THE JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archives - Book Discussions
>
WHAT ARE YOU READING AND WHY!!
message 601:
by
Barb H
(last edited Feb 28, 2010 04:27PM)
(new)
Feb 28, 2010 04:23PM

reply
|
flag

Jill wrote: "Hi all............A couple of pages ago I wrote that I had ordered the book "The Other Side of the Night", which is the story of the ships Carpathia and Californian which were involved in the fate ..."
Jill- based on that - I'm putting The Other Side of the Night in the James mason bookshelf!
Jill- based on that - I'm putting The Other Side of the Night in the James mason bookshelf!

On my own, I'm currently reading a lot of international literature, as I'm participating in an "Around the World in 80 Books" challenge. Next up will probably be Leon Uris's Mila 18.

Rick........thanks for putting the book on the bookshelf. It's a dandy
I am really looking forward to a productive month of reading in March. I have a long list of books to read, but the first three will be:
Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
American Rust by Philipp Meyer
All three are for my reading group, Reading With Sea, which is why they are first. I'm looking forward to good discussion. Then I want to finish The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand and a few others that should be coming in the mail any day. Maybe today! : )
I've been loving, loving using my Moleskine Passion Book Journal and have been taking it everywhere with me. I am loving it so much that I think others need to check these journals out, so I decided to give one away this month. If anyone is interested in getting it, they can check it out here:
http://readingwithsea.wordpress.com/2010...
Otherwise, what are you all looking forward to reading in March?
-Sea
Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
American Rust by Philipp Meyer
All three are for my reading group, Reading With Sea, which is why they are first. I'm looking forward to good discussion. Then I want to finish The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand and a few others that should be coming in the mail any day. Maybe today! : )
I've been loving, loving using my Moleskine Passion Book Journal and have been taking it everywhere with me. I am loving it so much that I think others need to check these journals out, so I decided to give one away this month. If anyone is interested in getting it, they can check it out here:
http://readingwithsea.wordpress.com/2010...
Otherwise, what are you all looking forward to reading in March?
-Sea

I read Atlas Shrugged and Fountainhead way back in college and were partly responsible for making me pursue a career in law.
Im reading Wild Swans now by Jung Chang and i love it!
Ivan wrote: "I'm going to read Maugham's stories "The Letter" and "Rain" for my land-based book group."
loved the Bette Davis Version of The Letter- 1941- Herbert Marshall and James Stephenson were especially superb
loved the Bette Davis Version of The Letter- 1941- Herbert Marshall and James Stephenson were especially superb
Jill wrote: "Rick wrote: "Jill wrote: "Hi all............A couple of pages ago I wrote that I had ordered the book "The Other Side of the Night", which is the story of the ships Carpathia and Californian which ..."
my pleasure, Jill!
my pleasure, Jill!
Miss GP wrote: "I'm reading a new book:City of Dragons, by Kelli Stanley. It's a noir mystery set in 1940's Chinatown. I'm reading it because it was assigned to me for review, and I'm having a ter..."
haha- i have to admit- I HATE that style of minimalist writing- I know you have to review it- but I would have a hard time getting into the characters
haha- i have to admit- I HATE that style of minimalist writing- I know you have to review it- but I would have a hard time getting into the characters
I am just about finished with The Amateurs by Marcus Sackey and 1/4 done with Captain Blood by Raphael Sabatini - next up for my current thriller book is SAFER by Sean Doolittle and I hope to complete Captain Blood and then Basil by Wilkie Collins this month.

Now I'm reading "Rain" by the same author.
Ivan wrote: "I just finished reading Maugham's "The Letter" - quite a bit different from the Bette Davis film - with a different ending. Imagine Hollywood changing the ending to fit their moral code.
Now I'..."
I think Rain was made into a film in early 1930's maybe 1930- with joan crawford and walter huston
Now I'..."
I think Rain was made into a film in early 1930's maybe 1930- with joan crawford and walter huston

I have it on video and tried to watch it - urgh - it was so dated - and Joan's performance is so exaggerated (not to mention the fact that she looks so many drag queens I know).

