WHAT ARE YOU READING? - Part 6

This is a continuation of the topic WHAT ARE YOU READING? - Part 5.

TalkClub Read 2023

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WHAT ARE YOU READING? - Part 6

1AnnieMod
Aug 21, 5:16 pm

The old topic is getting too long so time to move to a new one.

Stop by, grab a beverage and tell us what you are reading (or had been reading or plan to be reading) :)

2labfs39
Aug 21, 5:28 pm

Today I started Killers of the Flower Moon and got swept up in the story. I know nothing about the Osage murders, so it's all new to me.

3jjmcgaffey
Aug 22, 3:27 am

Just finished an ER book, No Small Change by Annie Cook. It was...odd. I have a lot of complaints about it; the author is incredibly heavy-handed - in signaling the romance, in blaming actions and events on menopause, in using magic as the solution for everyone's problems, and the tired old trope of "oh, they're hurt, I love them" to get her protagonists out of their ruts. And yet. I had things to do today and I didn't get them done because I wanted to keep reading. The characters are vivid and complex and fascinating, the setting is nicely depicted (including that this is just post-pandemic, there are a lot of references to the way that upended people's lives), and even with the heavy-handedness it was still a great story and some fascinating interactions. There's a sequel (or will be soon) and I want to read it. Oh, yeah, looks like this was her first book - I _definitely_ want to keep reading her.

4lilisin
Aug 22, 4:48 am

Since my last update I finished the following three books.

Cédric Gras : Alpinistes de Mao (Mao's Alpinists)
Jules Verne : Autour de la lune (Round the Moon)
Nella Larsen : Passing

And as of the moment I'm completely enraptured by Dracula. I can't put it down!

5ELiz_M
Aug 22, 8:07 am

I have been stuck in three (four if you count my year-long read of Clarissa) for what seems like forever: The Ground Beneath Her Feet, which I'm enjoying but it can't be read quickly; Is Just a Movie, which was delightful at first, but is now meandering and I thought it was half the length it actually is; and therefore have mostly halted Sometimes a Great Notion which is also seems wordy and meandering.....

6dianelouise100
Edited: Aug 22, 10:59 am

I have finished This Other Eden and find it to be too beautiful a book to resist going back to the beginning to reread for a deeper appreciation of language and craft. This short novel says so much about the human spirit.

So I’m rereading This Other Eden and hoping to finish Faulkner’s The Mansion this week as well.

7torontoc
Aug 22, 9:31 pm

I am really loving my read of Tom Lake

8dchaikin
Aug 22, 11:25 pm

I finished Fatelessness today. My brain is still processing, and not getting anywhere. But it's been awhile since I really got into a book. I'll start The Mansion by William Faulkner next.

Also, I'm listening to A Spell of Good Things (which is good, but not exciting, if that makes sense), and working through a collection Rainer Maria Rilkes poetry and prose, called Ahead of All Parting (which I'm finding a little bewildering).

9jjmcgaffey
Aug 23, 12:27 am

Finally got to A Little Too Familiar, which is just as wonderful as I was promised - cozy paranormal romance, with found family on multiple levels. It does have a few detailed sex scenes, but the focus is much more on their relationship(s) and on the characters as people. Love it, immediately got on the library waitlist for the second book (which came out last week, fortunately). There's a third - probably next year - I'll get on that waitlist a lot sooner.

10cindydavid4
Aug 23, 9:24 pm

Finished hogfather for the discwork Death books challenge. I loved the begining and Sir terry as always loves his puns, Towards the middle thing just get to convuluted, which is typical of his books. Didnt mind when I first read but now its all too much. But the ending makes up for it all. giving it 4*

Finished orwells roses Loved this book wonderful look at an orwell you wont recognize and interesting digressions into roses as art as commerce, as patterns, as protest Sassy Lassy wrote an excellent review which says what I want to say much better than I can, so with her permission, here it is

"It's somehow comforting to discover that George Orwell loved roses. This man, with one of the bleakest perspectives on his times and the future, found solace in that most elemental of human activities, cultivating a garden, the solution preferred by another philosopher in another turbulent age.

In April, 1936, Orwell moved to a small rented cottage in Wallington, one with a tin roof, lacking gas, electricity, and indoor toilet. While fairly standard rural living for the times, it was not exactly easy living. He immediately planted a garden, one focussed mainly on food, but he also planted roses; not an obvious choice given the circumstances. Later there would be goats.

Gardens are full of life and death, but also of hope. This is the influence on Orwell and his writings Solnit examines in these essays.

At first they seem to meander, but then suddenly they return to the subject, and everything falls into place. How else does Ralph Lauren's 1980s insistence on chintz and roses morph into a discussion of the imperial passion for importing the products of empire, and then connect to Jamaica Kincaid and her visceral reaction to the colonisation of her Antigua home? Solnit suggests The Road to Wigan Pier provides the parallel and the answer, with Orwell saying You have got to choose between liberating India and having extra sugar. Which do you prefer?

