Constant Reader discussion
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Constant Reader
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What I'm Reading - July - August 2021


I've had this for ages in my to be read pile, must def get round to it, esp as you say it is like Rebecca, which I adore

Yes, but Rebecca on steroids.


All Quiet On the Western Front – Erich Marie Remarque – 4****
Many have called this the “greatest war novel of all time.” I’m not certain I agree with that superlative, but it IS a powerful, emotional, gripping, disturbing, enthralling, and honest exploration of war and its effects on the young who become the pawns of their leaders.
My full review HERE


All Quiet On the Western Front
– Erich Marie Remarque – 4****
Many have called this the “greatest war novel of all time.” I’m not certain I a..."
Do you have a favorite war novel, BC? Wondering, is all.

Regeneration, Pat Barker
The Siege of Krishnapur, J.G. Farrell
The Tartar Steppe, Dino Buzzati (re the anticipation of war; not a shot is fired).
Bonus: Favorite War short stories:
"Guests of the Nation," Frank O'Connor (Irish Civil War)
"Dolgushov's Death," Isaac Babel (Russian Civil War)
"How to Tell a True War Story," Tim O'Brien (Vietnam War)
"The Village," Kate Wilhelm (Vietnam -- wild Sci Fi twist with quaint American small town attacked by U.S. troops as if it were a Vietnamese village)

Regeneration, Pat Barker
The Siege of Krishnapur, J.G. Farrell
The Tartar Steppe, Dino Buzzati (re the antic..."
Thanks, Tom. Of the novels, I've only read Pat Barker's. Am tabbing The Tartar Steppe to hunt down. Is Obie's short story part of his collection The Things They Carried? That I read, too. It's in the stacks Dewey Decimaled with a number meaning "Long Ago."

Jensen has had quite a life and shares it, warts and all.


Regeneration, Pat Barker
The Siege of Krishnapur, J.G. Farrell
The Tartar Steppe, Dino Buzzati (..."
Ken, that story is indeed from O’Bs TTC. I could have just as easily chosen title story or “On the Rainy River,” as well. The latter has best ending of entire collection.

Regeneration, Pat Barker
The Siege of Krishnapur, J.G. Farrell
The Tartar Steppe, Di..."
A reread of that book is in order. I joined GR to keep track of all the books I've read, and it's been quite effective at that. Still, even with reviews, it hasn't helped This Old Brain (now playing on PBS) to remember the books' content. With time, they make like Huck's raft and go down river....

Hard to say it's a "favorite" because it's so disturbing but the one that made a huge impact on me was Johnny Got His Gun by Dalton Trumbo. I read it sometime in the '70s ... long before I was tracking books regularly (either in a handwritten journal or on any website) ... so it's not in my GR record. But I'm sure I would have rated it 5*****


Hard to say it's a "favorite" because it's so disturbing but the one that made a huge impact on me was [book:Johnny Got His Gu..."
I'm aware of that one but haven't read it yet.
As for pre-GR, I actually made a GR bookshelf category for those books. Whenever one passes by and I say, "Oh, yeah. I read that in 1970-something," I simply put it there sometimes with a rating from memory (dangerous) but more often without comment.

Though technically not a novel, I'll toss in Christopher Logue's War Music: An Account of Books 1-4 and 16-19 of Homer's Iliad. Some really wild descriptions here.


Hard to say it's a "favorite" because it's so disturbing but the one that made a huge impact on me was [book:Johnny Got His Gu..."
Oh gawd, that one knocked me over!

Though technically not a novel, I'll toss in Christop..."
Put it on my reading radar (handy device). Thanks, Tom.



Mary I got well stuck into it last night with about 2 hours of reading and am hoping to get back to it this evening. It is an epic over multiple generations and so still feel like I'm early in the story line yet but going well, it is classic hard sci fi genre fiction rather then literary fiction but then that is what I expected and signed up for.






It was published right before the 2020 election and a lot of reviews mentioned the parallels to our own time, such as free speech issues and the big gaps between rich and poor. Maybe that influenced the reviewers.
That said, different books appeal to different folks and it's always fine to put down a book that doesn't interest you. I hope I have a different experience, but time will tell.
I


Ann, I knew there was a reason this was on my list, but forgot about the upcoming discussion. I apologize for preemptively scuttling your discussion. Who knows? Others may really enjoy it, and I will have to pick the book up and finish it.
Speaking of our discussions, next week, we start to discuss Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi. This book just went on sale today in paperback.

I have been following The Murmur of Bees discussion. I liked the book when I read it awhile back and it's a great discussion but I dont remember the details enough to participate.
Don't worry about expressing an honest opinion about a book! Im a history nerd, so it might appeal to me more than some, but I will see.



I gave up on all three (Joyce, Carol, & Oates) long ago, so I can sympathize, Mary.

I gave up on all three (Joyce, Carol, & Oate..."
Ken, I hear the musical version, by Hall & Oates, is way better, and highly danceable for those readers who value rhythm on the floor as well as on the page.

I gave up on all three (Joyce, C..."
Ha-ha. I'm a big fan of "Daryl's House" now playing on a YouTube near you!


Also finished just a fun one, Raft of Stars, with two boys on a Wisconsin northern woods journey with others following to find them.
Starting A Promised Land, once again relishing the intelligent and thoughtful nature of former President Obama.


Little Big Man – Thomas Berger – 3.5***
Berger’s novel purports to be a memoir/autobiography of Jack Crabb – frontiersman, Indian scout, gunfighter, buffalo hunter, adopted Cheyenne. I was completely entertained by this novel of the American West. Berger gives the reader quite the raconteur in Crabb, with a gift for story-telling and colorful language. By the narrator’s own account, he certainly has a gift for landing on his feet, managing to get out of more than one potentially deadly scrape by his wits or sheer dumb luck. If the scenarios stretch credulity, well that is part of the fun.
My full review HERE







Where We Come From – Oscar Cásares – 4****
The setting is Brownsville, Texas, a border town with a mean reputation as a haven for human traffickers and drug runners. But it’s also a community of hard-working, middle-class people who want nothing but a safe home for their children, decent schools, good roads, a thriving business district and reliable city services. Cásares focuses on one such family. I really enjoyed this exploration of a complex issue. There are multiple layers to the novel and much fodder for a stimulating book club discussion.
My full review HERE

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I just finished So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo. It's not going to be everyone's cup of tea, but admired quite a lot. I gave it 4****.