You'll love this one...!! A book club & more discussion
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What are you currently reading and why? (CLOSED)
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Larry
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Oct 09, 2010 01:46PM

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I didn't like Little Boy Lost AT ALL! I actually read it b/c this group will be discussing it next month.


Now the book on hgere says its 204 poages, and its only,err, 36 pages on my ebook!


Now the book on hgere says its 204 poages, and its only,err, 36 pages on m..."
I've noticed lots of old SF short stories got rewritten to be novels. It's also possible that the book is a collection that includes the story you're reading as an e-book, which seems to be the case here, actually.
Is it any good? The Timescape imprint (or whatever you call it) has some, um, interesting, titles....





Is it any good? or do you have to make allowances for it being so old?


Interesting review by Giovanni Gelati...



Its very true, each section is completely different but interesting how each influences the next. I can't decide which section would be my favourite. Still have to write my review of the book but I am still digesting it. (The Invisible Mountain)

Interesting review by Giovanni Gelati..."
Where can I find that review? Though I'm not sure I want to read it before I've finished the book.



http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
Now I will start The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust. One of my GR friends is rereading this, and we thought it would be fun to read a book together. :0)
We both like memoirs and books about WW2.



Hi Carol. Sorry I can't find any listing for Hoppy. So far I have collected books for the shows Have Gun Will Travel, Sea Hunt, Rin Tin Tin, Zorro, Annie Oakley, Roy Rogers, Combat, The Rebel, Maverick, Bat Masterson and Cheyenne. There are still lots more to collect. I am lucky because our city has an annual book sale (400,000 books) and the lady who looks after the kids section keeps an eye open for these books for me. Many of the shows have multiple books. I found a list of all their titles at kevintoys.tripod.com. Good luck finding what you want. Not long ago I read a Hopalong Cassidy novel. I didn't realize the original author chose Louis L'Amour to carry on the stories.


I just finished The Nazi Officer's Wife: How One Jewish Woman Survived the Holocaust and here is my GR review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I did learn about Armenian culture, Armenian Genocide and the Great Fire of Smyrna, but the biography could have been better told. I gave it three stars.
Now I have begun, still on the Armenian theme, Passage to Ararat


I had a hard time at first in the beginning of this one but after I got past the future/past contents I am finally enjoying it. I will be right with you in regards to the series. I go back and forth when books get to heavy and go back to Fern Michaels she is a easy read for me.


NONE of these reviews have spoilers!!!
Both this and The Door take place in Hungary, so they are fun to read together. The link to The Door is below.
While in Brittany I read several books. The only book I gave 5 stars to was The Blind Contessa's New Machine, and my GR review follows here:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... It is absolutely lovely. It IS a love story! And historical fiction!
I finished Passage to Ararat. For all those interested in the Armenian Genocide, you should read this book. Personally I think everyone should be informed about this issue, which in fact Hitler said everyone had already forgotten!!!! Here is my reviews for this book:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I can also very highly recommend The Door. Why? Well check out my review here at GR: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... Even though I would have prefered a different ending, it was a great book! I gave this four stars too!
I FINALLY read 84, Charing Cross Road. As my review states (http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...) I should have not put this book off as long as I have. I didn't think I would enjoy it because it is an epistolary novel. I don't usually like such writing, but this was definitely an exception!
For all ot us who really don't NEED to add more books to out TBR mountains, I guess this is not a good message. I have discovered some books that really are too marvellous to ignore!!! Now you know of them too.


Now reading Wife of the Gods: A Novel

http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/... It is historical fiction.
Now I will start Not Even My Name: A True Story. This is a memoir and it concerns ethnic clensing in Turkey. The Turks not only kicked out the Armenians, but also the Greeks at the time of WW1.


How coincidental. The Lending Library at work had a copy of The Little Giant of Aberdeen County, I was bored, so I picked it up, then let it sit at home. The title sounds like one of them home-spun things, perhaps cute anecdotes etc. about peoples' lives that only people who knew them would appreciate. Perhaps I should give it a closer look.

Nikki, The Post-Birthday World is a GREAT book. I read it a few years ago and I just loved it from start to finish. I checked out another Shriver book (So Much For That) a few months ago from the library but didn't get around to reading it, but plan to eventually check it out again and try again because I loved TP-BW sooooo much. What did you think? (I wrote this reply and then realized your post was written in Nov. 2008-not 2010-whoops :))



Nov 16...Well, Susan and Jess separate, reconcile, separate, reconcile again, separate again...don't know whether they reconcile again or not, haven't got that far. This seems to be a very candid portrait of SH, outlining her shortcomings as well as her qualities...a lot of information packed into this book, and I'm not a quarter of the way through yet. Ms Linet has done a prodigious amount of research on SH's past, through material already printed, but also interviewing anyone and everyone associated with her at one time or another, including early teachers, maids, wardrobe mistress, studio bigwigs...you name it, I don't think she left any stone unturned. There is no fluffy filler in this book, yet it does have many anecdotes...an enjoyable read, at least so far.
As for the 'why'...I recently attended a screening of cartoons at 'the Lasky Barn' which is the home of the Hollywood Heritage Museum. I found this book on their 'used bookshelf' and it interested me so I bought it even though I am wary of bookshelves and bookstores in general because I buy way too many as it is...but I bought it anyway. As I was having it rung up by the cashier he remarked "Oh, this is one that I brought in. I bought it here, read it, and brought it in again. We just love Susan." I'm a sucker for a personal touch, so I left feeling good about the book, and actually bought a membership to HH also, along with a book about the best 100 Loony Tunes Cartoons, signed by the author, who was our speaker that night. (Unusual for me to buy a book new, but I was just so carried away by the event...)



Give it a chance. In the beginning I was a bit disturbed by the varying prose styles. It is NOT just about the massacres of Greek Pontians in Turkey after WW1. It is also a biography of one woman who, having lived through these horrors, came ot singing, loving life. It has a large emotional impact.
And now I will start Nothing in the World. Writing reviews has taught me that what I like best are those books that both teach and make an emotional impact on me. I think this will do that, as it did with Not Even My Name!

I do not know if anyone could call this a comfort read.....I gave it 5 stars. Amazing writing!
Now I will start The Homecoming Party - a coming of age novel covering Italian, French and Albanian culture.
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