On the Southern Literary Trail discussion

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General Bookishness > Retired: What are you reading?

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message 1701: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Laura wrote: "I may just reread Capote's book. "

I was going to suggest that but you thought of it yourself. I've always enjoyed rereading Jean Shepherd's A Christmas Story.


message 1702: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
Thanks Tom, I didn't like the movie, but I will give the book a try. I put it on hold at library.


message 1703: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5543 comments Mod
Laura, you DIDN'T LIKE THE MOVIE? That's just un-american, LOL!


message 1704: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
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.


message 1705: by Timothy (new)

Timothy Taylor (tim_taylor) | 11 comments Another Christmas book recommendation with a small town southern feel is O Little Town by Don Reid (member of Statler Brothers). I stumbled upon this one last year and really enjoyed it.

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


message 1706: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
Thanks Tim, my library had that one too. Statler Brothers, country music?


message 1707: by Timothy (new)

Timothy Taylor (tim_taylor) | 11 comments 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 been meaning to read the others as well.


message 1708: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
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!


message 1709: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
How could I forget Hello MaryLou?!


message 1710: by penneminreads (new)

penneminreads After Twelve Years a Slave I needed something light-hearted to read, so I started The Humans by Matt Haig today, and I'm 50% done already, which is always a good sign :)


message 1712: by Timothy (new)

Timothy Taylor (tim_taylor) | 11 comments Laura wrote: "How could I forget Hello MaryLou?!"

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


message 1713: by Angela M (last edited Dec 03, 2015 08:52PM) (new)


message 1715: by Tina (new)

Tina  | 485 comments Did someone say the Statler Brothers... "smoking cigarettes and watching Captain Kangaroo. Now don't tell me, I've nothing to do". Those guys had some stellar harmony and awesome lyrics in their songs. I've seen them in concert. Had no idea that one of them was a novel writer!


message 1716: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Tinaaaa! PULP FICTION!


message 1717: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
I watched 3 videos today! I had them in my head and hummed all afternoon.


message 1718: by Tina (last edited Nov 30, 2015 08:31PM) (new)

Tina  | 485 comments LeAnne, I am the consummate media nerd (books, movies,music)


message 1719: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Sigh...I need you & the posse here in my book club. FUN!!!


message 1720: by Tina (last edited Nov 30, 2015 08:35PM) (new)

Tina  | 485 comments LeAnne, Laura and I could sing Statler songs for your group. Right, Laura? "Counting flowers on the wall. That don't bother me at all."


message 1721: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
I could also throw in some Oak Ridge boys?! Elvira, my heart's on fire!


message 1722: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Can we get Bruce Willis to sing it with us?? I actually own the soundtrack to the movie & totally forgot about that song!


message 1723: by Tina (new)

Tina  | 485 comments Giddyup a um papa um papa mauw mauw. Well, that's what it sounds like.


message 1724: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Lol!!! Cracking up. Gnite!


message 1725: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
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!


message 1726: by Tina (last edited Nov 30, 2015 08:44PM) (new)

Tina  | 485 comments Bruce, only if they put that soft lighting on him like they did on him and Sybill Shepard in Moonlighting.


message 1727: by Tina (new)

Tina  | 485 comments Laura wrote: "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.


message 1728: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Anybody wonder if Laura was the said scarf rider? Maybe there was soft lighting on the karaoke stage & she just went with it.. o.O


message 1729: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
LeAnne don't tell all my secrets!


message 1730: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5543 comments Mod
I've got those darn songs stuck in my head just from reading about them.


Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 178 comments In November I read a bunch of New Zealand literature, and some memoir from New Zealanders. One book was Janet Frame's autobiography and she spoke so eloquently about Faulkner I wanted to share it with all of you.

"...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."


message 1732: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5543 comments Mod
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.


Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 178 comments Diane wrote: "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.)


message 1734: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5543 comments Mod
Thanks, I'll look for that one.


message 1737: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
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.

Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys


message 1738: by penneminreads (new)

penneminreads 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 picking up in any spare minute I've got to continue reading. Can't believe I just let it sit on my to-read list for so long!


message 1739: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
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.


message 1740: by Angela M (new)

Angela M I also thought Station Eleven was an excellent read. Glad you're enjoying it Astrid.


message 1741: by penneminreads (new)

penneminreads Angela M wrote: "I also thought Station Eleven was an excellent read. Glad you're enjoying it Astrid."

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 :)


message 1742: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
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.


message 1743: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments These are all great reading ideas! I've been stuck just a bit re-reading a couple of novels for bookclub, but it's my own fault as they were both my selection! A Man Called Ove and City of Thieves are books you've likely already read, but in the outchance that they are not, I gave both of them five stars!

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.


message 1744: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments Tom, I just read Nocturnes a few months back, and I must say John Connolly "creeps" me out and gives me the "shivers" on a regular basis. I have been reading his books in publication order, and Nocturnes was a nice change of pace from his Charlie Parker series. 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. I am generally sanguine about these things, but that was too much. I brushed it with my book & sent it flying across the room, but got very little sleep. At this point, I adopted my "no John Connolly at bedtime" policy.


message 1746: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (last edited Dec 05, 2015 09:47PM) (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
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.


message 1747: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments Tom wrote: "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 t..."

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.


message 1750: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Diane S., aren't the little drawings and stories adorable? Tolkien was a sweet dad!


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