Rick.....I think there was also a silent version of "Rain" with the tragic singer Jean Eagles. There was also the version "Sadie Thompson" with Rita Hayworth (I think).
Hollywood loves to eviscerate books when they come to the screen....................why?


Hollywood was working under the Hays Code- which restricted alot of what scripts could contain- many writers hated the film adaptions of their books since the film only bore a passing resemblence to the book. Aslo one must take into consideration that writing a scene in a book is far less expensive then filming it- so many books are edited on screen. But mostly- it comes down to the fact that most writers are in the idea and message business while studios are in the money business-thats why they buy all the rights to a book so they can mutilate it all they want- and still retain the title.

Rick.........those were excellent thoughts on the transfer of book to movie. No wonder many authors don't sell their book rights to film. I don't mind the moviemakers editing out portions of books for film, such as in "Wuthering Heights" but when the film totally changes the storyline, I get grumpy! One of the few books that was not tampered with was "Rebecca" by Daphne DeMaurier which Hitchcock transferred to film almost word for word....."Last night I dreamed I went to Manderly again".......that first line quote always pops up in trivia quizzes.
YES!!! ROBERT MORLEY'S SON SHERIDAN MORLEY WROTE A BIOGRAPHY OF JAMES MASON CALLED- ODD MAN OUT!

Thanks Rick.............I will take your advice and look for it on-line.



O, the joy of being a college student under the gun to try and finish by May. After this, I can actually read for fun again...O, how I can't wait for that day. May 15th, marked and circled on the calender...only 47 more school days with finals and counting...

