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What I'm Reading - March 2013




Another English village tale, brought up to date, sans Miss Marple, the vicar, and the manor house. Cast of thousands, or at least it seemed that way to me. Certainly it was the entire population of the village and then some. I might have enjoyed the story a bit more if I could have kept the characters straight. Maybe my short term memory is worse than I think it is, but I badly felt the need for a chart to keep everybody straight. As it is, I’d put this book down as a tempest in a teapot.

I found the one book I read by Amis--The Information--a grim but fascinating pleasure. The things I didn't like make me want not to read him again, but the density of his style and the force of his writing about mortality make me want to pick up another one. Very torn.



I didn't like it much either, Nicole. It's the book that made me decide, "no more Irving."


I have more of his on the shelf, but keep procrastinating. Y'all's comments above make me all the more curious though. Interesting contrast.


Wow, just read the synopsis at your link....he does fit in quite a lot of unique individuals! And...they mostly sound pretty stereotypical.

I want to read The regeneration Trilogy and almost bought a copy of Life Class a while ago when I saw one very inexpensive. It definitely sounds like another book that would interest me. thanks for the summary.



But, to each their own kettle of fish. :)

Would have put the book's name as a link, but somehow the add book/author doesn't have either on tap.
Weirdness. Must be a glitch.



For my guilty pleasure I am reading another one of Joanna Trollope's books - Brother and Sister: A Novel. This is about an adopted brother and sister who decide to search for their mothers. Trollope is good at family dynamics and all of her characters have enough flaws to make them interesting.

I'm not a dog-lover, but I loved Maggie, the German Shepherd, a former military dog, who was wounded in Afghanistan when her beloved handler was killed by a sniper. Scott James, a Los Angeles police officer is reassigned to the K9 division after his partner Stephanie is killed and he is severely wounded during a confrontation with some bad guys. Both Scott and Maggie suffer from a kind of post traumatic stress syndrome from their experiences. Scott is paired with Maggie, and they make a terrific couple, who bond, help each other recover, and work to find the man who killed Stephanie.
Marge

Marge


Ann, I know somewhere along the way I've read one or more of Trollope's books and enjoyed them but I have no idea which one(s). Can you suggest a starting point for me to give her another go at some point.


I'm also an Irving fan and have liked all of his books, except The third Hand. Owen Meaney is one of my favorite books.

I wasn't wild about the Wife, either.

I found it interesting, but you had to pick through the reliability of her research.

Link to my full review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

This is a semi-autobiographical novel, written entirely in verse. Garcia McCall says so much with so few words! Her poetry is evocative and restrained, powerful and tender, vivid and elusive, full of sadness and joy, but mostly full of love.
Link to my full review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I have not had time for much pleasurable reading lately, so I'm relying on audiobooks and my daily commute to get my literary fix. I have just finished the Audible version of The End of the Affair, read by Colin Firth. What a treat! Next, I'll give a listen to Journey to the Center of the Earth, narrated by Tim Curry.

Not a vampire or apocalypse in sight though. :)
A lovely story, so far.

Natasha's Dance is one I've had on my list to read for a long time. Another interesting book on Russian history from 987 - 1917 is LAND OF THE FIREBIRD; THE BEAUTY OF OLD RUSSIA by Suzanne Massie.
Marge


The Massie book sounds good. I will have to check to see if the library has it.
I am getting a bit bogged down in some aspects of NATASHA'S DANCE, mostly the parts about music and art, but a lot of it is very interesting.


I'm not a dog..."
I just finished this, too, Marjorie and loved Maggie and Scott as partners. Coincidentally, we just watched a TV documentary called GLORY HOUNDS about dogs serving in Afghanistan. I love the way that the big tough soldiers talk to their dogs.

I am currently reading Kafka, Anne.

Anne: I really liked Kafka on the Shore. It was my first Murakami and maybe because of that, one of my favorites of his.
Mary Anne: I decided to abandon The Paris Wife after a fair shake and I have no regrets. I do not think it helped that I had read A Moveable Feast in the not too distant past and well, it is hard to compete with Hemmingway's writing . . .
Reaching back into the February posts a little, let me add my voice to the chorus of delight over the audio version of The Good House. I have listened to the narrator before on other books and did not love her nearly as much as on this one. It is not great literature, just a good yarn that you really get invested in - I am still missing Hildy a little.
On the John Irving front, I adored A Prayer for Owen Meany and for me none of his books have really held a candle to that, except maybe The World According to Garp.
Ann: I am curious where you come out on Orlando Figes. He has written some Russian history books that really appeal to me, but I have yet to dig in on them.
As for what I am reading. I am down in FL for a few weeks and will hit some baseball spring training games so I am on a bit of a baseball binge with Ball Four and Francona: The Red Sox Years.
I also continue to enjoy Roberto Bolaño and am particularly enjoying Woes of the True Policeman. If memory serves correctly, a lot of the character names overlap with 2666 but it is much lighter in spirit than that book.
And i am also really enjoying The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes. It is a history I know little about but am finding fascinating.

Off to check my library to see if they have either of these versions. Both are great narrators/ performers of audio books!

The Year of Pleasures – Elizabeth Berg – 3***
It was an enjoyable, quick read, but not a great one.
Link to my full review: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I am currently trying to make my way through Tinkers and finding it hard going. I'm about 1/4 - 1/3 through and really wish the guy would just die already. BUT a comment on the CR discussion, that it picked up a bit as it went along, encouraged me and I will keep slogging through. Most CRs in the discussion loved it, so my reaction is clearly out of left field. (FWIW, I don't think the parts about his father are the products of the mind-wanderings of the dying George. I figure the omniscient 3d person narrator is flipping from one related tale to the other...)

I read and loved Tinkers as well.
And...re above quote, agree.
Glad to hear from a WfOY fan. :)

Thanks for reminding me of Barker's Life Class, Joan. I enjoyed the Regeneration trilogy and also her novel Double Vision.
Finished Bring Up the Bodies, which I liked even better than Wolf Hall. Started Arcadia by Laura Goff but abandoned it after twenty pages, I'm definitely not in the mood for it. Whether I ever will be is another question.
So it's on to Charming Billy by Alice McDermott, which I'll be reading for my f2f book group.
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Books mentioned in this topic
A Prayer for Owen Meany (other topics)The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (other topics)
Wolf Hall (other topics)
The Night Circus (other topics)
Elegy for Eddie (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Orlando Figes (other topics)Louise Erdrich (other topics)
Orlando Figes (other topics)
Roberto Bolaño (other topics)
Orlando Figes (other topics)
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Oh yes -- The Silver Cloud Cafe has me in a stranglehold.