Topeka & Shawnee Co. Public Library discussion

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What Are You Reading? > What Are You Reading? October 2011

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message 1: by Angie (new)

Angie | 42 comments Welcome! This ongoing discussion is your place to share what you are reading and what you think about it!


message 2: by Angie (new)

Angie | 42 comments I just finished reading Chad Harbach’s The Art of Fielding, which has been generating a lot of buzz, and I think it is mostly worthy of it. It is about a Westish college baseball player, Henry Skrimshander, who is a can’t-miss pro prospect on the verge of setting the record for consecutive games without an error set by his shortstop idol, Aparicio Rodriguez. When an errant throw strikes a teammate in the face, it begins a crisis of confidence for Henry. This one throw, and Henry’s downward spiral, also affects other people in his orbit, including his roommate, Owen; the college president, Guert Affenlight; Guert’s daughter, Pella; and Henry’s teammate and personal coach, Mike Schwartz.

This is a baseball novel with appeal for those who aren’t sports fans as well, due to its well-drawn characters and the focus on the shifting relationships between them. At times it reminded me a bit of David James Duncan’s The Brother's K, another novel with a character’s struggling baseball career at its core, although Duncan’s novel is more expansive in terms of time and setting.

I quickly became wrapped up in the characters of the novel, especially Mike Schwartz, the burly catcher whose own career suffers as he becomes increasingly devoted to mentoring Henry. Surprisingly, Henry's struggles almost take a backseat to the other characters in the book's second half. Without giving anything away, I really liked how Harbach handled the ending to Henry’s part of the story.

In other sports-related reading, I just finished the ESPN oral history Those Guys Have All the Fun. I listened to the audiobook, which may not have been the best format for this book, because I would often forget who was telling each story in the middle and couldn’t easily flip back to check. It focused more on the business side of the network’s evolution, and less on the personalities and the sporting events they covered. After reading this, I really want to read a book based solely on the experiences of the women working in such a male-dominated place and industry, which is occasionally mentioned but with frustratingly little detail.


message 3: by Kara (new)

Kara (kaengamom) | 19 comments Just as I finished reading "Catching Fire" I found "Mockingjay" in my box!
Safe to say, this isn't a book I would recommend reading when you're waiting for the doctor in a closed in office by yourself. Just saying.
So far, I've found it less engaging and less dark than "Catching Fire." There were periods in "Catching Fire" where I didn't think I would read another chapter, but Mockingjay is, so far, surprisingly mild compared to the first two books. I expect that to change as I've just entered the third, and last, portion of the book.


message 4: by Miranda (last edited Oct 15, 2011 06:14PM) (new)

Miranda (readerslibrarian) | 37 comments Mod
I'm about halfway through The Lost Gate, by Orson Scott Card, and it's so good that the story has been in the back of my mind while I do everything else for the last two days. The story is rooted in Norse mythology, so it's filled with magic. It also has the vivid imagery and resounding characters that have made Card's books a hit with me in the past. I'll post an update after I've finished, but I think I can highly recommend it already!
Update: I definitely ended the book feeling really excited about the next release in the series. There was some interesting character development near the end of the book that has me wondering what he's going to do with the "cast" as he continues the story...I'm looking forward to finding out!


message 5: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 212 comments Just finished "In the Garden of Beasts" by Erik Larson. I enjoyed it, but think Larson chose the wrong character as the central point. Instead of choosing Ambassador Dodd he should have gone with his daughter Martha. However, I can see where Larson would have a hard time writing from Martha's perspective. Overall it gives the perspective of the time on why we didn't stop Hitler when he took control.


message 6: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 212 comments I had received several books that I requested all at once so I've been trying to catch up, and get them back to the libary for the next patron. My book club meets Monday so I'm reading The Time Traveler's Wife. I have seen and enjoyed the movie. I'm not sure I would be enjoying the book as much if I hadn't seen the movie because there are some things I would have a hard time visualing some things that are happening. Considering I've hadn't had much time to read I'm already 13% of the way through it.


message 7: by Kelli (new)

Kelli (kellismith) | 183 comments Mod
Miranda wrote: "I'm about halfway through The Lost Gate, by Orson Scott Card, and it's so good that the story has been in the back of my mind while I do everything else for the last two days. The story is rooted ..."

I have always wanted to read this author. I think I'll have to grab one of his books when I'm finished with what I'm reading now, Jean Plaidy's The Thistle and the Rose. She writes historical fiction which I enjoy reading every now and then.


message 8: by Kelli (new)

Kelli (kellismith) | 183 comments Mod
Melanie wrote: "Just finished "In the Garden of Beasts" by Erik Larson. I enjoyed it, but think Larson chose the wrong character as the central point. Instead of choosing Ambassador Dodd he should have gone with..."

