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What I'm Reading - March
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Sue
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Mar 27, 2011 11:15AM

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I just tried to find that discussion but it doesn't seem to be in the archives.



A pretty good read, but a little like watching a train wreck.


The Elephant Vanishes is good collection of his early stories; After the Quake has just six stories but they are all superb. His current collection of short stories, Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman: 24 Stories, has an interesting introduction in which he says that writing novels is a challenge and writing short stories is a joy. He alternates between the two, never working on short stories while writing a novel. He views his short stories as sort of an experimental laboratory for his novels.
I'm thinking of tackling The Complete Essays of Montaigne with the help of How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer. Has anyone used the latter as a companion book to "The Essays?"
Also, Barbara and Ruth, which of Theroux's travel books do you recommend? I have The Old Patagonian Express on my to read list because of my interest in Latin America, but haven't had time to even take much of a look at it.

His most well-known is The Mosquito Coast. I liked it a lot when I read it, but that must be over 20 years ago.



My favorite of Theroux's travel books is Riding the Iron Rooster about his travels by train in China and Tibet in the 1980's. However, I liked The Old Patagonian Express as well. He almost always talks to authors who live where he is traveling. In Patagonian Express, he visits with Jorge Luis Borges.
Dvora, I think of Theroux as a bit of a curmudgeon. He does like many things about the places in which he travels, but he has a lot of negative things to say as well. I love his writing because he takes a totally different view than the typical tourist and goes to totally different places.
One little nugget in The Pillars of Hercules which pleased me no end were his comments about Arles in the south of France. We've stayed there and it's a lovely city, but I was almost sickened by the dog excrement that was everywhere. I was there after Theroux and a new mayor had launched a campaign to get people to clean it up, but it was still everywhere. When I started reading his account, I wondered if he would include it and sure enough! He hated it that aspect of it as much as I did. And, he loved lots of other things about it -- just like me.

I believe I've now read just about all of Theroux's travel writing (except his trip down the Yangtze perhaps). I'd normally recommend The Great Railway Bazaar as the place to start, "Patagonia" would be fine also. the only one I actually disliked Dark Star Safari Overland from Cairo to Capetown - as one reviewer put it, "You never felt he was ever in any situation whipping out his Titanium Tier credit card couldn't fix." I found him incredibly pompous, more than once, during the book.
I really enjoyed listening to Murakami's novella After Dark.
Barbara,
I read one of Theroux's novels: The Consul's File, which left me understanding why a South Asian friend considers him patronizingly racist; on the other hand, I was hooked by having a protagonist with such a terrific moniker as Fenella Crabbe!

About two-thirds done with A Discovery of Witches which I've enjoyed. It's not blowing me away, but I'm sure I'll finish it, and I believe it's the first of a planned trilogy, so I imagine I'll follow up.
Finished listening to Eat, Pray, Love about ten days ago, and very much enjoyed it. Gilbert's self-deprecating humor came through very clearly in her reading.



But the India section was my favorite, mostly exactly because she so clearly acknowledged her own shortcomings, and what lessons she needed to learn, repeatedly.

About two-thirds done with A Discovery of Witches which I'..."
Oh good about the Maisie Dobbs. I still have the last one to read. I sort of dole them out to myself between other books as I've been enjoying this series for so long.



The only novel I've read by Theroux is Millroy the Magician, and I liked it. Though, "liking it" might not be an accurate description: it was really good, and the ending left me slightly confused and angered. But still, worth a try, I'd say.

I guess I should slip it in soon too. Sometimes it feels like a cheat since it's so enjoyable, not that others aren't also. It's sort of like dessert.

This little Tudor kick of mine started with The HBO miniseries THE TUDORS. I then read THE SIX WIVES OF HENRY VIII, some historical fiction about Elizabeth I, Anne Boleyn and her sister, and then watched the movie "A Man for All Seasons." Still need to watch the movies about Elizabeth 1.
I must admit, this is being a mighty fun romp through not-so-merry Old England!


Anne, I'm sure CR didn't read Wolf Hall as a group read, though I do think many of us have read it.
I love the Tudor period, too, and am really looking forward to Hilary Mantel's sequel to Wolf Hall.
Dvora, I really loved Dear Theo.




