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What I'm Reading July 2012
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Geoff
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Jul 15, 2012 09:37AM

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This is a wonderful book--direct, heartfelt, funny and true.

I am loving THE SWERVE. I also decided that I needed a copy of Lucretius.
Carol and Ione, I have read Machiavelli's THE PRINCE, which usually gets a very bum rap. You have to remember that he was describing the way politics actually worked in his time. (All things considered, even though I complain about politics today, I guess we have made considerable progress :).

The Unholy - my first Heather Graham and my first Krewe of Hunter book. There are earlier books in this series, but each can be read as a stand alone.
I'm currently reading City of Women and wow - is this good.

I didn't care much for Old Filth, but I loved God on the Rocks by Gardam. Have you read it?
Marge

Marge


The Descendants – Kaui Hart Hemmings
DOES THIS BOOK EXPLAIN MORE OF THE WIFE? HER EMOTIONS?..."
Joanie is in a coma ... the book focuses on Matt and how he is processing the information he is discovering.


Night of the Grizzlies - Jack Olsen
5*****
In this nonfiction work, Olsen explores the events that culminated in one night of terror in August 1967 when two young women were savagely attacked by grizzly bears.
I love reading ‘true crime’ and this work has all the hallmarks of the best of that genre. Olsen gives us an explanation and history of the various parties involved. He also recounts the unusual number of bear sightings in Glacier National Park during the summer of 1967, and even more unusual number of “encounters” between bears and humans.
The pace is unrelenting and the tension builds to an unendurable pitch. I reluctantly stopped reading because it was after midnight and I couldn’t keep my eyes open much longer. I should have stopped an hour earlier, or just kept going until I finished. Even though I live in a decidedly suburban area, without any evidence of any type of bear within 500 miles, every slight noise fueled my imagination, and I had a fretful night and little sleep.

Indeed I did :) It IS very enjoyable and one of the most interesting and best books I have read by any writer, my guilty pleasure. I doubt I have understand it fully but I love how Olga Tokarczuk juggles so many different balls in the air without ever getting lost herself in all those threads. It is pure magic.

Thanks for the good word on TINY BEAUTIFUL THINGS. It sounds like a winner.
Marge,
I also thought GOD ON THE ROCKS was very good.


Enjoy :) It addresses pretty much the Polish national identity, settling with the Polish myths and all the pain of our history. There is a wide range of characters all with their own attitudes to life and personality but nothing is exaggerated. It is well thought out, reliable and in-depth psychological and philosophical. Also the narrative style is matched - once feverish, restless as youth, and once balanced. The characters are difficult, ambigous but with flesh and blood. He shows the responsibility for fascism, the moral attitudes of all those involved and what triggered the violence. Szczypiorski was not afraid to talk about things unspoken, hurtful and difficult. I don´t say it is an easy read, but an important one for sure.


Still working on Something Wicked This Way Comes and about 1/4 way done with The Sisters Brothers.


A Turn in the Road – Debbie Macomber
Book on CD read by Joyce Bean
3***
When her mother-in-law, Ruth, announces that she plans to drive – alone – from Seattle to Florida for her high school reunion, Bethanne suddenly agrees to go along. Soon daughter Annie also joins the group, and the three women set out. Along the way they have plenty of time to consider their respective love lives and come to some decisions.
I was interested and engaged for the first 150 pages or so. I liked the way Bethanne and Ruth interacted. I applauded both of them for refusing to bow down to the expectations of others regarding “older women” and their strength of character. But then … I didn’t understand why Bethanne allowed her adult children to influence her decisions, nor how she could so easily disregard the obvious flaws in Grant’s character. As for Annie … She is a selfish, immature, “Daddy’s girl!”
The paperback text version of this book is 390 pages long … which is about 150 pages more than it needs to be. I could see the central issues long before the characters did, and while I realize there has to be some development of tension this went on far longer than was necessary. On a positive note, it’s a fast read, and generally enjoyable story. I can clearly see why Macomber has such a loyal fan base. Joyce Bean does a good job of voicing the audio book. Her pacing is good and she has enough variance in her inflection to distinguish the characters.


I've heard good things about this book John. Have to remember to check it out.

It is fantastic. I hope you read the next two in the trilogy, they truly complete the thought.

"Such, Such Were the Joys" by Orwell is a wonderful personal essay, Geoff, truly memorable. I read it on my father's recommendation many years ago.

Tim Gunn in any form is quite the human being.

