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What I'm Reading DECEMBER 2013
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Robert
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Dec 04, 2013 12:51PM

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5***** & a ❤
This autobiographical story is based on Capote’s own childhood, living with relatives in Alabama. It’s a memory of the innocence of childhood and the anticipation of something special. It is also a story of love and respect, as well as of loneliness and want.
Capote's writing is never so brilliant as when he is mining his childhood for stories such as this. The emotion is evident and genuine. His descriptions are gloriously vivid without overwhelming the story. The reader feels the anticipation of a child, smells the piney woods, shivers in the crisp morning, and is comforted in the warmth of love. The lessons learned – about kindness, tolerance, family, love and forgiveness – are gently told but ring loud and clear in the reader’s heart.


Any marginalia, Robert?

Uhh, my pronunciation of La Jolla elicited once a broad smile from a California girl. She was kindly trying not to laugh, I think.


5***** & a ❤
This autobiographical story is based on Capote’s own childhood, living with relatives in Alabama. It’s a memory ..."
It's a winner, all right.

Uhh, my pronunciation of La Jolla elicited once a broad smile from a C..."
I made the opposite mistake,sort of. As one who grew up in Northern Calif. I had heard the town name La Jolla often but had not seen it. So naturally I spelled it La Hoya.

I was happy to enjoy it, I'd tried one other, years ago, by Dick, and didn't finish it. I can see now that one has to just march over the first part..... :)

..."
Kat, much less ignorant than me saying "La Jalla." Around here (the DC area), your spelling would be taken to be a creative way of referring to a Georgetown University female student.

All my life, but especially recently (it may be a gerontological thing) I've been conscious of the origin stories and mythology present in the most enduring tales, and what is asked of authors to tap and incorporate this half-conscious material. I realize I'm not the first person to go there, nor do I claim this is a peculiarity of story-telling. But I wonder about the numinous world of the first humans, and their relation to it, and the importance of story-tellers in keeping this memory alive.
Happy holidays.



This is a work of literary fiction that explores themes of friendship, love, forgiveness and vulnerability. The framework is the decades-long friendship of two couples who meet in 1937 when both husbands are on the English faculty at University of Wisconsin. The writing is elegant and the prose simply beautiful (and beautifully simple). If you are a reader who needs a strong plot, with a dramatic storyline, this is not the work for you. The lives of these two couples are like the lives of most of us – without epic drama, but full of the joys and sorrows of a decades-long existence.
Link to my full review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I'd buy one!


http://constantreader.com/discussions...

Marge

Marge"
My feelings exactly.


This is a work of literary fiction that explores themes o..."
Sounds wonderful - thank you!



I read Embers a few years ago and loved it. I can also recommend Casanova in Bolzano.

http://constantreader.com/discussions..."
Thanks for that link, Sherry. Wonderful discussion!

http://constantreader.com/discussions..."
Thanks for that link, Sherry. Wonderful di..."
It's much shorter than I remember it being. I didn't participate because I decided not to do a re-read. I did participate in our discussion of
Angle of Repose. I liked that one even better. If you haven't read it, I highly recommend it.


I love Jeeves, I wasn't sure if this was faithful to Wodehouse's character, but I added it on your recommendation, John.


I read Arthur & George a few years ago for my F2F book club. I really liked it. Great book for discussion.

Maybe something like The Rook by Daniel O'Malley. I read it earlier this year and loved it. Here is the review I wrote then. https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Or. Replay by Ken Grimwood.
Here is my review for that one. :) https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


Adchie is also the author of the highly praised Americanah and Half of a Yellow Sun. I am feeling sad that I have now read all of her novels. I guess I will have to progress to her short stories.

Perhaps I should try again to read this. I read a few chapters of this book back in 2006, but did not finish, as I had trouble telling who was talking, Arthur or George. My notes say "perhaps I'll check it out again soon and see what the "suspenseful drama" (as one reviewer said) is all about."
Marge

Perhaps I should try again to read this. I read a few chapters of this book back in 2006, but did not..."
Funny, I read the first few chapters a few yrs. ago and didn't finish either--though I think it had more to do with what was going on in my life at the time. It's still on my shelves, maybe I'll give it another try.

There are some interesting novels around about the dark side of religion. For a very different example: Has anyone read Bee Season by Myla Goldberg? I thought it was fascinating and complex.

Ruth, I read ARTHUR AND GEORGE. I liked it, but didn't love it.

I read Bee Season a few years ago. I remember it being quite compelling.


Boring for a long stretch, then interesting again with Bella's story. With the Russian family in the Crimea, I feel like I'm reading [book: Fathers and sons by Ivan Turgenev, it's so close.

Good to know. Maybe I'll give it a try. Kat

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