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What Are You reading June, 2012
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Starting
because it was on my shelf because I bought it at Goodwill eons ago because it's like new and now I'm trying to read more books on my shelf and




How about Roald Dshl's Matilda? The heroine is 5 and a half and the reading level is age 7 and up.


In my malaise I decided to bring another book out to the deck over the weekend (ostensibly to protect the hardcover library copy of Tinkers from whatever could happen outdoors), and started my June +12 in '12, Mister Pip. Love love love. I'm glad it worked out that I read this after I read Great Expectations, because otherwise a large portion of the book would be lost on me. I also heard a bit ago that they were making a movie of this, and that Hugh Laurie would be playing Mr. Watts, which is brilliant casting, imo.
I am also still enjoying Alice I Have Been, especially the audio work by Samantha Eggar. I have to say that some of the parts of the book are making me uncomfortable (taking pictures of Alice in the garden, for example), and I don't know if they are supposed to or not. It is possible I am being too sensitive.



And today is a great day as I found out that Carlos Ruiz Zafon has a new book coming out on July 10th and revolves around the same characters in Shadow of the Wind and The Angel's Game. The Cemetery of Forgotten Books is in it as well. I am so excited!!!!!

You lasted longer than I did. I gave up after 40 pages or so, and I love his earlier books.

I reread the play as I'll be appearing in it this summer as Sir Toby Belch. Ah, what fun!
Shakespeare fact: most directors these days cut Shakespeare's plays down to a reasonable two hours for performance. That will be the case for the production I'm in. I'll miss the double-talk conversations between Sir Toby and the Clown, and some of the "mistaken identity" humor involving male/female twins Sebastian and Viola. Although I can see why the director removed this stuff. In the former case, the invented references to phony experts like "Qeuebus" (God, would I have loved saying "Qeuebus"!) would have been indistinguishable from other archaic references, thereby causing confusion to the average theater goer. In the latter case, the humorous situations are often repetitive.
Cutting Shakespeare is nothing new. David Garrick, an actor and director who was a friend of Samuel Johnson, used to do it routinely in the 18th century.

I'm looking forward to finishing Swamplandia so I can move on to a nonfiction book called "Color: A Natural History of the Palette" by Victoria Finlay. I sneaked in a chapter or two and am eager to dig deeper.
My current audiobook is John Irving's "Last Night in Twisted River." Some aspects of the writing style and plot irk me, but not enough that I'll stop. The story begins with an adolescent boy accidentally killing his father's lover (he mistakes her for a bear and whacks her on the head with a heavy skillet--sounds ludicrous, I know). The father and son flee their New England lumber camp after arranging the scene so that suspicion of guilt will fall on someone else, but inevitably fate will catch up with them, and I'm interested enough to stick around and see what happens.

Kahneman describes two the two modes of thinking, the intuitive mode, which he calls "System One", and the engaged, active mode, which he calls "System Two". System One performs those automatic tasks of daily life that require no conscious thought, such as driving, recognizing faces, and reading people's emotions. System Two kicks in when we multiply numbers or have to make decisions requiring thought.
This book is really about decision making, and how the two "Systems" interact in making decisions. The problem is that humans don't make as good decisions as "econs" (hypothetical rational entities). The reason we don't make as good decisions as we could is that System Two is lazy, and will always seek a shortcut. Further, System Two is in thrall to judgments made by System One, which often set System Two off onto an incorrect premise. Even when presented with statistics which would result in better decisions, humans will ignore said statistics and "go with their guts", resulting in poor decisions.
This fascinating book intersects with concepts of game theory and with issues discussed in Susan Cain's






Hated Twisted River, and now I just barely "like" Irving!
He was recently interviewed by Craig Ferguson (CBS Late Show) and it was pretty quickly obvious that he passed his prime as a writer (IMHO) and perhaps as a civil human being. And I loved his earlier books! If interested, read my (scathing) review of Last Night in Twisted River. Uff!


A crazy good mix, a great way to get into summer reading (even though none of them are really "beach reads").
What puts the "summer" in a great summer read, you think?



Hated Twisted River, and now I just barely "like" Irving!
He was recently interviewed by Craig Ferguson (CBS Late Show) and it w..."
I saw him on Craig Ferguson & thought it was hysterical...
SPOILER:
No mockingbirds are harmed.
No mockingbirds are harmed.
"Killing a Mockingbird for Dummies".