I'm really excited to read this book! I'll keep in mind what you said about the daughter.


message 9: by Vikki (new)

Vikki (vikkihoran) | 6 comments I am reading three very different books right now. Variety is the spice of life! I am reading Jane Kirkpatrick's historical fiction, Where Lilacs Still Bloom. I got my hands on an advanced reading copy and unfortunately this book is not out until April 17, 2012. I am also reading Apparition & Late Fictions by Thomas Lynch. Thomas Lynch is an undertaker in Milford, Michigan and also lives in Clare, Ireland. This is a group of short stories linked by the "gone and not forgotten". They are very good short stories and I thought it would be a good book to read in October. My last book is Snakes in Suits by Paul Babiak and Robert Hare. Robert Hare devised the checklist for psychopaths that was discussed in one of the last books I read, Jon Ronson's The Psychopath Test. These books are all so different from each other but each one very interesting to me.


message 10: by Nathan (new)

Nathan | 13 comments Mod
Kelli wrote: "Miranda wrote: "I'm about halfway through The Lost Gate, by Orson Scott Card, and it's so good that the story has been in the back of my mind while I do everything else for the last two days. The ..."

I've read a couple of books by Card. My personal favorite is "Songmaster", which I would highly recommend.


message 11: by Nathan (new)

Nathan | 13 comments Mod
I just got finished reading "Last Dance: Behind the Scenes at the Final Four", which I would recommend to any college basketball fan. It was written by John Feinstein, who has written several excellent sports books. "Last Dance" really gives the reader a feel for what being at the Final Four is like by talking to coaches and players who have participated over the years. Currently, I am reading "The Doomsday Key" by James Rollins. I've read one other book by Rollins, "Altar of Eden" which was okay, but I am enjoying this more, as it is more heavily involved with historical artifacts, and ancient mysteries.


message 12: by Kara (new)

Kara (kaengamom) | 19 comments I'm currently entertaining a book called "The Magician" in the "Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel" series. It's got a cliche premise but it involves a lot of folklore and mythology from a myriad of cultures from around the world, but mostly the western half. Like the Morrigan, a celtic goddess, and the Valkyries from the norse mythologies, and that's only the beginning. I'm hoping as the series continues that it delves deeper into ancient eastern beliefs, but I like the author's perspective into the beliefs of our ancestors.


message 13: by Megan (new)

Megan | 15 comments Mod
I have just started Lionheart by Sharon Kay Penman. I have read several of her historical fiction books and have enjoyed every single one of them. This particular one is about Richard I and his Crusades to the Holy Land. I would recommend any of her books. They have a lot of action, romance, and intrigue. Just about everything you would need out of a good historical fiction book.


message 14: by Andrea (last edited Oct 17, 2011 09:59AM) (new)

Andrea (talk2me) | 11 comments I am reading John Flanagan's "The Lost Stories" the fillers for his series "Ranger's Apprentice" which ended, to much sadness by his fans, in Book 10. This is clearly a set of story plots he either took out or abandoned when writing his series. They do add to the overall understanding of the characters and help to say goodbye to the series. This is a great series for anyone 10 and up - very robin hood meets the lone ranger.
I have read the "Alchemist" the first in the "Nicholas Flamel"series and really liked it. I would recommend it for 12 and up - I haven't read the rest series as yet but I am working on it, among other things.
I am starting "Throw like a girl" a book by Olympic Gold medalist and super athlete/softball pitcher, Jennie Finch. It was recommended and looks like a good book for aspiring softball stars in what can be done in the field of Softball even making it a livelihood. It deals with, among other things, where to go to college, how and when to get coaches, how to balance the rest of life with top level competitive sports. There are far too few guidance books for girls in sports. I hope this one turns out to be a good one. I will let you know.


message 15: by Miranda (new)

Miranda (readerslibrarian) | 37 comments Mod
Kelli wrote: "Miranda wrote: "I'm about halfway through The Lost Gate, by Orson Scott Card, and it's so good that the story has been in the back of my mind while I do everything else for the last two days. The ..."

