Books on the Nightstand discussion

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What Are You Currently Reading? November 2011

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message 151: by Jana (new)

Jana (jazziegirl2010) | 309 comments Ann, RE Night Circus, are individual people changing their mind about it? Or is the backlash from waves of NEW people? Further psychological study needed.

I stand firmly in my "Jim Dale read it to me whilst I was driving and I enjoyed it" opinion.

The only book I've actually hurled across the room is A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers . My apologies to Dave Eggers.


message 152: by Linda (last edited Nov 23, 2011 05:10PM) (new)

Linda | 3102 comments Mod
Jana wrote: "...The only book I've actually hurled across the room is A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers. My apologies to Dave Eggers.

I didn't hurl it, but I was close to hurling. I did finish it however.


message 153: by [deleted user] (new)

I had mixed feelings about the Eggers book while I was reading it. I particularly found it reprehensible that Eggers was using his little brother's life and pain as sort of a creative writing experiment. But when I closed the book, I realized that Eggers had engaged me in just the way he'd intended. He'd made me angry. In retrospect, I thought it was a great piece of writing, and unlike anything I'd ever read.


message 154: by Ann (new)

Ann (akingman) | 2097 comments Mod
Jana wrote: "The only book I've actually hurled across the room..."

The only book my ENTIRE book group hurled across the room (metaphorically)...


message 155: by Shona (new)

Shona (anovelobsession) | 178 comments I just finished Alias Grace and I loved it. I was so in to the book that I was trying to get some Thanksgiving cooking done while I was reading it....I quickly put together two pumpkin pies and put them in the oven and sat down to read again. Unfortunately I'm not that skilled at multi-tasking. I pulled the pies out and started cleaning the kitchen only to find that I had forgotten to include one of the main ingredients - no not the pumpkin - the evaporated milk. Pies weren't good - but the book was excellent!!!!!


message 156: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3102 comments Mod
Just started The Bee-Loud Glade by Steve Himmer . I know I'm late to the fair.


message 157: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie (rudejasper) | 9 comments Currently, I'm three books along listening to Garth Nix's The Keys to the Kingdom series Drowned Wednesday (The Keys to the Kingdom, #3) by Garth Nix I had previously read a short story by Mr. Nix. He really has a unique imagination that I am really enjoying.

I'm also reading some historical fiction. Just finished Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks which was really great and have moved into the mystery genre with Birds of a Feather (Maisie Dobbs, #2) by Jacqueline Winspear which is also fantastic. All in all its been a run of good reading which is great for a long holiday weekend. Good excuse to avoid shopping!


message 158: by Jana (new)

Jana (jazziegirl2010) | 309 comments Stephanie wrote: "Currently, I'm three books along listening to Garth Nix's The Keys to the Kingdom series Drowned Wednesday (The Keys to the Kingdom, #3) by Garth Nix I had previously read a short story by Mr. Nix. He really has a unique..."

Have you read Maisie Dobbs #1? I've had that on the "nightstand" for a long time and can't seem to get to it.


message 159: by JT (new)

JT (jtishere) | 43 comments Finished Back When We Were Grownups last week for my in-person book club. It's only my second Anne Tyler - the first was The Amateur Marriage. She can pull you in so subtly, it just amazes me. Just started The Invisible Bridge andA Great Deliverance, and still plowing through a fascinating biography of Alfred Hitchcock - Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light.


message 160: by Elizabeth☮ (new)

Elizabeth☮ wow! what strong feels jana and linda!

i love eggers' books. his narrative non-fiction is great!


message 161: by Stephanie (last edited Nov 26, 2011 12:11PM) (new)

Stephanie (rudejasper) | 9 comments Jana wrote: "Stephanie wrote: "Currently, I'm three books along listening to Garth Nix's The Keys to the Kingdom series Drowned Wednesday (The Keys to the Kingdom, #3) by Garth Nix I had previously read a short story by Mr. Nix. He r..."