I do recommend it. It's really sort of an historical mystery using her then contemporary policeman.

The sixth and final book of the Earth Children series (The Land of Painted Caves) will be released tomorrow. I had never read any of the books but with the devotion and excitement I've seen from fans at the bookstore where I work, I decided to read through the series. So far, at almost the half way mark of the first book, I'm enjoying the story.

LUST FOR LIFE has been on my to re-read list. I can foresee a Van Gogh feast in my future. Once the Tudors have their way with me!

I also want to begin The Cairo Trilogy, but I'm afraid the small print might cause me to go blind! It really is small, and I'm really near-sighted.

The sixth and final book of the Earth Children series (The Land of Painted Caves) will be released tomorrow. I had never read any of the b..."
I'd heard so much about this book that I downloaded the audio from my library. Maybe it's better in print. I didn't last 30 minutes on the audio.


Cateline wrote: "I'm reading two at present, The Boat by Nam Le, and Augustus: The Life of Rome's First Emperor by Anthony Everitt."

Kat (LvnEvryMin) wrote: "I started The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle last night and enjoying it so far."

On to Doomsday Book. Also, my history buff friend Sid recommended Flyboys: A True Story of Courage to me because it has cannibalism in the story about the Japanese atrocities during WWII. Really interesting story. I had the urge to clear the deck and read Flyboys next, but I was set on reading Doomsday for the last week. I don't know. If Doomsday doesn't grab me from the very beginning, I might jump to Flyboys. The urge is pretty strong to read it. Who'd know being a cannibal, you can make so many friends?

John wrote: "I like Murakami, too, though I bailed early on Kafka on the Shore."

I found that book pretty boring and returned it to the library unfinished after page 90.
I've heard that her BRAT FARRAR is good and plan to give it a read sometime.
Marge

Even if one knows a lot of the history of Henry VIII, the Boleyns, etc. it is still a great read simply because Mantel does such a superb job of telling it.
It is taking me more time to get through the book because I stop to look up so many things that Mantel just hints at (some of which I probably should ignore, but can't as I like details), such as Calais (the city in northernmost France closest to England was a possession of England for several centuries); how horrible the sweating sickness was and that it disappeared and thankfully has never reappeared; the emperor's solders plundering Rome because they had not been paid; the Percy family (I'd never heard of, but were the most powerful family in Northern England during most of the Middle Ages); pictures of the Seymours' Wulfhall; etc., etc. --so many interesting tidbits.
Now I want to watch the old movies, A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS and ANNE OF THE THOUSAND DAYS. (Incidentally, Elizabeth Taylor was seen as an-- uncredited--courtesan in Anne of the Thousand Days.)
Marge


Gabrielle: I am about 100 pages into The Tiger's Wife. I had the same reservations as you going into it and so far those issues have not been a problem for me. Someone else here has already finished it so I will definitely start a discussion thread when I am done.

John wrote: "I like Murakami, too, though I bailed early on Kafka on the Shore.""
It's been a while, but as I recall the combination of unpleasant audio narration and subject matter; seemed heavy-handed and coarse to me.


Gabrielle: I am about 100 pages into The Tiger's Wife. I had the same r..."
I'm glad to hear the book hasn't held any problems for you, Al. I'm just starting it, but I'll be sure to check your discussion thread and add something if I finish in time. Thank you.
Kitty, if you have Netflix and can watch "Brother's Keeper," it's very interesting. You see the real people Clinch writes about in Kings of the Earth.

Brian wrote: "John, does that mean that one should avoid the audio version of books that have a talking cat and Colonel Sanders in its cast of characters? I read the print version and enjoyed it a lot, but someh..."

Gabrielle: I am about 100 pages into The Tiger's Wife. I had..."
I added it to my queue.

Actually, I really liked the last book I listened to featuring a talking cat (Wild Things). I confess I don't recall the details specifically - apologies if that means my recollection of disliking the book is "invalid" in your opinion. It wasn't just the audio though - I wasn't getting into the story itself.
I like Murakami as a writer, just not that book.
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