Another essay. "In the Rose Factory", quotes Orwell on coal, saying It is only very rarely, when I make a great mental effort, that I connect this coal with the far-off labor in the mines. Solnit visited an actual rose factory in Bogata, describing the process of growing roses for the floral industry, and the condition under which the female workers work, ending with ...it was even more rarely that anyone connected the roses to the invisible toil in these greenhouses. They were the invisible factories of visual pleasure.

Orwell's Roses is not by any means a standard biography. Rather, it is an exploration and a meditation on the writer, his works, and how he is viewed today. Solnit certainly knows her subject and his writing. Her thoughts often provide a different way of viewing them; ideas that definitely inspire another look at Orwell.

As for those roses he planted, they were still there at the cottage when Solnit visited in 2016."

highly recommended 5*

11japaul22
Aug 24, 8:55 am

I'm starting two new books. Homestead by Melinda Moustakis which is a first novel about homesteading in Alaska in the 1950s. For nonfiction, I'm trying Nine Black Robes by Joan Biskupic, which is about the Supreme Court's recent swing to the right and the consequences. I expect it to be interesting but upsetting.

12arubabookwoman
Aug 24, 10:26 am

>11 japaul22: I read Nine Black Robes a month or so ago. It was excellent!

13japaul22
Aug 24, 10:52 am

>12 arubabookwoman: I think I put it on hold at my library after you recommended on the "has anyone read?" thread when I asked about Supreme Court reading. Looking forward to it!

14Nickelini
Aug 24, 12:16 pm

I’m not reading much but like to see what others here are up to

15avaland
Aug 24, 4:13 pm

Finishing up an "old" favorite: Kate Grenville's The Idea of Perfection, which I first read back in 2003. So funny and yet...

16qebo
Aug 24, 6:30 pm

Dusted off The Soul of an Octopus a month ago; it had been sitting around for years, and unexpectedly my RL book group wanted a break from depressing social issues so it was just the right thing. Then Other Minds, also sitting around for years, helpfully filled in some gaps. Just started Monarchs of the Sea about cephalopod evolution; this one I just acquired.

17labfs39
Aug 24, 8:51 pm

I finished Killers of the Flower Moon, my second excellent nonfiction read in a row. I'll still listening to (and enjoying) The Color of Water, but need to find a new paper book to start. So many delightful options calling my name!

18cindydavid4
Aug 24, 10:24 pm

reading the man who walked through walls and the napolean of Notting Hill both are really funny satires on politics

19JHemlock
Edited: Aug 25, 6:21 am

>17 labfs39: I read The Wager last month. What a ride that was. I understand that Scorcese and Decaprio are teaming up for a film version of that as well.

20JHemlock
Aug 25, 6:25 am

Right now I am finishing up The Warrior With Broken Wings by Thorsten Brandl It is not as engaging as Palladium but still a great story.

21labfs39
Aug 25, 4:03 pm

>19 JHemlock: Interesting. I hadn't heard of The Wager, but the next time I'm in the mood for this sort of book, I'll look for it.

Today I started Woman at Point Zero and am already halfway through. Intense.

22bragan
Aug 25, 4:23 pm

I finally finished The Greenlanders and have now started on The Book of Eels by Patrik Svensson. Which is translated from Swedish, so I guess I've got some kind of Scandinavian theme going.

23qebo
Aug 26, 9:13 am

>22 bragan: The Book of Eels
I have this around and was reminded of it when dchaiken reviewed it earlier this year. Fits into my current theme of slimy squishy things in the water so I may get to it. Meanwhile I watched a documentary.

24dchaikin
Aug 26, 9:23 am

>23 qebo: interesting theme. 🙂

>22 bragan: >23 qebo: I enjoyed The Book of Eels. Low key, but has its rewards.

25bragan
Aug 26, 11:09 am

>23 qebo: That is a very specific theme, and probably a perfect book to go with it!

>24 dchaikin: I'm enjoying parts of it more than others, but it's definitely worth a read.

26Alleypat
Aug 26, 12:00 pm

I'm reading Ordinary Monsters by J. M. Miro. Oh, how extremely wonderful! I feel like I'm reading Dickens, Faulkner, and modern lit at the same time. And, it's kinda creepy, especially to be reading right before bed! But I adore it.

27rocketjk
Aug 26, 12:22 pm

I've just finished Three Thirds of a Ghost by Timothy Fuller. This is the third book in Fuller's Jupiter Jones mystery series, a now obscure set that was evidently relatively popular when the books were first published in the early 1940s. In the series' first book, Jupiter Jones, a wise-cracking, over-confident know-it-all, had just graduated from Harvard and got involved in a Thin Man sort of way in helping the police (who of course didn't want his help) solve the murder of a Harvard professor. Jones' saving grace is his ability to laugh at himself and his pretensions. In this third book, Jones by by now is himself teaching literature at his alma mater. I've got bit of a review up on my Club Read thread.

Next up for me will be Ghost Season, a novel by Sudanese-American author Satin Abbas.

28LyndaInOregon
Edited: Aug 31, 6:32 pm

I must not have done anything but read in August -- am ending the month with 16 reads and one DNF.