I have read the first Maisie Dobbs book and liked it very much. I really like that time period/place - Britain between the wars or really in the 20's Britain in the aftermath of WWI. This series has also been fairly original - somewhere between a cozy mystery and Charles Todd's Ian Rutledge series if your familiar with those. And they are quick enjoyable reads. A little word of warning however if you're really in the mood for a mystery book 1 may be a bit of a disappointment as the mystery takes a bit of back burner to Maisie's story. Birds of a feather is more of a traditional mystery.


message 162: by Nancy (new)

Nancy Groves | 138 comments I've just finished reading "The Chaos Crystal," the fourth and final volume of a sci-fi/fantasy series by the Australian writer Jennifer Fallon. This is the third of her series that I've read, so obviously I like her work. The plots and characters are, in my view, well above average for this genre. I look forward to reading more of her work.

Next up is this month's choice for my book club, "The Harbor" by Lorraine Adams. A bit tardy, we're reading a book with a tie-in to 9/11. I don't think it deals with 9/11 itself but with the experiences of Arab Muslims in the US and the domestic war on terrorism. I think it will be an excellent book.

On the audiobook front, I finished Dickens' "Oliver Twist" a few days ago and am about halfway through Ann Tyler's "Noah's Compass." Oliver was one of Dickens' earliest novels and perhaps not his best (the plot relies heavily on coincidences), but it's a good story, and his criticism of the treatment of the poor is vivid, and probably still relevant now. As for Tyler's book, I'm a big fan and have never read anything of hers I didn't like.


message 163: by Jana (new)

Jana (jazziegirl2010) | 309 comments Elizabeth wrote: "wow! what strong feels jana and linda!

i love eggers' books. his narrative non-fiction is great!"


I don't disagree that he's a great writer, I just couldn't get through that book (I have a review in my "read" list which explains where I gave up/hurled the book.) I would like to try his Zeitoun by Dave Eggers sometime.

Just finished Moonwalking with Einstein The Art and Science of Remembering Everything by Joshua Foer and pronounce it a great read!

I just got off to a promising start with Cleopatra by Stacy Schiff . I'm not sure if this is good or bad, but because we watched ROME last year, I feel like I will get more out of the book: I have faces for everyone and know a lot of their history. I don't want to sound like Charlton Heston is my Moses, but I think that's what I've done in this particular slice of history. Hail Ciarán Hinds!


message 164: by Shannon (new)

Shannon B | 85 comments I just finished Moonwalking with Einstein (highly recommend!), and am reading and listening to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. I love it already !


message 165: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3102 comments Mod
I've put it off, but started listening to Smokin' Seventeen A Stephanie Plum Novel by Lorelei King (Narrator) Janet Evanovich (I believe Evanovich has become the Thomas Kinkade of writing - just spew it out, don't worry about quality.) I've heard this one is better and I needed something to listen to in the car.

About to start (here, in the house) listening to Bossypants by Tina Fey . It was due today and since I'm not driving any place that takes 5-1/2 hours, I listen to it and do some sewing that needs to be done (fix my MICHIGAN jacket's seams).


message 166: by Nancy (new)

Nancy Groves | 138 comments I've read all of the Stephanie Plum books by Janet Evanovich and have Explosive Eighteen on hold at the library, but I agree with Linda's comments that the author has been just "spewing" them out. It's high time for some character and plot development, not the same old, same old. The books are fun, but they're getting tiresome.


message 167: by [deleted user] (new)

The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

In the Regency and Victorian periods, English novels usually had a "marriage plot", in which the heroine dealt with choosing between marrying one of two men, each having different personality characteristics. This book is an update and a deconstruction that type of plot.

There's a love triangle, in which Madeleine, a lit major, chooses between Mitchell, a soul-searching religious studies major, and Leonard, a troubled biology major. The action takes place in the early eighties (why Eugenides chose to set it then I haven't figured out yet, but I was pleased, because that made the characters my contemporaries).