I have really enjoyed reading Card's science fiction; Ender's Game is one of my all-time favorites. This book has the superb wordsmithing and imagination that made the Ender series so good, but it's sparkling with magic! Another that he wrote in the fantasty category is Enchantment, and I recommend it as a romantic and magical story that kept me captivated until the end. :)


message 16: by Miranda (new)

Miranda (readerslibrarian) | 37 comments Mod
Nathan wrote: "Kelli wrote: "Miranda wrote: "I'm about halfway through The Lost Gate, by Orson Scott Card, and it's so good that the story has been in the back of my mind while I do everything else for the last t..."

I haven't read that one, I'll definitely check it out!


message 17: by Miranda (new)

Miranda (readerslibrarian) | 37 comments Mod
Kara wrote: "I'm currently entertaining a book called "The Magician" in the "Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel" series. It's got a cliche premise but it involves a lot of folklore and mythology from a myr..."

Sounds like another good magical read...I have such a great list of titles growing right now, with magic and myth as the common theme. :)


message 18: by Miranda (new)

Miranda (readerslibrarian) | 37 comments Mod
I have also read some Jean Plaidy, Kelli. I think she does a great job of bringing the stories of the queens to life.
I have also read all of her titles under the pseudonym Philippa Carr, a series of historical fiction that follows the women of a family generation after generation, starting with the time of King Henry VIII. Have you ever read them?


message 19: by Kelli (new)

Kelli (kellismith) | 183 comments Mod
Miranda wrote: "I have also read some Jean Plaidy, Kelli. I think she does a great job of bringing the stories of the queens to life.
I have also read all of her titles under the pseudonym Philippa Carr, a seri..."


I have not read any Philippa Carr books. I will have to try that series. Thanks!


message 20: by Angie (new)

Angie | 42 comments Over the weekend, I read Julie Otsuka's slim, beautiful book, The Buddha in the Attic. (Otsuka's first book, When the Emperor Was Devine was a community reads pick.)

In this novella, Otsuka documents the lives of Japanese picture brides: their arrival in the United States, married to husbands and adopting lives that do not live up to the promises they had been led to believe when leaving Japan; their lives as wives and mothers and workers; and their forced removal to internment camps during World War II.

The book is told from the first person plural perspective, as in the book's opening lines:

"On the boat we were mostly virgins. We had long black hair and flat wide feet and we were not very tall. Some of us had eaten nothing but rice gruel as young girls and had slightly bowed legs, and some of us were only fourteen years old and were still young girls ourselves. Some of us came from the city, and wore stylish city clothes, but many more of us came from the country and on the boat we wore the same old kimonos we'd been wearing for years--faded hand-me-downs from our sisters that had been patched and redyed many times."

The result is an evocative, lyrical portrait of the lives of the women, their husbands, and, in the moving final chapter, the townspeople left behind when all the Japanese disappeared. The story veers from the universal to the carefully chosen specifics--a sweater left behind at a friend's house, a woman dying in childbirth. In this way, it reminded me very much of Tim O'Brien's haunting story of Vietnam, The Things They Carried.


message 21: by Abigail (new)

Abigail | 38 comments Mod
I am currently reading the book "License to Pawn: Deals, Steals, and My Life at the Gold & Silver" by Rick Harrison, one of the stars of the television show "Pawn Stars". So far I have really enjoyed reading it. It gives his background from his point of view and how the pawn shop has grown over the years as well as stories from other members of the show. He also includes several anecdotes about some of the people that he has met over the years, including the story of a man who gambled away $3 million dollars in 36 hours! I will state that there are what my family refers to as "colorful metaphors" (also known as swearing) in the book, so for those who do not like reading that kind of language in a book, please be aware. This book has a good combination of stories that will make you both laugh and rethink your preconceptions about pawn shops. I would recommend it to any fan of the show as well as to those who are not or have never heard of the show.


message 22: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 212 comments I'm reading Zora Neale Hurston's Mules and Men. It's part of the series that the libary and Kansas Humanities Council bring in the fall and the spring. I realized Monday that we are meeting today (Wednesday), and I'm not going to get finished. I will have to get to the library early and check it out so I can finish it.


message 23: by Angie (new)

Angie | 42 comments Melanie wrote: "I'm reading Zora Neale Hurston's Mules and Men. It's part of the series that the libary and Kansas Humanities Council bring in the fall and the spring. I realized Monday that we are meeting today (..."

I haven't read Mules and Men, but I really like Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God and her short stories. I imagine it will make for a great discussion.


message 24: by Melanie (new)

Melanie | 212 comments The first part of Mules and Men is one to read a bit and put down then go back a bit later. It was even recommend to read some of it outloud. I'm into the second half which is more of the style I'm used to reading and will hopefully finish tonight or before the weekend.


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