. He didn't know better. Seen from the outside it was quite a limited existence. Laxness captures this duality very well.
I'm reading Purple Hibiscus by Adiche. I'm in Nigeria, Africa.
I take it you mean where are we in our book???

Ah, interesting, I'm looking forward to that when I get to Iceland.

How is it, Melissa?"
It's okay. I really like the main character's 5-year-old daughter and learning about a culture that's so different from my own, but it's a bit depressing.

I've really just started it but it seems good so far. Anything about mysterious old manuscripts, murder, etc can't be bad.

Glad you are enjoying this one. It is my Kenya read and I will get to it when I get back to Africa. Right now I'm in Estonia, so not so near Kenya. I have a fixation about trying to keep the map neat. Silly, I know.

Beth, I don't think you're too weird about trying to keep the map neat. We all have our little quirks. :)
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
True: A Novel (other topics)The Hairdresser of Harare (other topics)
Secretum (other topics)
The Maid (other topics)
The Maid (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Tomas Tranströmer (other topics)Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa (other topics)
Veronica Scott (other topics)
Veronica Scott (other topics)
Vilhelm Moberg (other topics)
More...