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June: What Are You Reading?
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Sherry, Doyenne
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Jun 01, 2010 04:39AM

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I'm finishing A House for Mr. Biswas and The Historian. The latter is becoming a bit of a slog now because it's overly long. Not enough real story for almost 700 pages.
I hope to read Fools of Fortune, too, one of William Trevor's "big house" books.

For the Bodice Rippers, I've just finished the unimpressive Soulless, a fantasy/romance.
And on a whim, I've just started Don't Bet on the Prince: Contemporary Feminist Fairy Tales in North America and England which I immediately love. Well-written fairy tales with active and effective heroines.
I'd love to reread Biswas, which is an old favourite, but my hands are way too full.



I did not like The Kite Runner myself since I thought it was overwrought and overwritten, but I loved Snow Falling On Cedars. However, I tried to watch the movie three times and fell asleep all three times. I guess for me, at least, the book was better than the movie.




Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake-Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia by Dennis Covington

However, and I did not do this on purpose, it was an ideal read on Memorial Day.
I'm now back into my huge library pile of started books to see who emerges in this next round :) I also picked up several more from the library today. I highly recommend "shopping" at the library for those looking to experience "retail therapy" without actually spending any money!!



http://web.archive.org/web/2006110201...

Gabrielle wrote: "I was disappointed in it as well. For one thing, the people were stereotypes, and the people there aren't stereotypes. They are people."
Oh, no, Ruth, Gabrielle, too, I loved it. I had reservations on the happy ending resolve but it was clearly laid out as fragile as the story wound down to the finish so I forgave that somewhat. I felt that the characters were so real that their responses felt much like my own and that pulled me into the book. What you saw as stereotypes, Gabrielle, I found to be the universality/common denominator of humans of whatever their nationality. I basically put all those other half dozen or so books on hold to devour this pretty immediately. Yes, for the story's purposes we are embedded into a stereotypical abusive, etc. household (Rasheed) BUT we also saw Laila's family and Mariam's father's life and Nana and those who were important to Mariam in her younger days. We were given plenty of contrasts in how the various cultural entities responded to the events unfolded in the story.





Loved that!

How have you liked "sweetness" so far? I've had it on reserve for over two months now and I'm kind of giving up hope! If it's a good one I should probably buy it.

I always hate to tell anyone to buy a book. I myself am cheap in that department so I would wait it out. I was waiting for two month for The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest and I got it yesterday!
The book was adorable and I loved how the heroine was a super smart eleven year old sleuth. It was easy to read and enjoyable.



I had a similar reaction, Ruth.
I love, love LOVED! Snow Falling on Cedars. If I didn't have so many new books to read, I would revisit it. I'm working on developing my summer reading list now.


I am reading a Jacqueline Winspear, catching up on the series, and alternating between library books and those I own.

I had a similar reacti..."
I want to reread Snow Falling On Cedars soon, Erin if just for the beautiful descriptions of nature. I thought the movie would be so good because of the beautiful setting, but no. It just moved too slowly (the movie, not the book).
Susan, In the Lake of the Woods does lend itself to great discussion, doesn't it. That's another one I'd love to reread. I still don't know for sure what I feel about the ending.




I just finished Breakable You for our discussion later this month.
I'm back to my big roulette wheel of library book choices. The one that I am the farthest along in is Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood - a memoir that I am enjoying. It has short, snapshot like chapters which make it perfect for stopping and coming back to.


Steinbeck's East of Eden was one of my favorite reads last year.
If you ever visit anywhere near Salinas, California (near Monterey) you must visit the Steinbeck Center/Museum. Fascinating place for Steinbeck fans and will make those who haven't read him run out and get his books.
BTW, I'm always curious about why people are concerned with how many books they read. I'm more concerned with reading a good book. If I don't like a book, and have a long list of books I want to read, I simply stop reading the book after, say, 75-100 pages, and get on to another book. I do sometimes come back later and read a book I'd discarded.
Marge


I think that's wise, Susan and Marge. We only have a limited amount of time to spend reading, and I think it should be enjoyable and rewarding. Because we have to do other things and because new books are constantly being published, we probably won't get to read all the good books we want to read, let alone wage through ones we don't like.
Most of my ratings are good, too because I've finally learned to choose books I'm pretty sure I'll like, however I do come across a clunker now and then. I still feel compelled to finish a book, though I'm trying to break myself of that compulsion and take my own advice about limited reading time. I guess this in one of those cases where it's easier to give advice than to take your own. LOL

Marge, my problem is that there are too many good books out there! Like Gabrielle, I've done a pretty good job at learning what I will and will not like. While I have been able to weed out quite a number (some entire genres, even!), knowing that I won't enjoy them or otherwise benefit by reading, there are still a lot of books left to read! Even if one limits herself to Pulitzer, Nobel, Booker and Orange winners, that is still a gargantuan list to take on.

Absolutely! Right now I don't have a coffee table, though! LOL No room! But I'll get one eventually. And some books for on it! :)

The only thing I found annoying about the book was the main character calling his wife "Kath" so much of the time. I know her name was "Kathy," but I think O'Brien, who I really do like very, very much, overused the expression, "Kath, oh, Kath!" I remember thinking if I read that one more time, I was going to stop reading the book. But I kept on, wanting to know."
That made me sit here and laugh out loud; it just reminded me of my friend Cathy's significant other, who nicknamed her, 'Catheter.'

The only thing I found annoying about the book was the main character calling his wife "Kath" so much of the time. I know her name was "Kathy," but I think O'Brien, who I really..."
I didn't mind him calling his wife, "Kath," Beej, but the main character had a penchant for saying, "Kath, oh, Kath!" over and over. It got on my nerves. LOL And Tim O'Brien is such a first rate writer. I was surprised it didn't get on his nerves, too! :)
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