On the Southern Literary Trail discussion

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General Bookishness > Retired: What are you reading?

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message 3001: by Cassie (new)

Cassie Selleck (cdselleck) | 29 comments I'm about to graduate from Goddard college with the BFA in creative writing, and my chosen seem of study was southern women writers. During that time I got hooked on Elizabeth Spencer and Lee Smith. The two that stand out to me were Spencer's Voice at the Back Door and Smith's Oral History. Neither our new books, but I was surprised that I had missed them over the years.


message 3002: by Janie (new)

Janie Watts | 43 comments Cassie, they are both such accomplished writers. At the Southern Literature Conference held in Chattanooga, held every other year, readers have the opportunity to meet them. My favorite Spencer story is "Light in the Piazza."


message 3005: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
I just started rereading A Clockwork Orange for the first time in over forty year. In the preface Burgess reveals that the book was originally written with 21 chapters but the American publisher cut the final chapter to give it a more fatalistic ending. The American ending is also what Stanley Kubrick chose for the movie version. It wasn't until 1986 that the final chapter was restored and American readers were able to read the book as Burgess intended. So far it's vedy horrorshow!
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess



message 3006: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5544 comments Mod
I read Clockwork Orange as a young adult, and was horrified. It would be interesting to see what my reaction would be at this point in my life. I'll let you be my "canary in the coal mine" this time around.


message 3007: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
Is that the one that you have to figure out the language when reading?


message 3008: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Laura wrote: "Is that the one that you have to figure out the language when reading?"

It is. I think the edition I read back in the 70s had a glossary but this one doesn't. I'm mainly listening to it on audio and I'm not finding it difficult to follow along. Out of curiosity, I googled to see if there was a glossary online and there are bunches of them.


message 3009: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5544 comments Mod
Yes, Laura, and I didn't have a whole lot of patience with it 40 years ago, probably even less now.


message 3010: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Diane wrote: "Yes, Laura, and I didn't have a whole lot of patience with it 40 years ago, probably even less now."

Oddly enough, the audio version may be a lot easier than actually reading it.


message 3011: by Connie (new)

Connie  G (connie_g) | 655 comments I read "The Clockwork Orange" a few years ago, and used a language glossary for a few chapters. Then it seemed to flow. I can't say I "liked" the book, but I found it fascinating. I saw the movie back in the 1970s with absolutely no idea what it was about. What a shock!!


message 3012: by Jane (new)

Jane | 779 comments I remember people walking out of that movie but they seemed to spend most of the early 70 s walking and stomping out of movies back then in my town


message 3013: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments Connie wrote: "I read "The Clockwork Orange" a few years ago, and used a language glossary for a few chapters. Then it seemed to flow. I can't say I "liked" the book, but I found it fascinating. I saw the movie b..."

I've never read the book but did see the film on a big screen back on it's initial release in the 70s. Wow. Put me off ever wanting to read it, to tell you the truth. I know there are all sorts of messages that I missed for all the shock in the film but I just can't stand the thought of reading it and having some of those visuals return!


message 3014: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Connie wrote: "I read " I can't say I "liked" the book, but I found it fascinating..."

It's definitely one that sparks a lot of conversation. It's interesting that in the preface, Burgess admits that it wasn't his favorite work.


message 3015: by Diane S ☔ (new)

Diane S ☔ Clockwork orange was assigned reading in my high school, junior year. So intense. Nowadays parent's would probably be outraged if that was assigned.


message 3016: by Carol (new)

Carol (carolfromnc) I would have been outraged if I had been forced to read it for school, and I graduated from ugh school in '79. The movie still haunts me. I will not read the book, not that there's anything wrong of course with choosing otherwise.


message 3017: by Karen (last edited Aug 18, 2016 09:13PM) (new)

Karen | 28 comments The Death of Sweet MisterThe Death of Sweet Mister] I just finished reading The Death of Sweet Mister. Hete is my review


message 3018: by Karen (new)

Karen | 28 comments I just finished reading The Death of Sweet Mister by Daniel Woodrell. My review is hereThe Death of Sweet Mister


message 3019: by Brina (last edited Aug 15, 2016 06:40AM) (new)

Brina After reading Sweet Mister, I am decompressing with a baseball book. Reading Hank Greenberg, Hero of Heroes by John Rosengren


message 3020: by Guy (new)