Standouts this month were Homeland, a collection of Barbara Kingsolver short stories, and the absolutely stunning On the Clock by Emily Guendelsberger, which I raved about upthread.

3.5 stars for
-Hogfather, Terry Pratchett (part of the Discworld challenge)
-Garden Spells, Sarah Addison Allen (a totally unexpected delight from an author I'd never heard of)
-Bloodstream, Tess Gerritson (a medical thriller with an ending I didn't see coming)
-An Otherwise Perfect Plan, Ken Schafer (a YA novel that was an LTER)

I also read all three of Vonda McIntyre's Star Trek movie novelizations, The Wrath of Khan, The Search for Spock, and The Voyage Home

Rounding out the month, in more-or-less descending order of interest...
False Summit, Cam Torrens
The Girls Who Stepped Out of Line, Mari K. Eder
The Summer Place, Jennifer Weiner
The Boleyn King, Laura Andersen
The Cry of Dry Bones, N.T. McQueen
He Was Some Kind of a Man, Roderick McGillis (August selection for my Wish List challenge)
Chocolate on a Stick, Carole Bellacera

29RidgewayGirl
Aug 31, 12:51 pm

I finished The Bee Sting by Paul Murray yesterday and I need to think about it for a few days before I put anything into a review. Trying to work through why he ended the novel where he did.

I'm whole-heartedly loving A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry, to the point of going out and buying another one of his novels before I was halfway through this one.

I've just started Lazy City by Rachel Connelly, which has an interesting start and I'm continuing a slow perusal of Van Gogh and the Avant-Garde: Along the Seine, the catalog from an exhibition I recently visited.

30dchaikin
Aug 31, 3:06 pm

>29 RidgewayGirl: I’m curious about The Bee Sting. I wanted to read Skippy Dies, but haven’t gotten to it. So I thought it might make a nice pairing (if i like The Bee Sting).

31lilisin
Aug 31, 8:07 pm

I've read three more books since my last post.

Shi Dan : Mémoires d'un eunuque dans la cité interdite (Memoirs of a Eunuch in the Forbidden City)
Shinsuke Numata : La Pêche au toc dans le Tôhoku
Bram Stoker : Dracula

Leading to my best reading month so far this year at 6 books, and more importantly, a reading pace of about 50 pages a day. (My reading page average for the year was at 21 pages a day.) I had a difficult first half to the year due to personal life so it feels good to well, feel good again which means wanting to read again.

32dianelouise100
Edited: Sep 3, 8:13 am

I’ve finished Old God’s Time, which I liked a lot. Stream of consciousness narration, strong character development, beautiful writing. Recommended, even though a bit confusing for me because of narrative technique.

I’ve begun Volker Ullrich’s Hitler: Ascent 1889-1939, a biography for the WWII challenge—when I get to the 2nd vol., I’ll actually be reading about the WWII years. I began Ascent yesterday, and am finding it very readable.

33cindydavid4
Sep 1, 4:51 pm

finished the hands of my father and its such a wonderful memoir of a young boy with deaf parents, in the 30s, Despite his frustration at having to interpret the world for them at a very young age, there is so much love between them all. His father was a very wise man, but also angry at the hearing world that treated them so badly (this was in the days when signing was frowned upon; neither family learned how to communicate with their children) This memoir is a tribute to both his parents and was indeed a language of love. 5*

34labfs39
Sep 1, 9:01 pm

I finished Nervous Conditions tonight and am considering what to read next. Maybe The Exploded View by Ivan Vladislavic, or maybe something light after a string of heavy topics.

35dchaikin
Sep 1, 10:03 pm

I finished listening to A Spell of Good Things, and apparently misunderstood the title. But I got very into the book. Next, and with some excitement after recent comments by kjuliff and JoeB1934 on my thread, I'll start listening to Old God's Time by Irish author Sebastian Barry.

36dchaikin
Sep 2, 5:44 pm

I started Entangle Life by (the wonderfully named) Merlin Sheldrake.

37rocketjk
Sep 3, 11:47 am

Greetings all! I'm about 80% through the very good Ghost Season a novel about a village at the crossroads of civil war in Sudan by Sudanese-American author Fatin Abbas.

My pleasure-reading time is about to shrink, however, as this coming week I begin a course at Columbia University via their free seniors' auditing program. I'm taking a class on Latin American History (i.e. South and Central America, rather than Latin culture in the U.S.). I'm guessing there will be plenty of reading. My wife is taking a class on LBGT History. We don't get graded, and it's up to the individual professor the degree to which auditoring students are invited to take part in class discussion and so forth. I don't know what the case will be in my class, but regardless, I feel that there's no point in taking the class if I don't do the reading, too. The syllabus isn't posted yet. I may not find out until the first class on Tuesday. We have a Columbia University ID cards and everything!

38labfs39
Sep 3, 7:57 pm

>37 rocketjk: What a wonderful program, Jerry. I'll follow along with interest to see what is assigned for reading.

39cindydavid4
Sep 3, 8:12 pm

the lost education of horace tate for the RTT September school days theme

40dchaikin
Sep 4, 9:15 am

Glad we have our LT back. Yesterday it was pulled down because of a cyber attack. (There was a notice on fb).