I finished the story and did watch the film again. I wanted to see if it ended the same way - and it pretty much did. Crawford not as pretty good, Huston rather stilted.
Rachel wrote: "Currently working on Crime and Punishment for my Russian literature class, and my independent study of Jane Austen's works in German, which right now is finishing [book:Pride and Prejud..."
I found CRIME AND PUNISHMENT very good- it was not the dry- demorilizing tome I thought it would be- rather- a very good read
I found CRIME AND PUNISHMENT very good- it was not the dry- demorilizing tome I thought it would be- rather- a very good read
Lauren wrote: "I'm currently in the middle of or at some other point in twelve books, two of which are re-reads, but at the moment am actually reading just two. Which are Acheron by Sherrilyn Kenyon, the why is b..."
seems very facinating- here is some info you and others might find interesting
Sherrilyn Kenyon (b. 1965 in Columbus, Georgia, USA) is a #1 bestselling and award-winning US writer of both fiction and nonfiction. Under her own name she writes Urban Fantasy and is best known for her Dark-Hunter vampire series. Under the pseudonym Kinley MacGregor she wrote historicals also with paranormal elements.[1:] Kenyon's novels have an "international following,"[2:] with over twenty million copies in print in over thirty countries. Under both names, her books appear at the top of the New York Times, Publishers Weekly, and USA Today lists, and they are frequent bestsellers in Germany, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Her website averages over a million hits a month, and her visitors come from over forty countries.[2:] Her annual fan convention K-Con is so popular that it sells out every year in under five minutes and brings visitors from all over the world to New Orleans, LA where her acclaimed Dark-Hunter novels are set.
[edit:] Dark-Hunter series
The Dark-Hunters are immortal warriors pledged to the Greek goddess Artemis and dedicated to defending mankind against Daimons (vampires) and other assorted enemies: including a couple of rogue gods and goddesses.
Fantasy Lover, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002) (ISBN 0-31297-997-5)
"The Beginning" [12:], also in the back of Sins of the Night early print editions (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002)
"Dragonswan", in the anthology Tapestry, published by Jove (2002, ISBN 0-51513-362-0) and reprinted singly by Berkley (2005, ISBN 0-51514-079-1)
Night Pleasures, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002) (ISBN 0-31297-998-3)
Amanda Devereaux has a crazy family. Her mother and older siblings are witches and psychics, and her twin sister is a vampire hunter. All Amanda wants is a quiet, normal life. Only when she finds herself the target of an attack meant for her twin, she wakes to find herself handcuffed to a sexy, blonde stranger.
He is Kyrian of Thrace. And while Amanda's first thought is that this might be another of her sister's attempt at extreme match-making, it soon becomes clear that Kyrian is not boyfriend material.
He is a Dark-Hunter: an immortal warrior who has traded his soul for one moment of vengeance upon his enemies. Kyrian spends his eternal days hunting the vampires and daimons that prey upon mankind. He is currently on the hunt for a very old and dealy daimon called Desiderius who has deemed it sport to handcuff Kyrian to a human while he hunts him. Now Kyrian and Amanda must find a way to break their bond lest they give into their dangerous attraction to one another. Or Desiderius kills them both.
Night Embrace, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-482-0)
"Phantom Lover", in the anthology Midnight Pleasures (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-762-5)
Dance with the Devil, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-483-9)
"A Dark-Hunter Christmas", [13:], also in the back of Dance with the Devil early print editions (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003)
Kiss of the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-241-6)
Night Play, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-242-4)
"Winter Born", in the anthology Stroke of Midnight (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-876-7)
Seize the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31299-243-2)
Valerius isn't a popular dark-hunter-he's a Roman, which means that the largely Greek Hunters have a major grudge against him and his civilisation for superseding them. To make things worse , he's very conscious of his aristocratic background and breeding. So it serves him right when he runs into Tabitha Devereaux. She's sassy, sexy and completely unwilling to take him seriously. (Not to mention Tabitha is also the sister in law of Kyrian, a former Dark-Hunter and Val's mortal enemy.)
What Tabitha does take seriously is hunting and killing vampires, and soon she and Val have to grapple with the deadliest of all daimons-one who's managed to come back from the dead, and one who holds a serious grudge against both of them. To win against evil, Val will have to loosen up, learn to trust and put everything on the line to protect a man he hates and a woman who drives him nuts.
Sins of the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31293-432-7)
"Second Chances", in Exclusive Dark-Hunter Collectible Booklet (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005), free giveaway
Unleash the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31293-433-5)
Dark Side of the Moon (St. Martin's Press, 2006, reprinted by St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2007)(HB ISBN 0-31235-743-5, PB ISBN 0-31293-434-3)
"A Hard Day's Night-Searcher", in the anthology My Big Fat Supernatural Wedding (St. Martin's Griffin, 2006) (ISBN 0-31234-360-4)
"Until Death We Do Part", in the anthology Love At First Bite (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2006) (ISBN 0-31234-929-7)
"Fear the Darkness", free ebook (St. Martin's Press, 2007)
The Dream-Hunter (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2007) (ISBN 0-31293-881-0)
Devil May Cry (St. Martin's Press, 2007, reprinted by St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2008) (HB ISBN 0-31236-950-6, PB ISBN 0-31294-686-4)
Upon the Midnight Clear (St. Martin's Paperback, 2007) (ISBN 0-31294-705-4)
The Dark-Hunter Companion, co-author Alethea Kontis (St. Martin's Griffin, 2007) (ISBN 0-31236-343-5)
