The Next Best Book Club discussion
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What Are You Reading - Part Deux
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Jackie
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Sep 03, 2014 08:19AM

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2**
I love Agatha Christie and have enjoyed other Miss Marple mysteries, but this one misses the mark. It is far too convoluted, and yet very slow going despite everything that is happening. Christie has proved that she is more than capable of juggling many storylines to build suspense and thwart the reader’s efforts to figure out the solution. But rather than tight plotting with twists and turns, this novel’s storyline seemed to just meander without purpose (other than to fill pages). In the end, I felt that I hadn’t read a Christie novel at all, but something written by a less-skilled author to imitate the Queen of Crime.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Totally agree ... my favorite King novel.


ROFL... Thanks, Jackie! Pity there is no alcohol currently in house. I may have to change that.
;-D

ROFL... Thanks, Jackie! Pity there is no alcohol currently in house. I may have to change that.
;-D"
I guess that's why I haven't tried to join a local book club.....I don't want to get "stuck" reading something I don't like, but at the same time I'm too honest to pretend I read something when I actually didn't. Most of the time I finish books when I buy them, especially if they're hardback and I paid full price for them.


This is a good start to a mystery series. Callahan is a strong central character; her previous experienc..."
One my favorite characters. I've read four in the series but some how I've skipped To Live & Die in Dixie which is the second book. Will have to remedy that.


Here is my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



I do sometimes, or at least I'll try to. I always have that hope in the back of my mind that it might get better, that or I'll feel guilty if it's a hardback and I paid full price for it.


Right now I'm pushing myself to finish Frog Music, I'm not sure why...
I gave up Trieste which I was reading before this one, since I couldn't get into the author style.
Probably just don't want to abandon two books in a row...





The subtitle pretty much sums this up: Life and language in the Amazonian Jungle. Everett chronicles his experiences over three decades living among an indigenous tribe. Parts of this book are very enjoyable for an armchair traveler. There is plenty of danger – 30-foot anacondas, jaguars, piranhas, distrustful natives, malaria, and tarantulas the size of dinner plates. Stories of such encounters were fascinating, but other sections of the book read more like a research paper and I would lose interest.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I started this morning Americanah.


3***
Hercule Poirot mystery # 8 has the “retired” detective on holiday with his friend Hastings at the Cornish seaside town of St. Loo. A mystery lands in their laps when a young heiress admits that she’s had several near misses in the last few days. This is a fine example of the kinds of puzzling cases Christie is so good at crafting, with a large cast of colorful characters and quite a few plot twists. On the whole an entertaining summer read.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


The subtitle says it all: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital. This is the story of the men and women who survived Hurricane Katrina inside New Orleans Memorial Hospital, of those who died. I thought that Fink did a fine job of outlining the conditions within the hospital during and after the storm. However, in part two, I felt that Fink lost some of her journalistic detachment. The grand jury may have declined to indict, but Fink seems bent on trying Dr Pou in this book. Despite what I perceive as Fink’s bias, however, I still think this was a fascinating and informative look at how our governments and institutions are prepared (or not) to deal with the realities of a major disaster.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Annie and Starr were best friends in second grade, until Starr and her daddy suddenly moved away. Some twenty years later, Annie and Starr meet outside a department store and immediately renew their friendship, setting off on a road trip. I was interested in the friendship between these two women, but Conner lost me at the end. Annie makes some really uncharacteristic decisions, and the final chapter was particularly unbelievable. So the end result was that I was left feeling unsatisfied. I do think that Conner shows promise and I’d be willing to try another book by her … but not anytime soon.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...








Using the life of Harry Houdini as a framework, Galloway crafts a novel that “creates a magic trick of its own, revealing the ways in which love, grief and imagination can – for better or worse – alter what we perceive and believe.” The book is told in alternating chapters, jumping from present day to the past and with different narrators. Like a skilled magician Galloway kept the reader’s attention away from what was REALLY happening and led us to what he wanted us to believe was happening. I’m still not sure I fully understood everything that was going on, but I enjoyed the ride.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



I'm a fan myself, but I've been reading his work since I was a kid. My oldest sister was the one who introduce him to our family when I was maybe about five years old. She'd found his very first book Carrie at the library and checked it out. Then she made sure she read all the gory parts out loud to me when our parents weren't around. I started reading them myself once I could read well enough to get through his books, this was when I was about ten or so.
I'm reading Now You See me by Sharon Bolton and it's fantastic so far!


Book #1 in the Kinsey Millhone series. This is a fast-paced mystery thriller with plenty of twists and turns and multiple suspects to keep the reader busy. Kinsey is a wonderful lead character –resourceful, tenacious and intelligent, and she can take care of herself. I like that the book is set in an era before wide-spread use of computers, and without cell phones. Mary Peiffer performs the audiobook at a good pace. She does not use many different voices for the various characters, but Grafton’s dialogue makes it clear who is speaking and I was never confused.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Here is my review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...



This is the first memoir in a series of six which together formed Angelou’s autobiography. In this work she chronicles her childhood from about age three to age 17. This is a wonderfully told first-hand account of a young woman’s coming of age, as well as of the changes brought about in the country from 1930-1945. She was an extraordinary woman, and this is an extraordinary memoir.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
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