Guy Austin | 26 comments Brina wrote: "After reading Sweet Mister, I am decompressing with a baseball book. Reading Hank Greenberg, Heronof Heroes by John Rosengren"

Baseball - Yeah! would love to know who this is. Big fan of the sport, its history and Hank Greenberg.


message 3021: by Brina (new)

Brina Author John Rosengren. Also wrote book on Marichel-Roseboro fight. So far this book is interesting. I chose it because of Greenberg the man, not necessarily Greenberg the ball player. I am up to where he joined the army.


message 3022: by Kim (new)

Kim (kim1974) | 108 comments I am currently reading THE RETURN by Dinah McCall (also known as Sharon Sala)


message 3023: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
I just finished Hard Red Spring, a historical novel spanning 100 years of Guatemalan history and U.S. involvement. Very well researched but painfull to read. Here is my review.
Hard Red Spring by Kelly Kerney


message 3024: by Brina (new)

Brina Does it mention El Salvador? If it does then it is a must read for me.


message 3026: by Connie (new)

Connie  G (connie_g) | 655 comments I loved David McCullough's The Wright Brothers. Here's my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 3027: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Brina wrote: "Does it mention El Salvador? If it does then it is a must read for me."

Actually, it doesn't. El Salvador's troubles were more in the 1970s.


message 3028: by Brina (last edited Aug 17, 2016 05:52AM) (new)

Brina Tom, I reserved the book, just couldn't exist. Meanwhile, I am reading The Poisonwood Bible.


message 3029: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Rats! Just finished up Barkskins and was almost as disappointed in it as I was in The Luminaries, Fates and Furies, and LaRose.

They are all big, fat books that included far too much minutia and either way too many characters for me to care about or included far too many years in their reach. I did love the big fatties from Donna Tartt and Anthony Doerr, so it really isn't my attention span that...OH LOOK, A SQUIRREL! Okay, maybe it is me.

On a happy note, I'm totally enjoying being sad and full of dread with our Daniel Woodrell group read, The Death of Sweet Mister, especially since I've caught a few sentences that tie in two of his other books. I'm also happily about to fire up the audio version of an excellent and quirky novel that I read earlier this year. By happenstance, it was nominated by one of my real world book clubs, so yippee - I get to enjoy The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty again!

Lastly, I've been doing some YA stuff, despite my general intolerance for it, so my kid and I can yak about the books together. The best part is, that he started a junior high book club this summer with my help, and their two meetings have been fantastic. Since the Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children movie is coming out in late September, my son picked that for the club to read. They're going to dress in vintage looking clothes from Goodwill and have high tea for the discussion and will all go see the movie together when it debuts. Yeah, it is over the top, but for his friends who do not like to read much, making every book club discussion into a party makes reading fun AND social.

On the flip side of book club, my husband is the only dude in our neighborhood club...we have decided to start offering a lot of BEER and porkrinds to boost male participation. ;)

That's my reading update! LOVE seeing what y'all are up to!


message 3030: by Brina (new)

Brina Leanne- I know. I just eliminated 2 tomes from books I had originally wanted to read this month. Not enough time or energy to get them read. Hmm how to boost male participation? I'm trying to revitalize the baseball book club here on goodreads and all I can think of is read an occasional sports themed book. My dad is in a book club and I know they do offer food because they meet once a month in a restaurant. Hope those ideas help.


message 3031: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Brina wrote: "Leanne- I know. I just eliminated 2 tomes from books I had originally wanted to read this month. Not enough time or energy to get them read. Hmm how to boost male participation? I'm trying to revit..."

A sports book might help, good idea! We did have two husbands stay at the last meeting, even though they hadn't read the book. I think having Joe go over to yak with them helped, plus the book was set in Chechnya during the two early 2000s, and they got into our discussion about Putin and pipelines. We are also going to do a progressive dinner in November based on MO Walsh's book set in an upscale Baton Rouge neighborhood...I think that'll draw them, but poor Joe wants fellow guy readers now!