Dream Chaser (St. Martin's Paperback, 2008) (ISBN 0-31293-882-9)
Acheron (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-312-36215-3)
One Silent Night (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-31294-706-2)
"Shadow of the Moon", in the anthology Dead After Dark (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-31294-798-4)
Dream Warrior (St. Martin's Press, 2009) (ISBN 0-31293-883-7)
Bad Moon Rising (St. Martin's Press, 2009)
[edit:] B.A.D. Agency Series
Published by Simon & Schuster
"BAD to the Bone", in the anthology Big Guns Out of Uniform (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-967-4)
"Captivated By You", in the anthology Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down: Three Tales of Erotic Romance (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-159-2)
Bad Attitude, (2005) (HB ISBN 1-41650-356-0, PB ISBN 1-41652-029-5)
Born to Be B.A.D., a reprint of the BAD stories PLUS a new short story called "One BAD Night" (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-750-7)
"Turn Up the Heat", in the anthology Playing Easy to Get (Pocket, 2006) (ISBN 1-41651-087-7)
Phantom of the Night, (2008) (ISBN 1-41650-357-9)
"Whispered Lies," (2009) (ISBN 9-781416-597421)
[edit:] Nevermore Series
TBA/2007
[edit:] Other Novels and Novellas
Daemon's Angel, (Leisure, 1995) (ISBN 0-50552-026-5)
"Love Bytes", in the anthology Naughty or Nice (St. Martin's Press, 2000) (ISBN 0-31298-102-3)
"Knightly Dreams", in the anthology What Dreams May Come (Penguin Group, 2005) (ISBN 0-42521-085-5)
[edit:] Essays
"The Search of Spike's Balls", in Seven Seasons of Buffy edited by Ben Bella (ISBN 1-93210-008-3)
"Parting Gifts", in Five Seasons of Angel edited by Glenn Yeffeth (ISBN 1-93210-033-4)
[edit:] Non-Fiction
The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the Middle Ages, (Writer's Digest, 1995)
The Writer's Complete Fantasy Reference: An Indispensable Compendium of Myth and Magic, (Writer's Digest, 2000)
The Writer's Digest Character Naming Sourcebook, with Hal Blythe and Charlie Sweet (ISBN 0-89879-632-6)
The Writer's Digest Character Naming Sourcebook, 2nd ed. (ISBN 1-58297-295-8)
[edit:] Writing as Kinley MacGregor
Published by Avon (HarperCollins Publishers) unless noted otherwise.
[edit:] The Sea Wolves Series
Master of Seduction, (2000) (ISBN 0-06108-712-2)
A Pirate of Her Own, (2004) (ISBN 0-06108-711-4)
[edit:] The MacAllisters Series
Master of Desire, (2001) (ISBN 0-06108-713-0)
Claiming the Highlander, (2002) (ISBN 0-38081-789-6)
Born in Sin, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-790-X)
Taming the Scotsman, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-791-8)
"Midsummer's Knight", in the anthology Where's My Hero? (2003) (ISBN 0-06050-524-9)
The Warrior, (2007)
[edit:] Brotherhood of the Sword Series
Born in Sin, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-790-X)
Taming the Scotsman, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-791-8)
"Midsummer's Knight", in the anthology Where's My Hero? (2003) (ISBN 0-06050-524-9)
A Dark Champion, (2004) (ISBN 0-06056-541-1)
Return of the Warrior, (2005) (ISBN 0-06056-543-8)
The Warrior, (2007) (ISBN 0-06079-667-7)
[edit:] Lords of Avalon Series
Sword of Darkness, (2006)(ISBN 0-06056-544-6)
Knight of Darkness, (2006) (ISBN 0-06079-662-6)
"The Wager", in the anthology Elemental: The Tsunami Relief Anthology: Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy (Tor Books, 2006)
[edit:] Other Novels and Novellas
"Santa Wears Spurs", in the anthology All I Want for Christmas (St. Martin's Press, 1999) (ISBN 0-31297-680-1)
[edit:]
seems very facinating- here is some info you and others might find interesting
Sherrilyn Kenyon (b. 1965 in Columbus, Georgia, USA) is a #1 bestselling and award-winning US writer of both fiction and nonfiction. Under her own name she writes Urban Fantasy and is best known for her Dark-Hunter vampire series. Under the pseudonym Kinley MacGregor she wrote historicals also with paranormal elements.[1:] Kenyon's novels have an "international following,"[2:] with over twenty million copies in print in over thirty countries. Under both names, her books appear at the top of the New York Times, Publishers Weekly, and USA Today lists, and they are frequent bestsellers in Germany, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Her website averages over a million hits a month, and her visitors come from over forty countries.[2:] Her annual fan convention K-Con is so popular that it sells out every year in under five minutes and brings visitors from all over the world to New Orleans, LA where her acclaimed Dark-Hunter novels are set.
[edit:] Dark-Hunter series
The Dark-Hunters are immortal warriors pledged to the Greek goddess Artemis and dedicated to defending mankind against Daimons (vampires) and other assorted enemies: including a couple of rogue gods and goddesses.
Fantasy Lover, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002) (ISBN 0-31297-997-5)
"The Beginning" [12:], also in the back of Sins of the Night early print editions (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002)
"Dragonswan", in the anthology Tapestry, published by Jove (2002, ISBN 0-51513-362-0) and reprinted singly by Berkley (2005, ISBN 0-51514-079-1)
Night Pleasures, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2002) (ISBN 0-31297-998-3)
Amanda Devereaux has a crazy family. Her mother and older siblings are witches and psychics, and her twin sister is a vampire hunter. All Amanda wants is a quiet, normal life. Only when she finds herself the target of an attack meant for her twin, she wakes to find herself handcuffed to a sexy, blonde stranger.
He is Kyrian of Thrace. And while Amanda's first thought is that this might be another of her sister's attempt at extreme match-making, it soon becomes clear that Kyrian is not boyfriend material.
He is a Dark-Hunter: an immortal warrior who has traded his soul for one moment of vengeance upon his enemies. Kyrian spends his eternal days hunting the vampires and daimons that prey upon mankind. He is currently on the hunt for a very old and dealy daimon called Desiderius who has deemed it sport to handcuff Kyrian to a human while he hunts him. Now Kyrian and Amanda must find a way to break their bond lest they give into their dangerous attraction to one another. Or Desiderius kills them both.
