Vintage Tales discussion
Book Chat!
>
What are you currently reading?
message 451:
by
Rosemarie
(new)
Sep 08, 2017 05:15PM

reply
|
flag

That one got five stars from me, Rosemarie!










I am reading Ben Hur by Lew Wallace and A Lost Lady by Willa Cather.
I read Our Hearts were Young and Gay a few years ago and thought it was a lot of fun.
I read Our Hearts were Young and Gay a few years ago and thought it was a lot of fun.


Ben Hur has short chapters, which I like because I am reading more than one book at a time. They make for a little break between other books.
I read both the books you mentioned in high school, so I really should read them again. I have a copy of Quo Vadis, which also takes place in that time, still waiting to be read for the first time.
I read both the books you mentioned in high school, so I really should read them again. I have a copy of Quo Vadis, which also takes place in that time, still waiting to be read for the first time.







Werner, I love this book. I was fortunate enough to find a vintage copy at a used book sale and consider it one of my treasures.




Barb and I read the third book of Susan Page Davis' Ladies Shooting Club trilogy, The Blacksmith's Bravery, together out of order last year, because I believed the first two books were out of print and unobtainable. Subsequently, though, I discovered that, while they ARE out of print, there are dealers who still have copies and can be contacted through Amazon. So I gave Barb the first book,

As I work through the review copies in my current queue, the one presently up is the opener for a projected series about a 21-year-old female target-shooting champion who becomes a rookie sheriff's deputy,


Kilmeny of the Orchard is my favourite book by LMM. I remember reading it in elementary school and now have a copy of my own.
I have started reading Doctor Zhivago and know it will take a while, so I reading it slowly interspersed with other books.
I have started reading Doctor Zhivago and know it will take a while, so I reading it slowly interspersed with other books.






I am just a wee bit older than you, Werner, I have discovered that certain horror type fiction is not too bad, as long as it of the classic variety. I have discovered the stories of Algernon Blackwood, thanks to goodreads.
I just finished Jane of Lantern Hill for the second time and loved it even more than the first time around. It is my first 5 star book of 2018.
I enjoy thrillers at times, but only if the writing is enjoyable. Enjoy your book, Werner.
My favourite story in The Story Girl involves cucumbers. It is really funny.
I just finished Jane of Lantern Hill for the second time and loved it even more than the first time around. It is my first 5 star book of 2018.
I enjoy thrillers at times, but only if the writing is enjoyable. Enjoy your book, Werner.
My favourite story in The Story Girl involves cucumbers. It is really funny.

Rosemary, I've always been a fan of supernatural fiction (I prefer that term rather than "horror," though the latter term is what the book trade usually uses), but like you, the kind I like is the more restrained classic variety, not the grisly-gory splatterpunk stuff. (I'm in the Classic Horror Lovers group here on Goodreads, so that would tell you something about my tastes!) Blackwood is actually a writer whose work I haven't read much of, but I liked "The Willows" and "The Valley of the Beasts."
I've always enjoyed both the fiction of action adventure and mysteries, some of which can involve suspense (though, like you, I insist that the writing be enjoyable and the storytelling done well). But for a long time, I've just had a disdain for the "thriller" term itself, as smacking of advertising hype. (And then too, a lot of copywriter-described "thrillers" epically fail to genuinely thrill!) But as I get older, I've learned to lighten up, and sit a bit more easily with the terminology. :-)
I have to remember that term-supernatural fiction-because that describes accurately the books I enjoy reading.



Tomorrow, in paper format, my Goodreads friend Urs and I plan to start a two-person buddy read of Lois Lowry's

Werner, I know what you mean by being over-grouped, but I am only really active in 3 or 4 of those groups. Five of the groups were started by a goodreads friend and are very low-key. I may just check out that group, Werner.
As to the question of how I read so many books--I don't watch TV and take a book with me if I know I am going to have to wait anywhere.
As to the question of how I read so many books--I don't watch TV and take a book with me if I know I am going to have to wait anywhere.

That's about the way it is with me too, Rosemarie; I belong to some groups where I'm not very active, or where the group itself isn't very active. (Of course, in my case, I have moderator responsibilities in several groups, which keeps me more active.)
Apoorva wrote: "How do you guys read so many books so soon ?🙈"
Actually, I don't usually feel that I read many books, and certainly not as many as I'd like! :-) But I'm able to read as many as I do because I read in different settings, and can multitask: I always have a paper book I read to myself when I'm exercising on the stationary bike, but there's always another one that I'm reading aloud to my wife when we're in the car together. And sometimes I also have a book I'm reading in electronic format. (Unlike Rosemarie, I do watch some TV; but I don't watch nearly as much of it as most people do, and I don't get involved in video gaming.)

I've just started The Spy Who Came In from the Cold
And yes, to read a lot of books, you should probably always carry a paperback in your coat pocket.

However, since so far today I've been free of fever (crosses fingers and knocks on wood!), I've now started on a nonfiction read about paranormal phenomena,

Katy wrote: "Started listening to Murder on the Orient Express today."
That is a fun classic mystery. Enjoy!
That is a fun classic mystery. Enjoy!
I started At the Mountains of Madness and Other Tales of Terror by H.P. Lovecraft. They are suitably creepy and strangely addictive.


And, Rosemarie, you have one of my favorite names. It was my mother's and is just so classically beautiful.
Books mentioned in this topic
Helsing: Demon Slayer (other topics)And the Shofar Blew (other topics)
Agnes Grey (other topics)
Knight Brew (other topics)
Persuasion (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Liane Zane (other topics)Francine Rivers (other topics)
Heather Day Gilbert (other topics)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (other topics)
William Wordsworth (other topics)
More...