On the Southern Literary Trail discussion

note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
1266 views
General Bookishness > Retired: What are you reading?

Comments Showing 3,101-3,150 of 5,490 (5490 new)    post a comment »

message 3101: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Brina wrote: "I'm curious what you end up picking. Ooh I forgot Erik Larson-- his history books that are officially categorized as historical fiction. Guys love those."

Yeah, too bad Devil in the White City is so old...none of his others can compare. One of the women had suggested The Orchardist or My Sunshine Awaywhich have male protags. I loved Sunshine... will keep looking


message 3102: by Brina (new)

Brina Diane I wasn't going to read Tom's mod choice but you sold me on the food and that I've been slightly obsessed with road trip books. Hopefully the library has a copy.


message 3103: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Diane wrote: "LeAnne, Tom's MOD choice for September is a great one for a discussion of what it means to be southern. I can't imagine anyone not liking it. And even though it's not a novel, but essays, there's l..."
We have had a copy on our bookshelf for years, but it never drew me. The hub has read it - will see what he thinks. THANKS!!!


message 3105: by Deirdre (new)

Deirdre (deirdre_reviewer) | 13 comments Tom wrote: "LeAnne wrote: "Y'all Im looking for a few suggestions for One of my book clubs. This is the one that I started last December and have tried to make it a coed club for our neighborhood. We did City ..."

Mary Doria Russell's "the Sparrow" was a hard sell in my book club - they don't like science fiction - but the moral implications of the story prompted a good discussion. It was one of more disturbing books I've read. Still sticks with me.


message 3106: by Kim (new)

Kim (kim1974) | 108 comments I am currently reading RETURN TO TAYLOR'S CROSSING by JANIE DEMPSEY WATTS
got it in the mail this morning


message 3107: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 496 comments LeAnne wrote: "Y'all Im looking for a few suggestions for One of my book clubs. This is the one that I started last December and have tried to make it a coed club for our neighborhood. We did City of Thieves, Man..."

A local university hosts a book discussion group and it attracts several men. Here are some of the titles that had a good response from both genders:

True Grit by Charles Portis
The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach
Out of Africa by Isak Dinnesen (it is NOT the movie)
Shotgun Lovesongs by Nickolas Butler
A River Runs Through It and Other Stories by Norman Maclean
For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

Have fun!


message 3108: by Deirdre (new)

Deirdre (deirdre_reviewer) | 13 comments Book Concierge wrote: "LeAnne wrote: "Y'all Im looking for a few suggestions for One of my book clubs. This is the one that I started last December and have tried to make it a coed club for our neighborhood. We did City ..."

Many men prefer non-fiction. There's great choices: "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough or any of McCullough's excellent histories; "Dead Wake" by Eric Larson, Robert Morgan's "Boone" or "Lions of the West."


message 3109: by Brina (new)

Brina My dad's group has read Dead Wake, The Wright Brothers, and Boys in the Boat. They also enjoyed a few books by Sherman Alexie.


message 3110: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Thanks!!


message 3112: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Deirdre wrote: "Mary Doria Russell's "the Sparrow" was a hard sell in my book club - they don't like science fiction - but the moral implications of the story prompted a good discussion. It was one of more disturbing books I've read. Still sticks with me. "

That is the problem with Russell and I actually had a chance to tell her that last year. The Sparrow gets "I don't like science fiction," Doc gets "I don't read westerns." A Thread of Grace will get you "I don't do war stories."

I put off reading The Sparrow for 10 years because the description didn't thrill me. Now for penance I am doomed to wander through eternity trying fruitlessly to get people to read this excellent book.


message 3113: by Deirdre (new)

Deirdre (deirdre_reviewer) | 13 comments Tom wrote: "Deirdre wrote: "Mary Doria Russell's "the Sparrow" was a hard sell in my book club - they don't like science fiction - but the moral implications of the story prompted a good discussion. It was one..."

Keep trying. We've read a lot of things in my book club that I would never have chosen. Most are pleasant surprises.


message 3114: by Angela M (new)

Angela M Tom , I don't want you to be doomed for eternity so I'm adding The Sparrow to my tbr! Not sure when I'll get to it though .


message 3115: by Angela M (new)

Angela M Ha - it was already on there !


message 3116: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments I loved The Sparrow. It sticks with me. I keep imagining Edward James Olmos as the priest, although when I first read it, I was younger. She is a terrific writer, but some books come to us when we are meant to read them, and they do not work for us until we are ready for them. Watership Down was like that for me, as were the LOTR books.


message 3117: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments He was younger, I meant. I WAS younger, also, but that was not relevant.