>37 rocketjk: fantastic, Jerry. Enjoy

Yesterday i started Old New York, a 1924 collection of stories by Edith Wharton. The stories all tie into The Age of Innocence.

41labfs39
Sep 4, 9:24 am

I am halfway through The Exploded View and finished the audiobook, The Color of Water. The latter was fantastic.

42qebo
Sep 4, 10:11 am

Finished Patient H. M. a few days ago, and had already lined up American Prometheus as the next audio book. 26 hours, and I'm about 2 hours in.

43dianelouise100
Sep 4, 7:52 pm

I’m about halfway through Pearl by Sian Hughes, so far not too impressed. Where are the promised references to the medieval Pearl by an anonymous contemporary of Chaucer? Hopefully things will pick up in the second half.

44dianeham
Sep 4, 8:44 pm

>43 dianelouise100: I was just considering reading that.

45cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 4, 8:53 pm

Yay we're back!

>37 rocketjk:, >40 dchaikin: (and others who have been reading about racial justice)you both may be very interested in the lost education of Horace Tate Im not finished with it but it is an amazing story, one that has been hidden until til this author ,who was working with Tate, discovered all the files.

46rocketjk
Sep 6, 10:03 am

>45 cindydavid4: Thanks! I will look into that book.

47cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 6, 4:08 pm

a tid bit from the book: principal at a poc school has been promised new text books. when he goes to pick them up, they are the same 20 year old books he used as a kid. apparently the white kids get to use them first then he'd get them. its maddening by itself when it happened in 1949; but knowing that such racism continues to happen now intolerable

48rocketjk
Sep 6, 12:31 pm

I finished the very good Ghost Season by Fatin Abbas, a novel about a small Sudanese village more or less on the front of the civil war that ended up splitting the country in two in 2011. We experience the feared renewal of fighting after a long layoff through the eyes of five disparate but intertwined characters, all of whom are believable and well drawn, as is the book as a whole. You can find a longer review on my Club Read thread.

Next up for me will be another "classics" hole fllled, as I decided to finally read Moll Flanders by Daniel Defoe. However, my pleasure reading will be slowed down by the fact that I've just started auditing a class on Latin American History at Columbia University and will have quite a bit of reading to do for the course. The main textbook will be Early Latin America. A History of Colonial Spanish America and Brazil by James Lockhart and Stuart B. Schwartz, with selected readings excerpted by several other works.

49LyndaInOregon
Sep 7, 10:58 pm

Just finished a beta read of Cam Torrens' third Tyler Zahn book, 'Scorched'. (No touchstone because it hasn't been assigned an ISBN yet.)

50labfs39
Sep 8, 7:29 am

I'm now reading The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue. It's eerily prescient of Covid, but having been published in July 2020, she must have finished writing it prior to the outbreak? How long does it take a book to go to press?

51cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 8, 10:56 am

from NPR "s Donoghue explains in the author's note to her new novel, The Pull of the Stars, she began writing the story in 2018, inspired by the centenary of the Spanish Flu pandemic. Donoghue delivered the final draft to her publishers this past March,(2019) just as a stunned world was taking in the enormity of the coronavirus crisis.

Understandably, her publishers fast-tracked the publication of The Pull of the Stars, which is set in a maternity ward in 1918 in Dublin, a city hollowed out by the flu, World War I and the 1916 Irish Uprising"

52dchaikin
Sep 8, 11:40 am

53dchaikin
Sep 8, 11:41 am

I’ve finally opened a Chaucer. I’m reading an introduction to Troilus and Criseyde. (And I finished Faulkner’s Snopes trilogy)

54labfs39
Sep 8, 12:53 pm

>51 cindydavid4: Wow, it's uncanny how similar the tone of the book is to what happened during covid. Not all the specifics, but the feel.

55japaul22
Sep 8, 2:04 pm

Yes, I read Pull of the Stars a couple of months ago and was also shocked that she wrote it before the pandemic. There are lots of lines about masking, situations with people coughing on crowded buses, comments about ineffectual government responses, etc. that had me in utter disbelief that she wrote it before the pandemic!

56cindydavid4
Sep 8, 2:06 pm

>55 japaul22: I had the same reaction, I knew they had anti mask organiations, but the rest was new to me

57LolaWalser
Sep 8, 3:05 pm

Before Covid, there was SARS:

SARS in Canada

58labfs39
Sep 8, 3:44 pm

>57 LolaWalser: Very true. Parts of the world were struck hard by SARS. I looked up a list of pandemics/epidemics by death toll on Wikipedia, and the influenza of 1918-1920 that Donogue references, was the second deadliest, after the bubonic plague of the 14th century. Covid is fifth after HIV (although that death toll is spread over decades).

59LolaWalser
Sep 8, 4:00 pm

I brought it up in reference to Donoghue. She wasn't prescient; SARS was like a dress rehearsal for Covid here.