Night Embrace, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-482-0)
"Phantom Lover", in the anthology Midnight Pleasures (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-762-5)
Dance with the Devil, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003) (ISBN 0-31298-483-9)
"A Dark-Hunter Christmas", [13:], also in the back of Dance with the Devil early print editions (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2003)
Kiss of the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-241-6)
Night Play, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-242-4)
"Winter Born", in the anthology Stroke of Midnight (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004) (ISBN 0-31299-876-7)
Seize the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31299-243-2)
Valerius isn't a popular dark-hunter-he's a Roman, which means that the largely Greek Hunters have a major grudge against him and his civilisation for superseding them. To make things worse , he's very conscious of his aristocratic background and breeding. So it serves him right when he runs into Tabitha Devereaux. She's sassy, sexy and completely unwilling to take him seriously. (Not to mention Tabitha is also the sister in law of Kyrian, a former Dark-Hunter and Val's mortal enemy.)
What Tabitha does take seriously is hunting and killing vampires, and soon she and Val have to grapple with the deadliest of all daimons-one who's managed to come back from the dead, and one who holds a serious grudge against both of them. To win against evil, Val will have to loosen up, learn to trust and put everything on the line to protect a man he hates and a woman who drives him nuts.
Sins of the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31293-432-7)
"Second Chances", in Exclusive Dark-Hunter Collectible Booklet (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005), free giveaway
Unleash the Night, (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2005) (ISBN 0-31293-433-5)
Dark Side of the Moon (St. Martin's Press, 2006, reprinted by St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2007)(HB ISBN 0-31235-743-5, PB ISBN 0-31293-434-3)
"A Hard Day's Night-Searcher", in the anthology My Big Fat Supernatural Wedding (St. Martin's Griffin, 2006) (ISBN 0-31234-360-4)
"Until Death We Do Part", in the anthology Love At First Bite (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2006) (ISBN 0-31234-929-7)
"Fear the Darkness", free ebook (St. Martin's Press, 2007)
The Dream-Hunter (St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2007) (ISBN 0-31293-881-0)
Devil May Cry (St. Martin's Press, 2007, reprinted by St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2008) (HB ISBN 0-31236-950-6, PB ISBN 0-31294-686-4)
Upon the Midnight Clear (St. Martin's Paperback, 2007) (ISBN 0-31294-705-4)
The Dark-Hunter Companion, co-author Alethea Kontis (St. Martin's Griffin, 2007) (ISBN 0-31236-343-5)
Dream Chaser (St. Martin's Paperback, 2008) (ISBN 0-31293-882-9)
Acheron (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-312-36215-3)
One Silent Night (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-31294-706-2)
"Shadow of the Moon", in the anthology Dead After Dark (St. Martin's Press, 2008) (ISBN 0-31294-798-4)
Dream Warrior (St. Martin's Press, 2009) (ISBN 0-31293-883-7)
Bad Moon Rising (St. Martin's Press, 2009)
[edit:] B.A.D. Agency Series
Published by Simon & Schuster
"BAD to the Bone", in the anthology Big Guns Out of Uniform (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-967-4)
"Captivated By You", in the anthology Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down: Three Tales of Erotic Romance (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-159-2)
Bad Attitude, (2005) (HB ISBN 1-41650-356-0, PB ISBN 1-41652-029-5)
Born to Be B.A.D., a reprint of the BAD stories PLUS a new short story called "One BAD Night" (2005) (ISBN 1-41650-750-7)
"Turn Up the Heat", in the anthology Playing Easy to Get (Pocket, 2006) (ISBN 1-41651-087-7)
Phantom of the Night, (2008) (ISBN 1-41650-357-9)
"Whispered Lies," (2009) (ISBN 9-781416-597421)
[edit:] Nevermore Series
TBA/2007
[edit:] Other Novels and Novellas
Daemon's Angel, (Leisure, 1995) (ISBN 0-50552-026-5)
"Love Bytes", in the anthology Naughty or Nice (St. Martin's Press, 2000) (ISBN 0-31298-102-3)
"Knightly Dreams", in the anthology What Dreams May Come (Penguin Group, 2005) (ISBN 0-42521-085-5)
[edit:] Essays
"The Search of Spike's Balls", in Seven Seasons of Buffy edited by Ben Bella (ISBN 1-93210-008-3)
"Parting Gifts", in Five Seasons of Angel edited by Glenn Yeffeth (ISBN 1-93210-033-4)
[edit:] Non-Fiction
The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the Middle Ages, (Writer's Digest, 1995)
The Writer's Complete Fantasy Reference: An Indispensable Compendium of Myth and Magic, (Writer's Digest, 2000)
The Writer's Digest Character Naming Sourcebook, with Hal Blythe and Charlie Sweet (ISBN 0-89879-632-6)
The Writer's Digest Character Naming Sourcebook, 2nd ed. (ISBN 1-58297-295-8)
[edit:] Writing as Kinley MacGregor
Published by Avon (HarperCollins Publishers) unless noted otherwise.
[edit:] The Sea Wolves Series
Master of Seduction, (2000) (ISBN 0-06108-712-2)
A Pirate of Her Own, (2004) (ISBN 0-06108-711-4)
[edit:] The MacAllisters Series
Master of Desire, (2001) (ISBN 0-06108-713-0)
Claiming the Highlander, (2002) (ISBN 0-38081-789-6)
Born in Sin, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-790-X)
Taming the Scotsman, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-791-8)
"Midsummer's Knight", in the anthology Where's My Hero? (2003) (ISBN 0-06050-524-9)
The Warrior, (2007)
[edit:] Brotherhood of the Sword Series
Born in Sin, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-790-X)
Taming the Scotsman, (2003) (ISBN 0-38081-791-8)
"Midsummer's Knight", in the anthology Where's My Hero? (2003) (ISBN 0-06050-524-9)
A Dark Champion, (2004) (ISBN 0-06056-541-1)
Return of the Warrior, (2005) (ISBN 0-06056-543-8)
The Warrior, (2007) (ISBN 0-06079-667-7)
[edit:] Lords of Avalon Series
Sword of Darkness, (2006)(ISBN 0-06056-544-6)
Knight of Darkness, (2006) (ISBN 0-06079-662-6)
"The Wager", in the anthology Elemental: The Tsunami Relief Anthology: Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy (Tor Books, 2006)
[edit:] Other Novels and Novellas
"Santa Wears Spurs", in the anthology All I Want for Christmas (St. Martin's Press, 1999) (ISBN 0-31297-680-1)
[edit:]