I blame that glitch on the fact that I am reading my second book in 36 hours in which author kills good dogs. I do not like that, I do not like it at all. It puts me in a very bad space.


message 3119: by Sara (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 1493 comments Tom, I found a list of books I wanted to read that I had put on a spreadsheet back in 1998. I checked it to see how many of the books there I had subsequently read. The Sparrow was on it, still unread. So, should I prepare for a curse?


message 3120: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Sara wrote: "Tom, I found a list of books I wanted to read that I had put on a spreadsheet back in 1998. I checked it to see how many of the books there I had subsequently read. The Sparrow was on it, still unread."

There's only one thing that can save you now. You know what it is.


message 3121: by Sara (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 1493 comments lol. Off to order it!


message 3122: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
Sara wrote: "lol. Off to order it!"

*GRIN*


message 3123: by Brina (new)

Brina In the Land of Dreamy Dreams. Thank you, Dawn!! Got from the library today along with...drumroll... Rae Meadows book. I am set for the week.


message 3125: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 496 comments A Deadly Cliché (A Books by the Bay Mystery #2) by Ellery Adams A Deadly Cliché – Ellery Adams – 3***
I like this series. I like Olivia’s independence and “get on with it” attitude. Her relationships with the town’s residents are developing nicely in this second installment. She is definitely beginning to open up to the possibility of love and affection in her life. I thought the reveal was a little over-the-top, but I was still sufficiently entertained. I’ll keep reading this series.
Full Review HERE


message 3126: by Brina (new)

Brina I finished A Covenant With Death by Stephen Becker. Thank you to those here who recommended it as it really is a hidden gem of a book.


message 3128: by Angela M (new)

Angela M I finished The Muse. 3 stars . My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show....


message 3129: by LA (new)

LA | 1333 comments Brina wrote: "I finished A Covenant With Death by Stephen Becker. Thank you to those here who recommended it as it really is a hidden gem of a book."

And we didn't even make you eat a live chicken..


message 3130: by LA (last edited Aug 29, 2016 08:05AM) (new)

LA | 1333 comments This week is starting well, book-wise! I Will Send Rain is beginning really well, with snake-oil styled desperation to end a months long drought and the kind of cabin fever that goes with being snowed in, rained in, or in this case, encrusted with dust. I'm reading with a small posse of friends and holding a hardback cover in my hands. Super enjoyable.

For my audiobook, I'm revisiting a book I totally love. Today, you may not know, is the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall. While it took several days for the levees to breach and the massive tsunamis of water to inundate homes in New Orleans, the deaths had already begun their foul tally on the coast. Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital is written by a Pulitzer-winning writer, and while it is of course meticulously researched and factual, this thing reads like something that William Gay might write.

What most of y'all probably do not know is that one of our hospitals - a wonderful hospital, actually, where both my children were born - went utterly haywire. While the staff at other hospitals in very similar situations was able to save nearly every patient, at Memorial, a doctor and her nurses injected lethal doses of meds into patients and then evacuated, leaving the bodies to decompose. Was this mercy killing on a grand scale? Was it murder? The author objectively reports the facts in a way that allows the reader to make that decision, but does so in a style that feels like fiction...maybe even horror.

I am rereading this book as a simple little homage to the thousands of family members who lost somebody they loved.


message 3131: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
LeAnne wrote: "For my audiobook, I'm revisiting a book I totally love. Today, you may not know, is the anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall. While it took several days for the levees to breach and the massive tsunamis of water to inundate homes in New Orleans, the deaths had already begun their foul tally on the coast. Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital is written by a Pulitzer-winning writer, and while it is of course meticulously researched and factual, this thing reads like something that William Gay might write. ."

I have that audiobook and really need to listen to it. I feel very silly now that I decided to start listening to My Sister's Grave, another GR group's selection.

By the way, I just finished The Code of the Woosters. I'm convinced that P.G. Wodehouse is the funniest author who ever drew a breath.
Five Days at Memorial Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital by Sheri Fink My Sister's Grave (Tracy Crosswhite, #1) by Robert Dugoni The Code of the Woosters by P.G. Wodehouse


message 3132: by Diane, "Miss Scarlett" (new)

Diane Barnes | 5544 comments Mod
I love Wodehouse. He never gets old.


message 3133: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments I think some Wodehouse will be in my future. I'm reading wonderful things, but there has been pretty uniform heartbreak. So some well place humor would be a good thing.

