On the Southern Literary Trail discussion
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General Bookishness
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Retired: What are you reading?


My review https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Oh my! May I recommend Vendela Vida's novel entitled The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty? Its format is quirky - she uses second person format for the entire book... "when you wake up and realize there's no coffee, your mild hangover takes on epic proportions. You go to check your travel case only to remember, foggily, that you have no travel case. Your luggage and wallet are gone, stolen by that guy that snuck up behind you at the check-in desk" (this is not a quote from the book, just silly me showing how she used second person).
Okay, the use of "you" was too much for some readers, but I totally rolled with it. It is incredibly clever, not just a gimmick, because in the story, the woman who has lost her passport to a thief ends up snagging another passport from essentially a LOST AND FOUND bin at the police station. The woman (whose name is never revealed - just like in Invisible Man )switches identity, and using the "you" makes her climb in and sort of become you, the reader, too.
Loved it.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Grissom’s debut - The Kitchen House - became a best seller; this book follows one of the characters in the first book over several decades. There is a good story idea here, a runaway slave who passes for white and builds a successful life. There are a number of twists and turn in the plot and I was caught up in the story and wanted to know how the characters would fare. However, Grissom uses multiple narrators and the result is that there is less cohesion in the story-telling. In summary, it’s a good story and kept me turning pages, but the writing fell short.
Full Review HERE

Yes, I did ... helped with the back story, but I think people could easily read & enjoy GOE without reading TKH first.

I just finished the audiobook version of The Summer Before the War. While it started off a bit slowly, it soon picked up the pace to the point where I didn't want to turn it off. This is easy five-star read for me. It's also a timely selection as Memorial Day is celebrated in the U.S.A. this weekend.
My review is here.
My review is here.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Last night I finished Absalom's Daughters: A Novel by Suzanne Feldman. This gender-bending look at one of Faulkner's classics told in the form of of a road trip taken through the Deep South by two sisters, one black and one white, This is not the story I expected it to be. Instead, it is something unique, something magical. My review is here.



Most of you here have read it, but for those who have not it is at its essence a story of two adult brothers, One damaged and the younger trying to save him. It reminds me a bit of the movie A River Runs Through It. You would probably call this a guy book but the love that younger brother has is as tender as anything I've ever read. Finally, Im starting Albert!

My experience with Gatsby comes from having it imposed on me twice in high school. I could probably benefit from rereading it in a discussion setting. The Hummingbird's Daughter is an amazing book. I'd also like to read The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, mainly because so many people have gone to such great lengths to ban it.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Sherman Alexie- recommended to me by both my parents. Rarely do they agree on books, so I decided to start with this one.
Hummingbird's Daughter- May read in another group, I'd like to finish by the end of the long weekend. I recently read another of Urrea's books, and he is a gifted author. Parts of his books take place in the southwest, mainly Mexico, so on a technicality, you can label his works southern.




Finished Truly Madly Guilty

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...






Finished People Who Knew Me

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I have this one too, Sue, but haven't got to it yet. I'm glad to know you liked it, as that is a pretty good indicator that I will as well.


Compton writes a gritty, no-holds-barred tale of a man struggling to do what is right. Best known for his short stories, this is Compton’s first full-length novel. His ability with the short-story format shows. There are several vignettes that would make great short stories, but he fails to adequately weave them together.
Full Review HERE

Diane wrote: "I have this one too, Sue, but haven't got to it yet. I'm glad to know you liked it, as that is a pretty good indicator that I will as well."
Angela M wrote: "Sue , thanks. Sounds like one is like ."
Diane, Angela and Jane, it is long but worth the investment of time. There is a major focus on women and the changing roles they face in the world too.
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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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Barbara Vine was a Pen Name that Ruth Rendell used when writing her darker novels. I have always wanted to read A Dark-Adapted Eye. Valente wrote In the Night Garden, a very interesting collection of interrelated stories. She also writes the The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland series.