All of the characters are well-read and intelligent. Plenty of books are discussed and name-dropped. Whenever I expected someone to be a cliche, or a "type", I was put in my place by Eugenides' insight and mastery of characterization. I would recommend this book to any bibliophile who enjoys a good exploration of the human heart (a love story, in other words). But don't read it if you're one of those romance buffs who expects a happily-ever-after ending. This book is much more nuanced than that, and takes into consideration that just because people love one another, it doesn't necessarily mean they should spend their lives together.

This book, for the most part, tells a smaller-scale story than "Middlesex", except for a section where Mitchell, in his trip to India, contemplates some larger questions and comes to know himself better. I found Mitchell Grammaticus to be one of the most engaging characters I've read about this year.

This is a book that I may come back to one day, and I don't say that lightly.


message 168: by Elizabeth☮ (new)

Elizabeth☮ Jana wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "wow! what strong feels jana and linda!

i love eggers' books. his narrative non-fiction is great!"

I don't disagree that he's a great writer, I just couldn't get through that bo..."




Zeitoun is a great book. you should definitely invest the time.


message 169: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Just finished Clockwork Prince and loved it as much as Clockwork Angel. Currently I'm finishing Grave Goods


message 170: by Callie (new)

Callie (calliekl) | 646 comments Finished You Suck a couple days ago. It was ok, but I didn't like it as much as A Dirty Job. Possibly because ADJ was audio, and Fisher Stevens was such a perfect narrator. I think I'll stick to audiobooks for this author.

Next up is Sarah's Key, which I am reading for book group. I actually won my copy in a giveaway from the blog My Friend Amy. I also received a copy of the movie soundtrack, which is absolutely perfect as background music for reading the book.

As for the book itself, I'm enjoying the story, and the alternating narrators. My only quibble is that the parts written in the American woman's voice feel almost translated from French, and something feels just a little off. I don't get this feeling at all with the parts written from the POV of the little girl. I'm sure that once I'm more immersed in the story it won't bother me as much.


message 171: by Tasha (new)

Tasha I agree with Elizabeth, Zeitoun is a good book, well-worth a read!


message 172: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Just getting started on The Maze Runner


message 173: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3102 comments Mod
Read one book of poetry last night and going to finish a second shortly. Both are by the U.S. newest Poet Laureate, Philip Levine.

One for the Rose by Philip Levine and What Work Is by Philip Levine


Shruti morethanmylupus (morethanmylupus) | 54 comments I just finished The Stranger's Child The Stranger's Child  by Alan Hollinghurst which I didn't like as much as I thought that I would. I'm starting The Taker The Taker by Alma Katsu today for a change of pace.


message 175: by Karen (new)

Karen Brown (khbrown) | 99 comments Eric wrote: "The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

In the Regency and Victorian periods, English novels usually had a "marriage plot", in which the heroine dealt with choosing between marrying one of two men,..."


Eric,
Enjoyed your review of The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides . This may be my best read of the entire year. Can't wait to read Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides .


message 176: by Melissa Wiebe (new)

Melissa Wiebe (melissawiebe80) | 200 comments Currently reading Little House on the Prairie (Little House, #2) by Laura Ingalls Wilder (and yes, the illustrations are in colour).


message 177: by Lisa (new)

Lisa O'Rourke | 13 comments I have just finished the compact, but fascinating 'A Single Man' by Christopher Isherwood. I have 'The Forgotten Waltz' by Anne Enright in my hand ready to start. I have previously read 'The Gathering' by Anne Enright and enjoyed it thoroughly, so hopefully 'The Forgotten Waltz' stands up to my expectations.


message 178: by Elizabeth☮ (new)

Elizabeth☮ Eric wrote: "The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

In the Regency and Victorian periods, English novels usually had a "marriage plot", in which the heroine dealt with choosing between marrying one of two men,..."



great review Eric. i have added it to my TBR.


message 179: by Victoria (new)

Victoria (vicki_c) | 367 comments Elizabeth wrote: "Eric wrote: "The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

In the Regency and Victorian periods, English novels usually had a "marriage plot", in which the heroine dealt with choosing between marrying ..."


