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What are you currently reading?
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Feb 03, 2018 10:48AM
I am reading The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid - I am truly enjoying reading this book - to the point that I am getting annoyed each time I have to stop lol. I am happy that I will have two hours of uninterrupted time this afternoon. Happy Reading
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Just starting The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George. Been on my shelve for the longest time. Trying hard to keep my promise one new book and one from the shelve - So far so good.
I hope you like Cat's Cradle. I think that it and Slaughterhouse Five are Vonnegut's best books(of those that I have read).

Many thanks - It's fascinating, full of wonderful quotes as well!
Interestingly, the same day I bought it (some months back) I also bought a book by Richard Yates called Cold Spring Harbor in which the dedication was to Kurt Vonnegut.

Reading Still Me by Jojo Moyes - looking forward to an afternoon of reading. Enjoy your weekend - Happy Reading
Thanks, Nancy. It is a snowy messy day here, perfect for an afternoon of reading, as well as the evening.

I'm still reading Still Me by Jojo Moyes - been watching the Olympics interfering with my reading so hoping to finish today. Packing to go to Florida and have my two books ready so I need to finish this one. Happy Reading.






I'm also about to start (tomorrow, barring anything unforeseen)





So glad to be back in the reading chair - physically been sick and a rough few weeks with school. Looking forward to sitting down with The Astonishing Color of After by Emily X.R. Pan while enjoying the Easter break.


I finished reading The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister and enjoyed it, up to a point. It was a romanticized view of the west and I really liked the main character, but the lady school teacher really got on my nerves at times. Fortunately she came to her senses in time.

That one is on my to-read shelf, Rosemarie, though heaven only knows when I'll get around to it. :-)

I could get behind that idea, Rosemarie! :-)


I have read one of his books, The Pioneers, and enjoyed it. I plan on reading more of his books, I just don't know when.

The Pioneers is part of the Leatherstocking series, and actually the first one of those books to be written, though it's set when protagonist Natty Bumpo is an old man. I read it back in junior college, and even did a book report on it for my American Literature class. But in order to review it now, and do it justice, I'd need to reread it (which I plan to do sometime). Even though I liked it back then, I believe there are aspects of it that I could appreciate better now.




While passing time at the public library in Harrisonburg this week, while Barb went shopping with a couple of my sister-in-laws --I accompany them some, but I'm mostly not interested in the venues where they shop-- I added a new (to me) anthology to my "being read intermittently" shelf: Best Australian Short Stories. Despite my Aussie connection, my reading of Australian literature up to now is virtually nonexistent; so discovering this collection on the shelf was a particularly pleasant surprise!


Louis L'Amour is Barb's favorite author, and a number of his books focus on various generations and branches of his fictional Sackett family. (Goodreads treats this as a series, but my understanding is that the various novels can actually be read independently.) She's recently embarked on a re-read of all the Sackett-centered books (she rereads more than I do); and since

This month, I'm also taking part in a common read in another group, of Ann Radclife's 1794 Gothic novel


I absolutely adore that book. I have read it four times. The first just to say I had. The second I paid more attention to the characters before the war. The third I paid more attention to what the war had done to the characters. And, the fourth, how the war had changed the perspective of the characters. If you like the psychology of people, it is a fascinating piece of work.

Agatha Christie is addictive. I have been rereading them since I first read them 20+ years ago. I have just started Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell.






In paper format, I'm finally reading a book I've had on my to-read shelf forever as a "must read": the werewolf novel










The book I started today is



I have just started reading Gormenghast by Mervyn Peake. It will take me a while to read it since it is so long.
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