Agreed Sara

I'll be interested to see what you think of this novel when you've finished it, Sherry, and see how yours compares to my own reading experience.

It is fantastic. I hope you read the next two in the trilogy, they truly ..."
Yes, I enjoyed all three books of the trilogy, but the first is my favorite.

Thanks Sara and Sue -- Gunn does a good job being honest about his own story, without being dramatic, and his "lessons" don't come off preachy at all. Just finished his depiction of a mind-boggling scene, wherein a child reached onto the plate of some diners (who were STILL PRESENT) at an outside table, grabbed some pasta, and shoved it in his maw. The mommy's reaction: did you like it? should we go in and have some?

If I'd been at that table, Tim might not have approved of my response.

Wow. A couple of years ago a kid almost ran me down on his bike--I said nothing, but his mother screamed at me, "Stop it, he didn't mean it!"

Sara, I expect you scowled, or looked shocked. Don't you know that probably damaged the sensitive bike-rider for the rest of his life?

I'm sure I did, and the little shit will get over it. :-)


Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury
Book on CD performed by Kevin Foley
5*****
Jim Nightshade and Will Halloway are neighbors, best friends, and born just minutes apart. The 13-year-old boys live in the small town of Green Town, Illinois and are looking forward to Halloween. But this year, Halloween will come early, because on Oct 24, just after midnight, Cooger & Dark’s Pandemonium Shadow Show will come to town with its carnival rides, mirror maze, sideshow freaks, and a carousel that can change your life.
Bradbury was a master of suspense and sci-fi. Here he turns his imagination loose on every child’s dream – and nightmare. Clowns and fortune tellers are both fascinating and frightening. A trip inside the funhouse mirror maze elicits feelings of adventure and claustrophobia. And who doesn’t love to be scared on a carnival ride – whipped around on the Tilt-a-Whirl, feeling your heart drop as you round the top of the Ferris wheel, made dizzy as the carousel spins round and round? Parents are old and useless, except when they are inventive and heroic.
Kevin Foley’s performance on the audio was magnificent. His youthful enthusiasm for Jim and Will made me willing to go along on this adventure that I would NEVER attempt in real life. Just remembering his oily voice for Mr Dark gives me the shivers.
This book scared the beejesus out of me – and I was listening ONLY in broad daylight, during my daily commute. Like the best roller coaster, Bradbury S-L-O-W-L-Y drew me up the incline of suspense, dropped me into terror, and then evened out to let me catch my breath, only to realize there was another, steeper, incline ahead. When finally the ride was over I was giddy with relief … and wanted to “go again!”


Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury
Book on CD performed by Kevin Foley
5*****
Jim Nightshade and ..."
I'm going to have to move this up on my TBR. Nice review.




Now I'm reading No One Sleeps in Alexandria set in Egypt during WWII and The Makioka Sisters set in Japan only a couple of years earlier. Both are starting off well.

I thought it was a wonderful book, even though it is quite slow and deliberate. You really have to quiet yourself to read that one.




I have both Strayed's memoir and novel in my TBR.

No One Sleeps in Alexandria really is interesting. I'm reading it with the MiddleEast/North Africa group where I've had some great reading experiences I probably would never have heard of otherwise.

John wrote: "I'm a couple of hours into listening to Stewart O'Nan's Emily, Alone, story of an 80-year-old upper-middle-class Pittsburgh widow. Very well written, but not much actually happens, almost as though..."
I read Wish You Were Here, which is the book where he first introduces the character of Emily. It too is well-written, but very little happens. It was a bit of a slog to get through it, so I moved Emily, Alone down on my "to-read" list.
I read Wish You Were Here, which is the book where he first introduces the character of Emily. It too is well-written, but very little happens. It was a bit of a slog to get through it, so I moved Emily, Alone down on my "to-read" list.
John wrote: "I read it in print, skimming the "philosophical" sections - doubt I would've made it through the audiobook. I really liked it, especially Renee(?) the building manager."
The Elegance of the Hedgehog is one of my favorite reads of the past few years. I agree that it is pretentious, the major complaint of many in my book group as well, but I found that to be part of its charm.
The Elegance of the Hedgehog is one of my favorite reads of the past few years. I agree that it is pretentious, the major complaint of many in my book group as well, but I found that to be part of its charm.
This month I am revisiting a favorite, Life of Pi, and I picked up some new books from the library, The Snow Child, Watergate: A Novel, and They Eat Puppies, Don't They?: A Novel.
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