The Land Breakers is turning out to be phenomenal.


message 3134: by Brina (new)

Brina I also am reading I Will Bring Rain. It's a nice story so far but not omg special. The book has the distinction of being read right after House of the Spirits which is my favorite book ever, so it is not the book's fault. This week I also how to finish Another Brooklyn and start Negroland by Margo Jefferson. Next up is one of the group reads for this group either Rick Bragg or Robert McCammon but haven't figured out which one first.


message 3136: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments I adore Wodehouse. Bought a whole slew of omnibus editions in England to cheer my husband up while we lived there, he had a tough job with exceedingly unpleasant co-workers for a while, and a dose of P.G. Before bed gave him a more restful night.


message 3137: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments Kim wrote: "I adore Wodehouse. Bought a whole slew of omnibus editions in England to cheer my husband up while we lived there, he had a tough job with exceedingly unpleasant co-workers for a while, and a dose ..."

Sounds good. I should key him up on my kindle for some last minute late night light reading. Thanks for the idea!


message 3138: by Kim (new)

Kim Kaso | 602 comments I save my English village books, or re-reads of some favorite authors, for lights out just falling asleep reading. Better dreams, on the whole. Also, I often read poetry before bed. My daughter used to climb into bed with me after all her stories & songs, bit of a night owl as a child. I would read to her from whatever poetry I was reading, she got Little Giddings and Burnt Norton one series of nights when her dad was working on Crete while we were living in England. She may have gotten some Growltiger and Jellicle cats as well as Prufrock as I was re-reading a lot of Eliot then.


message 3139: by Book Concierge (new)

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 496 comments It's not Southern Lit, but it has that Southern Gothic "feel" to it...

Once Upon a River by Bonnie Jo Campbell Once Upon a River – Bonnie Jo Campbell – 3***
I hardly know what to write about this novel. Very early on I was disturbed by Margo and the adults around her. I wanted to hug her and keep her safe and warm. And then I wanted to shake her till her teeth rattled. And yet … she is a compelling character and I couldn’t just turn away from her. Still, this is no Huckleberry Finn. Twain’s central character had a certain innocence about him, which Margo seems to lack.
Full Review HERE


message 3141: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments Kim wrote: "I save my English village books, or re-reads of some favorite authors, for lights out just falling asleep reading. Better dreams, on the whole. Also, I often read poetry before bed. My daughter use..."

The poetry is good too. I'm currently reading Anne Sexton, though--not a late night poet. I should pull out my complete Robert Frost and read more of that. I seem to have too many heavy books lately.


message 3143: by Brina (new)

Brina Angela I want to read that book. It looks interesting. I just finished Another Brooklyn.


message 3144: by Angela M (new)

Angela M Brina , it's definitely worth reading . I also loved Another Brooklyn.


message 3145: by Brina (new)

Brina I am reading it as a treat after my holidays are over. This month I am doubling up on sept/October group reads.


message 3146: by Angela M (new)

Angela M I have to get caught up on some advance copies so I can get back to joining in group reads .


message 3147: by Sue (new)

Sue | 760 comments Angela M wrote: "I have to get caught up on some advance copies so I can get back to joining in group reads ."

I'm so far behind that I never get caught up. I'm trying to stay somewhat even on the ARCs but I always have so many good ones to read. Then I squeeze a few group reads in around them. So I always have at least a few books going. (That's one reason the Wodehouse is sounding good!)


message 3148: by Brina (new)

Brina I read one book at a time- no kindle or audio or arcs. I have concentrated on group reads for a few groups lately that any purely pleasure reads have been put on the back burner. I am putting the month of October aside for myself.


message 3149: by Angela M (new)

Angela M Sue, I need to fit some in because I'll never get caught up either ! I just can't read more than one book at a time . I've tried but I just put one aside and keep reading the one I'm liking most .


message 3150: by Tom, "Big Daddy" (new)

Tom Mathews | 3383 comments Mod
I have long wanted to read Last Bus to Woodstock, the first book in the series that brought us the Inspector Morse TV series. Sometimes the reward doesn't justify the wait. Here is my review.
Last Bus to Woodstock (Inspector Morse, #1) by Colin Dexter


back to top
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.