60cindydavid4
Sep 8, 4:25 pm

We know she wasnt precient, just amazed how close both events were. weve had so many -bird flu, SARS, Ebola/ and now that people are no longer vaccinating their kids, I suspect polio and measles will have a comback

61cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 9, 12:30 am

Just finished Napoleon of Notting Hill satire written in 1904 and takes place in 1984. The author apparently chose that date from Orwells novel. According to lecture by Dale Ahlquist, President, American Chesterton Society "This was the man who wrote a novel called The Napoleon of Notting Hill, which inspired Michael Collins to lead a movement for Irish Independence." I have no thoughts about this but interested in others reactions

I dont remember which challenge this was for, but Mark recommended it to me This was the authors first book, and I think it shows in repetition and digressions. I did enjoy the humor and satire, but somewhere along the way I got lost, possibly because I didn't pick up on some local references. Glad I read it, id give it a 3.5

62cindydavid4
Sep 9, 1:04 am

how do I find a post? I am looking for the Monthly Author Challenge for September I tried the search bar but it tells me no results.any help would be much appreciated

63AnnieMod
Edited: Sep 9, 1:22 am

>62 cindydavid4: https://www.librarything.com/topic/352136

For that group - just open the group and it will be towards the start of the list if I had been away and had not pinned it yet. Which I just did (waving from London on my way back to the States).

64dianelouise100
Sep 9, 9:09 am

>44 dianeham: I’ve now finished Pearl, which I wound up liking a lot, though not as well as the other three Booker Longlist novels I’ve read…but that’s just me, of course. There are important references later in this book to the medieval Pearl, and I think I was misled in my expectations by the description of the novel.

65dianelouise100
Sep 9, 9:15 am

As Ullrich’s biography of Hitler is proving too long for me to think of finishing by the end of September, I’m considering two WWII novels I’d like to read: Corelli’s Mandolin or A Thread of Grace. Any opinions about either of those?

66dchaikin
Sep 9, 11:51 am

>64 dianelouise100: l’ll keep my own expectations in check. 🙂 Glad to know you enjoyed it.

67labfs39
Sep 9, 12:02 pm

>65 dianelouise100: I liked Thread of Grace, although not not as much as some of Russell's other books. I didn't write a review, so I'm afraid I can't give you more specifics on what I liked or not.

68cindydavid4
Sep 9, 12:57 pm

>63 AnnieMod: thanks. and jealous btw. Hope its cool AND rainy there :)

69WelshBookworm
Sep 9, 4:29 pm

>65 dianelouise100: I loved Captain Corelli's Mandolin. Haven't read the other (yet) but it's on my TBR.

71dianelouise100
Sep 9, 6:47 pm

>67 labfs39: >69 WelshBookworm: Thanks! I’ve read Birds without Wings and loved it. I’ve read a couple of very early novels by Mary Doria Russell, but don’t remember them, I think I liked them. Sounds like both could be good possibilities, so maybe I’ll check the library for what’s available.

72bragan
Sep 13, 4:50 am

I'm now reading An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green. I don't feel like it's quite living up to the promise I felt it had in the start, but I'm enjoying it well enough still, anyway.

73labfs39
Sep 13, 7:41 am

I finished The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind last night. Excellent story, and I hear there is a movie version.

74dianelouise100
Sep 13, 8:52 am

I’ve added a tome to my reading, Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years by Diarmid MacCulloch. This is the text for a class I’m taking, and I won’t finish it until May (a chapter a week), so it will be one of my “big books” for ‘24. I’ve also pulled the medieval Pearl from my stacks and am giving it a reread to supplement my reading of Hughes’ Pearl. I’m thinking there are more similarities between the two than I’d realized, and I welcome the opportunity to read the Pearl Poet, whom I’d pretty much forgotten.
And I continue with the biography of Hitler for WWII reading. I’ve found that Corelli’s Mandolin is the more easily accessible of the WWII novels I was considering, so it will be in the mix soon.

75dchaikin
Sep 13, 1:19 pm

>74 dianelouise100: i listened to MacCulloch’s biography of Thomas Cromwell. It was excellent.

76dianelouise100
Sep 13, 4:55 pm

>75 dchaikin: I’ve been reading Christianity today and am thankful to find this book not only very dense, but very clear and readable as well.

77labfs39
Sep 13, 5:41 pm

I started This Other Eden today. Excellent reading so far. His description of the wave that covered the island is amazing.

78dchaikin
Edited: Sep 13, 11:18 pm

>77 labfs39: i’m hoping i like it when i get there

I finished Old God’s Time yesterday evening, on audio. It wanders - in subject, times, and realities. I enjoyed it a lot.

I’ve started a fourth Booker longlist book on audio - If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery. So far mainly about growing up Jamaican in Miami, meaning a serious identity crisis. Weirdly it’s all second person, but it’s, well, funny. I’m entertained.

79Trifolia
Edited: Sep 17, 4:06 am

I've finished About People by German author Juli Zeh (which apparently was released in an English translation last week) and am now listening to Old God’s Time (what a book!) and reading Affections by the Rodrigo Hasbún (finally found a book by a Bolivian author).
And I reserved This Other Eden on Cloud Library. Looks interesting.

