On the Southern Literary Trail discussion
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General Bookishness
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Retired: What are you reading?
Thanks Tom, I didn't like the movie, but I will give the book a try. I put it on hold at library.
Diane wrote: "Laura, you DIDN'T LIKE THE MOVIE? That's just un-american, LOL!"
I knew as I typed I was going to get comments. I really am not a movie person, but I think I would like the book. So, yes, I did NOT like the movie.
I knew as I typed I was going to get comments. I really am not a movie person, but I think I would like the book. So, yes, I did NOT like the movie.

I'm always on the look out for good Christmas reads.

Yep, those Statler Brothers. He's written a few books centered around his Mt Jefferson, Virginia town. I've been meaning to read the others as well.
Tim wrote: "Laura wrote: "Thanks Tim, my library had that one too. Statler Brothers, country music?"
Yep, those Statler Brothers. He's written a few books centered around his Mt Jefferson, Virginia town. I've..."
Interesting, I just googled famous songs by them. Flowers on the wall and Elizabeth. Brought my childhood back!
Yep, those Statler Brothers. He's written a few books centered around his Mt Jefferson, Virginia town. I've..."
Interesting, I just googled famous songs by them. Flowers on the wall and Elizabeth. Brought my childhood back!


Ha. I did that same thing when I first stumbled on this book. Hope you enjoy it.



We were on a cruise and a lady did that song at karaoke and she pulled her scarf off and rode it like a horse in the giddy up part! She wasn't intoxicated, wink, wink!


I bet she was sober as a preacher.


"...I was reading A Fable and other William Faulkner novels from the library. Spinning, spinning, awhirl, where am I? That might describe my feeling on reading the first page of William Faulkner. I read on and on, I read through the book, and when I had finished I was still awhirl in pools of words and feeling which affected me like powerful music where the meaning is seldom questioned. I was preparing a review - how could I write a review of a novelist who clouded my vision with feeling? I returned to the book, reading it again and again, slowly emerging into the clear fountain-light where the characters, the scenes, the meaning appeared starkly outlined, solid, real, good. This was William Faulkner's world, and I had found it to keep."
Thanks, Jenny. I have her book "To the Is land", is that the one you are reading? That's a beautiful way of describing how Faulkner's words affected her.

To the Is-Land is the volume of her autobiography that spans her childhood. The Faulkner quote is from the second volume, An Angel At My Table. That's where the interesting stuff about her mental illness is too (which the book Faces in the Water is largely based on.)

I just finished Between Shades of Gray. Told through the eyes of a teenage girl, it is a heart-wrenching tale of Stalin's 1939 annexation of the Baltic states (Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia) and what happened to hundreds of thousands of the citizens of those countries. The horror of these events rivals that of the Holocaust and yet it is almost unknown to much of the world. Kudos to Ruta Sepetys for researching and writing this excellent book that tells us of events that desperately need to be told.
My review is here.
My review is here.


Astrid wrote: "I'm currently reading Emily St. John Mandel's novel Station Eleven and loving it. It reminds me a lot of Paul Auster, which is a good thing. This is the kind of book I'm really looking forward to p..."
That book seemed to get mixed reviews but I really enjoyed it, but then anything with Shakespearean actors is likely to get my attention.
That book seemed to get mixed reviews but I really enjoyed it, but then anything with Shakespearean actors is likely to get my attention.

I do, Angela! I especially love the different timelines, and now the story starts coming together.
Tom wrote: "Astrid wrote: "I'm currently reading Emily St. John Mandel's novel Station Eleven and loving it. It reminds me a lot of Paul Auster, which is a good thing. This is the kind of book I'm really looki..."
Tom, I'm going to have a look at some reviews after I finish the book but I can't find any flaws or anything that bothers me so far. I just enjoy reading this story :)
I just started reading (listening to) Nocturnes by John Connolly. The first (and longest) story in this excellent collection, The Cancer Cowboy Rides is a very creepy tale reminiscent of the Marlboro Man commercials.

I'm also about 40 pages into A Feast of Snakes for our December pick, and so far, I love it. The opening paragraphs about the majorette feeling the weight of the snake between her breasts initially reminded me of The Plague of Doves where a woman gets involved with a fundamentalist Christian weirdo and ends up feeling maternal toward the vipers - so much so that she lets them sleep in the bed with her to keep warm. She DID have snakes between her breasts! Crazy...looking forward to seeing where this book leads.

Kim wrote: "I was reading The Killing Kind one night in bed, very late...really a bad idea...and was enmeshed in spider descriptions when a big brown hairy spider dropped down from the ceiling unbeknownst to me and came creeping up over the bedclothes until it got right to my book and into my line of sight."
That could be especially traumatic considering the book you were reading. I too and reading the Charlie Parker series in order ans understand that Nocturnes is considered book 4.5. I have yet to get to a story that could be considered part of the series though.
That could be especially traumatic considering the book you were reading. I too and reading the Charlie Parker series in order ans understand that Nocturnes is considered book 4.5. I have yet to get to a story that could be considered part of the series though.

Oh good---I'm looking forward to when I can get to this. I really liked his Night Music: Nocturnes Volume Two, which I read a short time ago. Connolly writes so well.

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Books mentioned in this topic
Happy Land (other topics)Take My Hand (other topics)
Happy Land (other topics)
Happy Land (other topics)
Somewhere Toward Freedom: Sherman's March and the Story of America's Largest Emancipation (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Bennett Parten (other topics)Wes Browne (other topics)
Hubert Skidmore (other topics)
Mark Twain (other topics)
Delia Owens (other topics)
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I was going to suggest that but you thought of it yourself. I've always enjoyed rereading Jean Shepherd's A Christmas Story.