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2012-2024 Discussions
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Where in the World Are You?!?! (Currently Reading)
message 651:
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Jenny (Reading Envy)
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Mar 12, 2012 07:07PM

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I loved that book, Jenny and I look forward to your thoughts on it.

Mikki, I see purchase of a new bookshelf on the horizon for you...."
Or perhaps a larger apartment!
I'm in Columbia now with Chronicle of a Death Foretold. I might be stuck here for a bit because the writing is really drawing me in and I might need to read a book of his short stories when finished...
I'm a bit upset with myself for taking so long to read this author.


I've tried reading the book numerous times, couldn't get past the first 50 pages.

I loved the movie so eventually I'm going to try the book.

Hang in there with Wolf Hall. I found that Hilary makes you work a bit, but it can be worth it! My book club had mixed reviews. It's always interesting to see how people respond to that book.


I'm also reading this one, because I'm following the ten years of reading of the Great Books of the Western World and Homer's Iliad is the first book of the second year.
I'm still grimly slogging through Silent Terror: A Journey into Contemporary African Slavery--slogging not because it's poorly written, but because it's so upsetting.


A Thousand Splendid Suns is a great book. I read some years ago, so I can't add it to my list for this year's challenge, but I'm certainly going to re-read it. Enjoy it.




I think I'll go next to Paraguay with Outcast But Not Forsaken: True Stories from a Paraguayan Leper Colony.

This is my favourite book of all time. I read it first when I was about 8, after we had an extract from The Ballad of Kon-Tiki (a poem about the expedition written in the style of an epic saga) in our school reading books. I pestered my Dad to get it from the library for me, as it was an adult book, and it was just the most exciting thing I'd ever read.
I hope you enjoy it!

Osho, that looks interesting. I've just added it to my Amazon cart, thank you.

I've just entered the Balkan, more precise Bosnia and read the first pages of People of the Book . It's a library book which I have to return in a week or so. What kind of book is the The Tiger's Wife ?


"
Here is my review if that is helpful at all. It is quite literary, about two generations of a family living in the Balkans, with a bit of a mystery of who her grandfather is. I enjoyed it. While war was a surrounding theme, it wasn't intrinsically about war, which I appreciated.

That boy sure gets around." LOLZ Judy! How are you liking your Denmark read Mira? I've got that book slotted for Denmark too. I've decided to skip the Estonia read - it is set mainly in the US I discovered. I also discovered that I just cannot read vampire bodice-rippers!! I tried, honest!


I read My Name is Red and had such difficulty with it. If you find you have the same experience, I highly recommend Birds Without Wings for your Turkey selection.

I'm also still in Turkey with My Name is Red I'm determined to finish it but I need a break.

Many authors are hailed by the critics for their prose and their ability to take literature to a place yet unknown. Their books become enjoyable only so far as study is concerned, and for most people, it's beyond them. I think Orhan Pamuk is one of those authors. I found My Name is Red difficult to read, I did not find the story enjoyable, and the characters were flat.


Try Professor Martens' Departure for Estonia. Really good.




My link didn't work. Trying again.
http://www.amazon.com/Daughter-Fortune-Novel-Isabel-Allende/dp/038082101X
Daughter of Fortune, I am in Chile.
http://www.amazon.com/Daughter-Fortune-Novel-Isabel-Allende/dp/038082101X
Daughter of Fortune, I am in Chile.
Is Easter Island very close to Chile?? I don't know anything about Chile. Glad to learn.
Andorra sounds like a good read.
Andorra sounds like a good read.
I'm in Chile too. I'm reading Daughter of Fortune by Allende. I've never read any of her books. Your book really sounds good.

"
It is technically part of Chile, but is actually Polynesian. It is one of the most isolated islands in the world, according to Wikipedia.
("Easter Island is one of the world's most isolated inhabited islands. Its closest inhabited neighbour is Pitcairn Island, 2,075 km (1,289 mi) to the west, with fewer than 100 inhabitants. Easter Island's latitude is similar to that of Caldera, Chile, and it lies 3,510 km (2,180 mi) west of continental Chile at its nearest point (between Lota and Lebu in the Biobío Region). Isla Salas y Gómez, 415 km (258 mi) to the east, is closer but is uninhabited.")
Oh, "most isolated." I would have thought of Galapagos. I guess there isn't animal life on Easter Island just the very large statues. So, it's really far from Chile, huh?

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