ETA right translation of the title by Rodrigo Hasbún.

80AnnieMod
Sep 14, 1:27 pm

I am working through the Slough House novels and novellas in order: now reading London Rules.
Somewhere in the earlier threads I mentioned that I am trying to read the novellas in Standing by the Wall: The Collected Slough House Novellas in the proper order in between the novels (a process that started in June) but the summer ended up being a bad time for the series - between travel, work and them being hardcovers (so not traveling well) and getting distracted, I am just getting back to the series again :) But all the books need to go back to the library in 2 weeks so I decided it is time to stop getting distracted.

81dchaikin
Sep 14, 1:37 pm

>79 Trifolia: Enjoy Old God’s Time!

82dianeham
Sep 15, 4:36 pm

I’m reading The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I never read it before and decided it was time.

83dchaikin
Sep 15, 6:08 pm

>82 dianeham: it is time. Fun book. 🙂

84WelshBookworm
Sep 15, 7:14 pm

I'm continuing the Meg Langslow series with No Nest for the Wicket. I was disappointed with the last one. This one is back in the groove. I want to play extreme croquet!

85lisapeet
Sep 17, 7:35 pm

I just finished incomplete reads of about 20 short story collections for a best-of-the-year work judging... I dislike having to do partial reads, but it was that or nothing, and there were other judges besides me. One of my projects in the next few months will be to go back and finish the ones I liked best, so right now I'm reading Jamel Brinkley's Witness, which is very good. He's got a really good ear for human nuance.

Also reading Diane Mehta's Tiny Extravaganzas, a poetry collection out next month. She's a friend, and I'm going to do a Q&A with her for Bloom, but in spite of being prepped to like this I'm really impressed. She's a beautiful writer.

86Nickelini
Sep 17, 11:43 pm

>82 dianeham: I’m reading The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I never read it before and decided it was time.

Ah, that's lovely. I have owned many sets of the Chronicles of Narnia. I think I'm down to two now. I used to read them about every seven years. Now I haven't read them in several decades, but I'm considering a reread.

87Nickelini
Sep 17, 11:45 pm

After 17 days and only getting through 106 pages, I've put Australian novel Foal's Bread by Gillian Mears aside (I think it's just not the right time for this one) and am trying a more contemporary Aussie book, Everyone In My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson.

88LyndaInOregon
Sep 17, 11:57 pm

Just finished the LTER, If That Was Lunch, We've Had It. Fun book, and a quick read, about a couple of young slackers from New Zealand who are trying to figure out how to "make a squillion dollars" without actually working for it.

89cindydavid4
Sep 18, 6:07 pm

sort of stalled in my reading the last week or so, I know it willl come back, just needs the right book and right read to do it

90lilisin
Sep 18, 7:51 pm

Again, three more books since my last post:
Keyi Sheng : Un paradis
Robert Louis Stevenson : Treasure Island
Ira Ishida : Call-Boy

91avaland
Sep 18, 8:56 pm

Have been enjoying Ursula LeGuin’s last volume of poetry.

92labfs39
Sep 19, 7:35 am

Finished the excellent This Other Eden and started another good one, Akin.

93ELiz_M
Sep 19, 7:41 am

I've recently read The World We Make, which I loved -- the idea of the personification of NYC, the authors sense of humor, just a lot of fun. Love in a Fallen City was melancholy and lovely and The Great Believers was heart-wrenching.

I'm now fairly deep into The Bethrothed.

95qebo
Sep 19, 8:18 am

Set aside the octopus books to read The Devil's Highway for a RL book group that'll meet next week.

96cindydavid4
Sep 19, 9:58 am

>93 ELiz_M: Oh I need to read that, loved the city we became forgot about this sequel

98cindydavid4
Sep 19, 7:49 pm

well that didnt take long. elsthread some of us were talking Emma Donogue and while Id read several, I realized I never read astray her collection of short stories. How wonderful these are, each is based on an event in the past, and with her usual undersanding of human nature, she comes up with some real gems. Hope the rest of them are as good

99labfs39
Sep 19, 8:17 pm

>97 dianeham: That sounds interesting, Diane. I'll look forward to your review when you finish.

100Yells
Sep 19, 9:30 pm

>98 cindydavid4: Weren’t they neat stories? I read them this summer and loved the explanation she included after each one. Donoghue is a favourite author of mine too.

101jjmcgaffey
Sep 20, 1:30 am

I've been sucked into the (wonderful) vortex that is Nathan Lowell's Golden Age of the Solar Clipper series of series. No villains, no huge events - just people going through more-or-less normal life (on starships traveling and trading between planets and stations). Ok, there's bad guys - at one point he has a captain who's a serial sexual abuser, of his crew who can't get away. But he's not a Villain - just a nasty guy who needs to be dealt with (and is). There's a lot of wonderful people of many (many) types; the heroes are people who work together, respect each other and their crews (financially and otherwise)...None of this sounds fun to read, but it is. People talking to each other, joking, doing work, dealing with crises, helping each other, solving problems large and small. It's very hard to stop reading at any point - in a book or between them.