Still, I'm very pleased to be moving on to an author whose work I love: Kurt Vonnegut. I just started Galapagos this morning. I picked it because it fit two challenges I'm working on in other groups. Needless to say, I'm enjoying it immensely. Vonnegut was a genius!


I loved Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, and I am eagerly awaiting the next book from Bradley. I just started the Woman in White by Wilkie Collins in preparation for reading Drood.


**Soumya** wrote: "I'm reading Dante's Daughter by Kimberley Heuston.
This book is a historical fiction book."
love to know your review of that book- love historical fiction
This book is a historical fiction book."
love to know your review of that book- love historical fiction
Brian wrote: "Congradulations Rick! I am sure the membership surpassed your wildest expectations. Laying the groundwork for what is becoming a mini empire, awesome to see!"
thanks you so much Brian- you have been a very valuable member- please read my Group Announcement post- first in dicussion-
thanks you so much Brian- you have been a very valuable member- please read my Group Announcement post- first in dicussion-
Miss GP wrote: "I finally finished City of Dragons by Kelli Stanley. I hated the author's writing style at first, but it actually grew on me. And, her attention to historical detail (1940s San Fra..."
interesting on how it "grew on you"- I guess if we give abook a chance- i can "grow on you"
interesting on how it "grew on you"- I guess if we give abook a chance- i can "grow on you"

