Constant Reader discussion
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Constant Reader
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What I'm Reading - Jan & Feb 2020
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Thank you for this recommendation, it is terrific. Amazing to think it was published in '38!

Yep, before Hitler's real rise!






Do it!

[bookcover:Little Lord ..."
Isaac, I need to read Little Lord Fauntleroy. It's one I missed when I was young.



Does this discuss mainly the aftermath and human costs? I think Chernobyl: The History of a Nuclear Catastrophe by Serhii Plokhy is an excellent book giving the historical/political/social context of events leading up to and immediately after the disaster. I’m wondering if this has significantly different information.


Al Capone Shines My Shoes – Gennifer Choldenko – 3***
Book two in this entertaining middle-school series, set on Alcatraz Island during the Great Depression. Moose Flanagan’s dad is a guard at the maximum security prison, and the family lives in the apartments provided for workers and their families. I was completely charmed by the first book, and certainly interested in this second outing. The relationships between the kids seem real to me. Moose deals with many of the things most 12-year-olds have to face, including bullying, peer pressure, and adults who don’t understand him. But he’s also burdened by a unique relationship with one particular inmate: Al Capone.
My full review HERE



I read another book about Chernobyl, Voices from Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster by Svetlana Alexievich. It was also very good.

Your Own Kind of Girl is Aussie singer and entertainer Clare Bowditch’s raw, often funny, memoir, which includes lots of tips and a good reference list. The cover is one of my favourites!






I wonder if the Laura Linney performance will be videotaped at some point. I certainly would love to see it.

two particles interact,
become entangled
and
suddenly they create their own world/reality
It’s just one of many possibilities - and it’s all theirs.


That sounds wonderful, Barbara. It's a favourite of mine and so is Laura. I'll look forward to it.




Ike And Kay – James MacManus – 3***
In his work of historical fiction, MacManus explores the relationship between General Dwight D Eisenhower and his assigned driver during WWII, Kay Sommersby. Rumor, innuendo and gossip have surrounded their affair for decades. It was interesting to see how the relationship unfolded and to get a glimpse of what they may have meant to one another, especially during the stress of wartime. MacManus gets at least one detail VERY wrong, and it makes me wonder what else he flubbed. Oh well, it’s historical FICTION, and it held my attention.
My full review HERE

Fingers crossed!




Riders Of the Purple Sage – Zane Grey – 3***
I hardly know what to write about this classic of the Western genre. It’s full of adventure, violence, strong men and women, tenderness, brutality and an abiding sense of justice. And, of course, there is the landscape, which Grey paints so vividly it is practically a character. I found myself laughing at the ridiculousness of some of the "love" scenes with Grey’s melodramatic, “bodice-heaving” dialogue.
My full review HERE


Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra – 4****
I’d read snippets from this work over the years but never experienced the whole thing. I’m sorry I waited so long to do so. It is a marvelous piece of fiction and is widely acknowledged as the first modern-day novel.
My full review HERE



It is a great book. I loved it.
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Books mentioned in this topic
Don Quixote (other topics)Riders of the Purple Sage (other topics)
Normal People (other topics)
Ike and Kay (other topics)
A Long Long Way (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Sally Rooney (other topics)Dervla McTiernan (other topics)
Sean Carroll (other topics)
Clare Bowditch (other topics)
Svetlana Alexievich (other topics)
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