102LyndaInOregon
Sep 20, 1:04 pm

>101 jjmcgaffey: The Solar Clipper series sounds interesting -- I'll keep an eye out for the series.

103jjmcgaffey
Sep 20, 6:07 pm

>102 LyndaInOregon: As far as I can see - available on Amazon only (ebooks). They do go on sale now and then. And unsurprisingly, I had very little sleep last night - started one book, finished it, started another...finished it at 6:30 am and collapsed for a couple hours' sleep (fortunately I didn't have anything scheduled today).

104LyndaInOregon
Sep 20, 7:58 pm

>103 jjmcgaffey: Currently still working my way through The Avram Davidson Treasury on my Kindle, but I put a couple of the paper copies on my Paperback Swap Wish List.

105lilisin
Edited: Sep 20, 9:36 pm

Finished a small collection of three short stories by Shusaku Endo, Le Dernier souper et autres nouvelles. Trying to get back into my Japanese reading as I have quite a TBR that has piled up but I haven't been picking anything up from it in a while -- at least, not books in translation.

106dchaikin
Sep 20, 11:28 pm

Opened Eduardo Halfon’s The Polish Boxer today.

107labfs39
Sep 21, 7:24 am

>106 dchaikin: Ooh, I'm tempted to join you, Dan, but I have to read The Midnight Library for book club (which I'm not excited about as friends who have read it didn't like it). Oh, what the heck, The Polish Boxer is short. I'm going to dig it out!

108dchaikin
Sep 21, 8:02 am

>107 labfs39: !! Awesome! I have a couple flights this weekend (taking my daughter back to college). I probably will read most of it onboard. The first 30 pages are fun.

Also I found some time to dig into Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde. I’m finding it readable and lovely. All charm and linguistic play, and my Broadview edition, with original language plus notes, is so far a perfect guide. (Thanks Joyce, for edition advice)

109Cariola
Sep 21, 5:19 pm

>77 labfs39: I loved this book. So many unique characters with so many different points of view.

Like a lot of you, my summer reading has been slow. I started many books that just weren't doing anything for me; spent a good deal of time trying to get into them but finally gave up.

I just finished The Invisible Hour. I hadn't read anything by Alice Hoffman in years and didn't expect to like it. But, overall, I did! Not crazy about all the time travel business, and but it was an interesting idea to link some of the main characters to Hawthorne and to make a case for the way reading can influence our lives. This was a 4 star read for me--not great but definitely worth the time.

I just started Wednesday's Child, a short story collection by Yiyun Li. So far, it's promising to be wonderful.

110Cariola
Sep 21, 5:22 pm

>80 AnnieMod: Have you been watching "Slow Horses"? It's an Apple TV production, based on the Slough House novels. Two seasons so far, and I'm eagerly awaiting the third. And this from someone who usually doesn't enjoy mysteries/spy stories/thrillers. Of course, it helps that Gary Oldman plays Jackson.

111AnnieMod
Sep 21, 5:32 pm

>110 Cariola: Nope, want to finish the novels and stories before even looking at the show :)

112labfs39
Sep 21, 5:45 pm

>109 Cariola: This Other Eden was very well-crafted. The characters are amazing: Esther in her rocking chair, Zachary Hand to God Proverbs and his tree, and of course Ethan.

113japaul22
Sep 21, 6:42 pm

I'm reading a biography of Simone de Beauvoir called Becoming Beauvoir that was published in 2019. It's very interesting so far.

For fiction I'm reading The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. It's a fun read with a great premise - a bit over-written, but the idea carries it - a young woman in the 1700s makes a deal with the devil that she'll be immortal and unbound to people's expectations of her, but what she gets is immortality but also that no one remembers her once she's out of their sight. I'm enjoying it.

114dianeham
Sep 21, 7:37 pm

>113 japaul22: They both sound good. Thanks.

115cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 21, 9:17 pm

>113 japaul22: loved TILAR for about the first 2/3rd of the book. I cant remember what pulled me out of the book but remember giving it a 3 for liking the beginning. will be interested in your review

116cindydavid4
Sep 22, 11:06 am

Just finished astray one of the few works from Donogue that I havent read. A collection of short stories based on small sized new events. She makes all of them interesting, tho didnt care that much for the ones from the gold rush. But still interesing

117dianeham
Sep 22, 9:07 pm

I read My Murder overnight last night. It was entertaining although pretty confusing toward the end.

118Cariola
Sep 23, 2:58 pm

>111 AnnieMod: I haven't read the books, so I can't say how faithful they are to the original. But I am really enjoying the series.

>116 cindydavid4: I had pretty much the same reaction to Astray. I've liked most of her novels; wasn't keen on The Pull of the Stars, mainly because it seemed that her research took the forefront rather than the story or characters. I decided to skip Haven but may get to it eventually.

119dianelouise100
Sep 23, 4:25 pm

I’ve finished Pearl by the Pearl Poet in a new verse translation by Simon Armitage. This edition offers facing pages of middle English and Armitage’s translation, which I enjoyed. I find the Pearl/Gawain Poet’s northern dialect of middle English more difficult and time consuming than Chaucer’s middle English, so found this work very helpful. Still a great poem, so medieval.