This book is a historical fiction book."
love to know your review of that book- love historical fiction"
Sure. i'll post the review here once I finish the book. So far it's really good.



I'm curious what you think of the Anne Tyler novel. I've been ..."
I liked the book, but wasn't amazed by it by any means. I do intend to read some more of her novels and then I can get a real feel for Tyler and know better if I like her stuff.


I'm one of those folks that can't stand to leave a book unfinished just in case it gets better. I kind of always think... what if it got really, really good after I quit, and I seem like an idiot for hating a book I didn't finish? I mean, how can you really have an opinion about something if you only experience a small percentage of it? It's like touching a cat's tail for the first time, & then proclaiming you don't like cats because they're too long, skinny & boney. So, I almost always finish a book. I do have to admit, though, that it's rare for one to go from "I hate this, it's unreadable" to "that was really pretty good" - but it does happen.

I'm one of those folks that can't stand to leave a book unfinished just in case it gets ..."
Miss GP..........you make a really good point. Books, like people, should be given a chance. I have picked up some books that started out horribly but improved as they went along. Of course, there are those that start out horribly and continue horribly. I must admit that I have put down several books unfinished because it was a too much of a task to struggle with them. But those incidences are few and far between.

Hi everyone,
I am reading an fascinating story called "The Sunne In Splendour", By Sharon Kay Penman. A Glorious Novel of the controversial Richard III. A monarch betrayed in life by his allies. From the bedchambers to the battlefields. Excellent depiction and discription of the scenes of Royal families in battle in England.
I love reading history! Cannot put the book down!
Sharon Kay Penman
I am reading an fascinating story called "The Sunne In Splendour", By Sharon Kay Penman. A Glorious Novel of the controversial Richard III. A monarch betrayed in life by his allies. From the bedchambers to the battlefields. Excellent depiction and discription of the scenes of Royal families in battle in England.
I love reading history! Cannot put the book down!


This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Confessions on the 7:45 (other topics)Amity (other topics)
Truly, Devious (other topics)
We All Fall Down (other topics)
Get Even (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Monica Rodden (other topics)Lisa Unger (other topics)
Natalie D. Richards (other topics)
Maureen Johnson (other topics)
Gretchen McNeil (other topics)
More...