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What I'm Reading - February 2012
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2**
I had such high hopes for this book. Basically it’s the story of a young woman combat photographer in Vietnam towards the end of the war, Helen Adams, and the two men she loves – Sam Darrow (a seasoned photographer who has a reputation), and Linh (the Vietnamese man who is Darrow’s and then Helen’s assistant).
I didn’t find anything about the relationships believable. I didn’t feel the passion or tenderness or compassion or love between any of them. The mark of good writing is that the author will show, not tell; Soli tells the reader over and over that these people love one another, but she doesn’t show us this. In fact, she shows us the opposite. Each of them seems closed off emotionally from anyone else; each follows his/her own agenda without regard to the feelings of anyone else; each of them behaves poorly (to say the least) in relation to the others. I thought they took foolish chances and I really didn’t care what happened to any of them; I just wanted it to be over with so I could get on with another book.
So why did I give it 2 stars? Soli includes a long bibliography of works she used to research Vietnam and Southeast Asia during the time period portrayed in the book. I don’t know if she ever actually visited the country, but if she has not, then kudos to her for managing to convey such a sense of the atmosphere of the place. I could smell the tropical jungle, feel the torpidity brought on by heat and fatigue, and hear the din of traffic and busy city streets. I give her 2 stars for creating this atmosphere, but I really don’t recommend the book.


2**
I had such high hopes for this book. Basically it’s the story of a young woman combat photographer in Vietnam towards the end of the war, Helen Adams, and ..."
BC I felt the same way, there was a big hole in the book for me.

I started reading The Old Wine Shades, by Martha Grimes last night. My head is a little fuzzy in the early stage of a cold, and this is very, very light. When I regain my faculties, I'll return to Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era, by James McPherson, which I am reading with another GR group.


The Brass Verdict

And Then There Were None

Truly, Madly

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society

The Winter Garden Mystery

The Borgia Bride

The Ghost and the Dead Deb

Murder With Peacocks

Strictly Dishonorable and Other Lost American Play

The Affair: A Reacher Novel

The Kitchen Witch

All of them fit at least one challenge I'm in at the moment, and one is my first pen-pal read!

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/29/b..."
If it wouldn't be such a terrible idea, Kat, it would be kind of funny. Thank you for the link.
Sarah, I do remember you recommending The Terror to me. Thank you.
BC, I was not fond of The Lotus Eaters, either, and I, too, had high hopes for it.
I'm going to begin East of Eden.

Didn't we do it as a CR book some time in the past?

Didn't we do it as a CR book some time in the past?"
Seems like it was an official one at some time or other but I don't think I took part. Haven't checked the archived ones but will do so.
ETA: YES, mid-May to mid-June 2002 and you and Beej and Dean Denis mostly -- one post each from Pres and yself and several from Ernie. I've decided to add the two books I mentioned (Tortilla Curtain and Tortilla Flats) to my challenges for the year.
I've been taking this year easy, peasy and yet I feel like I'm stretching things at the same time. I started off with rereading two of my favorites food writer/personal writing by Laurie Colwin and finishing up two from the end of 2011 Clara and Mr. Tiffany and Suite Francaise. Then I started putting together a list for the BOTNS 12 books in 2012 -- a challenge -- I did the +11 challenge they did in 2011 and ended up going way beyond the number of books I needed to reach that little jump. But this challenge isn't about just upping the number read by 12 -- it's about reading 12 books you deicde to read for whatever goal you wish -- and any number of 12's you decide to do and I'm having some fun with the mix and match aspects of that challenge. I'm reading books by and about favorite authors, Proust books I own but haven't read yet, now I'm throwing in some feminst reading or vaguely feminst reading by French and Piercy, an idea that grew out of being approached to participate in an info gathering survey on feminist reading for someone who is writing a chapter to be included in a two volume set on various topics, twelve biograpy/non-fiction. All of these are overlapping so I am slacking off on total numbers read most likely but it's deliberate. And I'm having fun with all of it.
Just finished rereading Three Women and have begun The House in Good Taste which I have had on the radar to read for many years and never done it -- found a lovely copy and grabbed it up so have no excuse for not reading it!
Sorry: This ended up posted after I re-posted a different version so now I've edited to combine the babble of both -- the original post had disappeared somehow or other and I couldn't locate it but it popped up again just the same.


I've finished Tony and Susan, a bit baffled by the thing. I'm going to go and look at the discussion. I've just started Cold Dish, a new mystery by Craig Johnson. Jane, I think this might be a good one. Do you know it?



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Books mentioned in this topic
The Stranger's Child (other topics)The Terror (other topics)
Three Women (other topics)
The House in Good Taste (other topics)
Truly, Madly (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen King (other topics)Henning Mankell (other topics)
Pam Houston (other topics)
Henning Mankell (other topics)
Henning Mankell (other topics)
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Just finishing up Tony and Susan.