In general, its seems like most real world book clubs are for chick lit, and half the women don't even read the choice. I'm so glad to have a reading husband and a reading son!


message 3032: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5544 comments Mod
There would be a mutiny in both my book clubs if we tried to include husbands. We actually enjoy not having to cater to them, and love having our own thing without having to compromise either our reading tastes or food and wine choices. Men have a way of trying to take over and direct anything they're involved in, at least in my generation.


message 3033: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Diane wrote: "Men have a way of trying to take over and direct anything they're involved in, at least in my generation. "

Nasty creatures, men! Actually, if you just give us a beer, set us in front of the TV and put the game on we'll be fine for hours.


message 3034: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
FYI: The author Q&A board for next month's Post-80 selection, Last Ride to Graceland is up and ready for you to post your questions. I've advised Kim that it is up to her whether she wants to wait until September to start answering questions or to do so as they come in.


message 3035: by Brina (new)

Brina Tom actually that's what I'd rather do myself. So I listen to games on the radio and read at the same time. It's called multitasking


message 3036: by Sara (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 1493 comments Tom wrote: "Diane wrote: "Men have a way of trying to take over and direct anything they're involved in, at least in my generation. "

Nasty creatures, men! Actually, if you just give us a beer, set us in fron..."


lol. I'm gonna try that, Tom.
Seriously, we had one guy at my last "real life" book club and he was a treat. I found that he always brought a different perspective to the read and saw things I had missed or read them with a different twist. When I moved and left the club behind, he was one of the things I most missed. If there had been GR back then, I would have been begging him to read with me online.


message 3037: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments My husband and son like reading and discussing books with me. My first husband was neither a reader nor a pet lover and that ended up being a non-starter for me aside from the other aspects that emerged that broke us up. Once I began dating, I required a reader and pet lover as a starting point...personality traits worked in our favor thereafter and we are in our 35th year together. I read so much, and it is so lovely to read together while drinking coffee and holding hands in a café.


message 3038: by Brina (new)

Brina I feel like gloating. My youngest daughter who is going into kindergarten won our library's preschool summer reading program she won a Lego desk set. We are going tomorrow to pick it up. And I have waiting for me A Covenant With Death that Leanne, Kirk, and Laura recommended. I look forward to reading it over the weekend.


message 3039: by Angela M (new)

Angela M I finished The Underground Railroad. 3.5 stars rounded up to four . My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


message 3040: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Brina wrote: "I have waiting for me A Covenant With Death that Leanne, Kirk, and Laura recommended. "

Please tell me you are talking about a book. I'd hate to think that this crew is now dabbling in the dark arts.


message 3041: by Laura, "The Tall Woman" (new)

Laura | 2848 comments Mod
Ok Tom that just made me laugh! That's a big Thank You from Tennessee!!!


message 3042: by Brina (last edited Aug 17, 2016 02:12PM) (new)

Brina Lol yes a book by Stephen Becker. Supposed to be TKAM of the Southwest written in 1964. I have been looking forward to this one.


message 3044: by Diane S ☔ (new)

Diane S ☔ Wouldn't that be hoodoo or voodoo?


message 3045: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Angela M wrote: "Finished The Invisible Life of Ivan Isaenko. 5 stars . My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show..."

This sounds good!


message 3046: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Tom wrote: "Brina wrote: "I have waiting for me A Covenant With Death that Leanne, Kirk, and Laura recommended. "

Please tell me you are talking about a book. I'd hate to think that this crew is now dabbling ..."


Snorting over here, laughing!! And yes, Diane S - we are totally introducing her to voodoo. I've got a gator foot, a purple candle, and some stuff for her to use in her first voodoo doll.
Question is: do we make her eat a live chicken?
Answer (from Steel Magnolias): not on her first visit!

LOL!!!!!


message 3047: by Angela M (new)

Angela M LeAnne , I really thought so ! Ivan is an unforgettable character.


message 3048: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Angela M wrote: "LeAnne , I really thought so ! Ivan is an unforgettable character."

I've got this backlog of really good books in physical form that keep falling to the edge of my plate, time-wise. I'm going to see if the library apps have this on audio. Seriously, I used to think audio books were for commuters and old farts, but man - you can actually accomplish at least mindless tasks and "read" at the same time!


message 3049: by Angela M (new)

Angela M I haven't been able to get into audiobooks. It's this weird feeling of having someone read to me . Tried one and it just didn't work for me . I keep thinking I'll try again sometime.


message 3050: by Kirk (new)

Kirk Smith | 101 comments Tom's off the hook! Haha! You'all remind me to never dabble. EVER Lol


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