Mass slaughter of penguins, though. Remember that part?

Hated Twisted River, and now I just barely "like" Irving!
He was recently interviewed by Craig Ferguson (CBS Late ..."
I feel so bad about not finishing Last Night.... Am 1/2 way through on my Kindle. I loved The World according to Garp and it saved me over holiday break when I was in college and home with bronchitis and stuck in the dcotor's office for hours. It is still one of my top ten books and I wished still loved John Irving, but....


Am also halfway through Paul J. Bauer and Mark Drwidziak's






I just finished Disgrace which I really enjoyed and I would like to read more novels by Coetzee. Any recommendations? I'm currently readingBlind Descent: The Quest to Discover the Deepest Place on Earth, what a page turner! Thank you Michael!
But even Kahneman noted that when he himself had the opportunity to use statistics instead of his feelings when making decisions, he chose his feelings. It's easy to believe we can change our human ways and behave as econs, but hard to put it into practice.

Try the
Life & Times of Michael KLife & Times of Michael K or Elizabeth Costello. Both great and quick reads.

post your thoughts on blind descent. it sounds interesting.

That is very true. . . I work in end of life care and I always see people making emotional, fast decisions re: their dying loved ones. Often the decisions are not very good ones. I keep thinking that maybe if I re-read the book very carefully, maybe I can do a better job advvising them and get them to make better decisions, but probably not. . . we'll see.
Re:
Blind Descent: The Quest to Discover the Deepest Place on Earth, it's a non-fiction about cavers who explore very deep caves using scuba diving and rock climbing equipment. It's interesting, sort of the caving version of "into thin air". . . a nice quick page turner where you learn about a different part of the world you normally don't hear much about. . . supercaves. . .


I haven't read Swamplandia yet, but thought it might be a good choice for our book group.


Devil in the White City is in my top 10 books of all times. I enjoyed In the Garden as well... just not as much as Devil in the White City. He seems to write about my interests, ie Chicago is my FAVORITE city and I've always been drawn to WW2 books ever since I was in middle school and read the diary of Anne Frank.

I liked Devil in the White City better than In the Garden of Beasts. I got really depressed reading about the rise of Hitler because I couldn't get rid of my sense of inevitability. It was hard knowing how much damage he would ultimately cause.
I liked Devil in the White City better because the murders of HH Holmes were contrasted with the building and running of the 1893 World Columbian Exposition. Reading about the fair was really interesting - and I found some old photos of the fair, which were incredible.

[bo..."
I love both of Victoria Finlay's books - Color: A Natural History of the Palette, and Jewels: A Secret History. She takes these mundane topics and talks about their histories and the people who were shaped by them. And she's a very readable author.

Hated Twisted River, and now I just barely "like" Irving!
He was recently interviewed by Craig Ferguson (CBS Late Show) and it w..."
I confess that I gave up on Twisted River despite my original post saying I'd stick it out. I made it through 10 of 20 discs in the audiobook and just felt I'd had enough when Irving once again left things at what looked like it could be a critical turning point and wandered off into several long, seemingly unimportant flashbacks about unrelated events that had happened years ago. I got tired of waiting for the plot to reemerge. Maybe someday I'll pick up the book and skim through it to see how it ends, but for now I'm glad to be done with it.

[bo..."
I'm still reading "Color," and it's fascinating. Color by color, the author explores how pigments and paints were made and used, going back not just to the eras of great masterworks in art but to the earliest cave paintings, Australian aboriginal societies, etc. I love her statement early in the book to the effect that when we think about art history, we think about the artists and their work but not about "the people who made the things that made the art," in other words, the people who make the colors.
My only minor complaint is that I would have liked more illustrations. Of course you can seek out relevant images online, but it would have been nice to have them reproduced within the book. There are several pages of illustrations in the center of the book, just not enough to satisfy me.
Books mentioned in this topic
Swamplandia! (other topics)Color: A Natural History of the Palette (other topics)
Blind Descent: The Quest to Discover the Deepest Place on Earth (other topics)
Life & Times of Michael K (other topics)
Elizabeth Costello (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Erik Larson (other topics)Ray Bradbury (other topics)
Susan Glaspell (other topics)
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