120dianelouise100
Sep 23, 4:28 pm

I’ve begun a new novel, The Dark Side of Love by Rafiq Schami, for a Syrian novel challenge. I’ve just gotten into it and finding it very compelling and readable.

121AnnieMod
Sep 23, 8:00 pm

>118 Cariola: I generally do not have issues with changes or issues with keeping both timelines in my head and connecting dots when they diverge a lot (or a little) but as I’d planned to read the book for ages, it just made sense to me that way. I expect to like it as well - I enjoy the books very much and short of it being a disaster (which I would have heard of by now), the series should be just up my alley.

122cindydavid4
Sep 23, 11:14 pm

finally finished lessons in chemistry and despite my blood pressure going up whenever I read another way women were wronged*, it was rather a delightful read. Cant wait for the series

*tho I did notice how much society went after men who did not tow the line.

123cindydavid4
Sep 26, 8:34 pm

so I found Marilynne Robinsons the giveness of things at my local indies sale pile, and since i love her novels, decided to try this. I consider myself a well read and somewhat intelligent person, but I gave up in the middle of the first chapter. She uses lots ofwhat might be called 'philosophiz' I could read the words but had no idea what she was talking about. Has anyone read this who can give me a way into it?

124rocketjk
Sep 27, 11:23 am

I finished Daniel Defoe's classic, Moll Flanders. Lower class life in early 18th century London was a tough go, all right, and Newgate Prison was a horrible place to land. But the novel is really a story of a tough-minded woman who survives on her own terms despite a dizzying series of setbacks and misfortunes. You can see my longer review on my Club Read thread.

Next up for me will be The Other Side of Silence, the 11th book in Philip Kerr's glorious Bernie Gunther noir series.

125japaul22
Sep 28, 2:34 pm

I'm excited that I got an early copy of Lauren Groff's new book, The Vaster Wilds. I'll be reading it next.

For nonfiction, I'm still reading Becoming Beauvoir, a bio about Simone de Beauvoir. I'm finding it interesting.

126cindydavid4
Sep 28, 2:53 pm

OH! im jealous!let us know what you think of it

127dchaikin
Sep 28, 11:35 pm

I suddenly finished four books - The Polish Boxer by Eduardo Halfon, Entangled Life by Merlin Sheldrake, Old New York by Edith Wharton, and, on audio, If I Survive You by Jonathan Escoffery.

But I've only started one new book, on audio, These Precious Days by Ann Pratchett Otherwise I'm mainly carrying on with Troilus and Criseyde and Walden.

128cindydavid4
Edited: Sep 28, 11:57 pm

Eager to read all those new ones! I loved Pratchett hope you like it as much3

Reading coconut for this months African theme. Ive gotten really distracted by other things so Im way behind, but hope o finish it soon

129dianelouise100
Sep 29, 8:32 pm

A Constellation of Vital Phenomena by Anthony Marra

I found this on the shelf at the library yesterday and a scan of the first couple of pages made me bring it home. It has caught me up at once, and I’ve finished about a third. I’ll be taking it along on a trip to Rhode Island to visit family, should make wonderful entertainment on the plane tomorrow.
I’ve also downloaded the audio of Western Lane of the Booker SL. The four+ hour flights should be enough to finish it, either going or coming. Airplanes and airports are so much nicer with a good book.

It’s very annoying that Prophet Song is no longer availble on Audible! I finally have a credit.

130cindydavid4
Sep 30, 12:20 pm

oh loved that book! had no idea what I was getting into. reading this reminded me of the group of Chechnyans took over a school and held it hostage. Also read mercury pictures presents and liked it as well

131dianeham
Yesterday, 6:27 pm

I’m (sort of) reading an ER copy of Eugene J. McGillicuddy's Alien Detective Agency. I really don’t want to keep reading it. It’s really annoying. I even find the title annoying. I feel like I should finish it. All the reviews so far are relatively good. So I don’t feel like I can just stop and write a review saying it was unreadable. Maybe I can just skim the second half? The review is basically "this book is not for me." The book is full of thousands of types of aliens and as many ai - all in real time and virtual time. And the detective McGillicuddy fancies himself a 1930s gumshoe in a fedora.

132LyndaInOregon
Edited: Yesterday, 9:18 pm

>131 dianeham: I just finished Eugene J. McGillicuddy's etc etc, and full review is here.

You might want to take a look at it before making your decision, though given what you've said in the post, I suspect skimming is going to be your best option.

Miller absolutely packed everything but the kitchen sink into this, but didn't allow the reader any time to take it in, in any meaningful way. There are a lot of wonderful ideas here, but none are really developed or considered, and after a while, all the alien races and individuals just run together. As noted late in my review, the undercurrent of angst on the part of the research scientist with nothing left to research is probably the most thought-provoking idea in the novel. The rest is just Cap'n Billy Whiz-Bang.

133dianeham
Yesterday, 10:25 pm