Constant Reader discussion
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Constant Reader
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What I'm Reading - December

Truly wonderful. I say this as the youngest child of five--all of the other four were boys.

Sara, you too?
I guess I'll have to put this on my TBR list.

I remember Dale Short recommending The Brothers K in the early days of Constant Reader and my intentions to read it. I just found an audibook production online at my library and put it on my list. Thanks for reminding me!





The Brothers Karamazov by that Russian dude.
At least I think that's what they're talking about.


well, and I've never read the Russian dude's book.


Just finished Pulphead, a book of essays which I really enjoyed. The author is very talented and funny.
I am listening to and devouring Rules of Civility - I think a lot of CRs would be into it, somewhat reminds me of Brooklyn but this one is much more of a love letter to Manhattan.
I am almost done with Steve Jobs. Listening to that one too. I have enjoyed it but it was a wee bit long. The earlier stuff was much more interesting IMHO.
And I am determined to finish Old Filth for the upcoming discussion.

It is a quick read. You might want to also tackle the companion The Man in the Wooden Hat which focuses more on his wife's side of things.


Apparently the same thing that's wrong with me--started listening several times and stalled. I will do it! Eventually.

FYI, I think you especially will love listening to the rules of civility.


FYI, I think you especially will love listening to the rules of civility."
I have a print copy somewhere on the lower ledges of the TBR mountain.



3***
The book is subtitled: A Giraffe’s True Story, From Deep in Africa to the Heart of Paris.
In October 1826 a ship arrived at Marseilles carrying the first giraffe ever seen in France. She was a gift from the Ottoman Viceroy of Egypt to the King of France Zarafa had already travelled over 1,000 miles to that point, but would have to walk the 550 miles from Marseille to Paris.
Allin did exhaustive research. Zarafa was a sensation in France – ladies had their hair coiffured a la Girafe (piled so high they had to ride on the floors of their carriages), children ate giraffe-shaped gingerbread cookies, towns along the giraffe’s route named streets and squares in her honor. She was, indeed a celebrity.
The book should have been fascinating and interesting to someone like me – a lover of natural history as well as world history. The sections that dealt with Zarafa’s actual journey were the most interesting to me. On the other hand, Allin’s book bogged down in details of the politics of the time. In total, I thought it was okay. I’m glad I learned about this tiny little detail of history, but I’m not telling everyone to run out and read it.

Audio book read by Philip Franklin
3***
In August 1992 a group of Alaskan hunters came across the decomposed body of an unknown hiker in an abandoned bus in the wilderness. Despite an obvious plea for help they found scrawled across a page torn from a book and affixed to the bus’s door, it took some days for authorities to confirm that this was Christopher McCandless. He had starved to death, just a few miles from help. How had he gotten there? Why had he died?
Krakauer traces “Alexander Supertramp’s” journey from a much loved son and brother in a well-to-do Virginia family, to an itinerant wanderer intent upon living off the earth. He managed to track McCandless as he crisscrossed the United States, even into Mexico, over two years following his graduation from Emory University in May 1990. To this reader McCandless appeared naïve and stubborn, and I felt angry with him for being so uncaring about the anguish he was causing his parents and sister. On the other hand, Krakauer did force me to recall some of my own foolish youthful escapades (though nothing as extreme as burning all my cash and hiking into the Alaska wilderness with only 10 lbs of rice). I could have done without sidebar stories of other people’s misadventures, but I understand why Krakauer chose to include them.
Franklin does a very good job of reading this tragic tale of a grand adventure gone horribly wrong.

He certainly is verbose.

Audio book read by Philip Franklin
3***
In August 1992 a group of Alaskan hunters came across the decomposed body of an unknown hiker in an abandoned bus in the wilder..."
I read this a couple of years ago, and enjoyed it much more than I thought I would.



Thanks for the suggestion, Tessa. I just put an ILL request for this book at our library.
I'm reading Old Filth. I'm about 1/2 way through and really enjoying it so far. It's been going slow, but that's my job's fault, not the book's!


Slow go is better than no go right John?

5*****
I've had this book for ages and I read it every December on my birthday. Happy Birthday to Me!
This autobiographical story is based on Capote’s own childhood, living with relatives in Alabama. It’s a memory of the innocence of childhood and the anticipation of something special. It is a wonderful, touching story of family love and respect, and also a story of loneliness and want.
One crisp November morning 7-year-old Buddy hears his cousin Sook (whom he calls Friend) declare, “It’s fruitcake weather!” With that pronouncement, the two set off on their annual campaign to bake dozens of fruitcakes for “friends.” Sook is an elderly woman with a child’s mind, and she and Buddy are constant companions (and each other’s only friend). It is during the Great Depression and times are hard. It takes them all year to save the pennies, nickels, dimes for their Fruitcake Fund, and the other relatives in their household look upon them with derision. Still, nothing can dampen their spirits as they bake and mail the fruitcakes, hunt deep into the woods for the perfect Christmas tree, make the ornaments and decorations that will make it look “good enough to eat!”
Capote was a gloriously talented writer and he is at his best here. The reader feels the anticipation of a child, smells the piney woods, shivers in the crisp morning, and is comforted in the warmth of love.
I leave you with one quote from the story. Sook and Buddy are enjoying the outdoors and she has a revelation …
“You know what I’ve always thought?” she asks in a tone of discovery, and not smiling at me but a point beyond. “I’ve always thought a body would have to be sick and dying before they saw the Lord. And I imagined that when He came it would be like looking at the Baptist window: pretty as colored glass with the sun pouring through, such a shine you don’t know it’s getting dark. And it’s been a comfort: to think of that shine taking away all the spooky feeling. But I’ll wager it never happens. I’ll wager at the very end a body realizes the Lord has already shown Himself. That things as they are” – her hand circles in a gesture that gathers clouds and kites and grass and Queenie pawing earth over her bone – “just what they’ve always seen, was seeing Him. As for me, I could leave the world with today in my eyes.”

5*****
I've had this book for ages and I read it every December on my birthday. Happy Birthday to Me!
This autobiographical story is based on Capote’s own chil..."
Oh, I love that book. Maybe I should do a reread for Christmas. Or, give it for presents...now there's an idea.

Audio book read by Philip Franklin
3***
In August 1992 a group of Alaskan hunters came across the decomposed body of an unknown hiker in an aban..."
Hmm, I think I will make this my next book to read. I loved his Into Thin Air. How do the 2 books compare?
I am currently reading Secret Daughter; I'm about 1/3 through, and I like it a lot.

I think Into the Wild and Into Thin Air are both fantastic stories well-told by Krakauer. Likely, if you dig one you will enjoy the other.

Jumped over into Love is a Dog from Hell, poems by Bukowski.


John,
I have only read 60 pages of OLD FILTH but I love it, and I particularly love the flashbacks.


I think Into the Wild and Into Thin Air are both fantastic stories well-told by Krakauer. Likely, if you dig one you will enjoy the other."
Agreed. It's been many, many years (10?) since I've read both but remember enjoying them. With INTO THIN AIR, I had a little trouble keeping up with all the different people but it didn't affect my enjoyment. This was doubly difficult in Krakauer's other book UNDER THE BANNER OF HEAVEN which I never finished. I just couldn't get into that one and gave up about half way through.

I've had this book for ages and I read it every December on my birthday. Happy Birthday to Me!"
My friend directs a reading of this every year in NYC. It's not staged, no music, just a sweet, lovely reading. I'm going to see it next Monday...it's like listening to an audio book but with drinks and friends.
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I'm finishing Let the Great World Spin, and loving it! Next up: State of Wonder by Ann Patchett. This is what I call a feast for the eyes.