Me too! I never finished Middlesex - heck, I barely started it. It's sitting right here on my shelf, so I wasn't encouraged to read The Marriage Plot, but I think I've been swayed.


message 180: by Jana (new)

Jana (jazziegirl2010) | 309 comments I don't know what this says about me, but I just finished Camus The Plague by Albert Camus and found it a very enjoyable read. It's my second of his, and now I'm on to The Fall by Albert Camus .

I thought Middlesex was amazing. I read it twice (read & listened) and I don't do that very often. I will definitely be reading The Marriage Plot, and I'm not sure why I haven't read The Virgin Suicides???


message 181: by Melissa Wiebe (new)

Melissa Wiebe (melissawiebe80) | 200 comments I just started Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson .


message 182: by Tina (new)

Tina (mom260224) | 2 comments The art of keeping secrets


message 183: by Valerie (new)

Valerie Started The Hare with the Amber Eyes by Edmund de Waal. Fascinating story (non-fic) about family, art, and loss.

I also loved The Metaphysical Club by Louis Menand. Anybody know another book that similar? Really enjoyed it.


message 184: by Paul (new)

Paul (pdmalt) Jana wrote: "I don't know what this says about me, but I just finished Camus The Plague by Albert Camusand found it a very enjoyable read. It's my second of his, and now I'm on toThe Fall by Albert Camus.

..."


Took a graduate course on Camus many years ago - and that's where I discovered "The Plague" - one of my all-time favorites. I should read it again. Of course, I also loved Eggers' "Heartbreaking Work". Go figure!


Shruti morethanmylupus (morethanmylupus) | 54 comments I just finished The Taker The Taker by Alma Katsu but wasn't all that impressed with it overall. I'm starting The Marriage Plot The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides next.


message 186: by Valerie (new)

Valerie About a 1/3 of the way through Mockingjay. I'll miss this series when I'm done (sigh).


message 187: by Alondra (new)

Alondra Miller Valerie wrote: "About a 1/3 of the way through Mockingjay. I'll miss this series when I'm done (sigh)."

me too... *weeps*


message 188: by Ann (new)

Ann (akingman) | 2097 comments Mod
psst ... the December thread is now open...


message 189: by Angela (new)

Angela (ilibridiangela) | 8 comments I am reading Ava's Man. Read All Over But the Shoutin' a few years ago and loved it.


message 190: by [deleted user] (new)

Ann, we're still catching up on our November reading.


message 191: by Valerie (new)

Valerie Angela wrote: "I am reading Ava's Man. Read All Over But the Shoutin' a few years ago and loved it."

Where can we find the December thread????


message 192: by Ann (new)


message 193: by Nancy (new)

Nancy Groves | 138 comments I finished reading "The Harbor" by Lorraine Adams several days ago; in some senses it's an immigrant "stranger in a strange land" story centering around a group of (mostly) illegal Algerian immigrants trying to get by in America and Canada, taking whatever jobs they can find, sending money back to their families, and trying to understand the foreign culture around them. It also explores the issue of terrorism, as it takes place around the time of 9/11. No one in the book IS a terrorist, but the FBI believes they are due to the challenges of translation and grasping the nuances of other languages, understanding another culture, agency bureaucracy, and the tendency to see what you want to see. I liked the book very much and would like to reread it, but there's too much else on my agenda right now.

I've read the first few chapters of "Larry's Party" by Carol Shields and know I'm going to like it.

On the audio side, I just finished the first volume of the Chaos Walking trilogy by Patrick Ness, "The Knife of Never Letting Go." It ended on a major cliffhanger, naturally, so I've requested the next one from the library. Before I listen to that, I'll tackle at least one other book for variety. First up is "The Lotus Eaters" by Tatjana Soli, involving a love triangle set against the backdrop of the Vietnam war.


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