Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, July 1, 2018?
Hey, Happy Canada Day! Sure wish we could have nice things here like they do.
I'm still reading The Bartender's Tale by Ivan Doig and almost finished. Also still listening to The Golem of Paris by Jonathan and Jesse Kellerman but have a ways to go, yet, on that. It has some really bone-chilling things going on. For instance, what it is like to live in Russia when you are just a commoner. Not nice.
What nice things are on your reading list this week?
Have a safe and happy 4th.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)I am finally going back to a Stephen King novel. I read so many of his books over the decades that I started having trouble with some of them seeming alike. Same thing with Tom Clancy.
But "The Outsider" has gotten good reviews and I haven't read a King novel in a long time, so gonna give it a shot. Looking forward to it.
By the way, "Lamb" is hilarious and cleverly written. Somehow Moore takes these impossible scenarios and enables the reader not to care about that and just enjoy the ride.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)about King. I will want to hear what you think of this one, though. It may tempt me to read another, too.
TexasProgresive
(12,307 posts)Halfway through "The Late Show" by Michael Connelly. It's a fast read and I'm loving Dectective Renee Ballard.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)I know I sure got more reading done back when I was working. Days just go by too fast, now.
Glad to hear you are liking her. I look forward to getting to know her.
Ohiogal
(34,903 posts)The Ballard character was so well written! I've read all of Connelly's books. IMO he is among the top crime fiction writers of all time.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)by Margaret Atwood. Wow.
In the near future when economic collapse and job outsourcing has made unemployment in this country include (or so it seems) almost everyone, Stan and Charmaine join The Positron Project, which promises full employment and useful skills to everyone who joins. The catch? You spend one month in the town of Consilience, and one month in the Positron Prison. And you will have no contact with the outside world ever again.
Really good so far. 80 pages left to go.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)hermetic
(8,636 posts)I wonder how I missed that one. I thought I had read everything of hers. Ah, well, one more to be on the lookout for. Thanks.
CrispyQ
(38,358 posts)Thanks!
murielm99
(31,463 posts)Odd Apocalypse, by Dean Koontz.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)to another place, doesn't it? Which is certainly a good thing at this point in time.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)northoftheborder
(7,609 posts)(Historic Fiction) Story placed in 17thC French territory, that would become Quebec. Young French girls were recruited by King Louis 14th to agree to sail to the frontiers of "New France", marry, have children and develop the settlements to help protect from English aggression. There were an abundance of young men already there, and few women. So they had their pick of misc. types - some rugged frontiersmen, some men of wealth and property. Three young women's lives are narrated over the years with their adventures in a rugged, untamed land. A sequel - Duty to the Crown, follows their story.
These are light reading for me, (I have to recover from a Philip Roth book.)
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Understandable.
I will say, though, that sounds somewhat entertaining. Of course, I love Canada and its history so I can see easily relating to one of them, probably Elisabeth.
virgogal
(10,178 posts)Actually, I have a couple of Jo Nesbo audio books coming up soon in my queue. Looking forward to them.
virgogal
(10,178 posts)Timewas
(2,294 posts)Into the Myron Bolitar series..on #4 today
Harlan Coben, with over 70 million books in print worldwide. I've read a few of those.
Timewas
(2,294 posts)I tend to try to read them in order if possible...
dameatball
(7,603 posts)When I like an author or a continuing series leading character, it is sort of weird to go back and read a suspense novel where the hero/heroine is risking their lives....and you have already read something two years after.... Of course the supporting casts sometimes do not fare so well.
Timewas
(2,294 posts)Will give you the order of books surprisingly called.
https://www.orderofbooks.com/
dameatball
(7,603 posts)CrispyQ
(38,358 posts)I just finished "A Clash of Kings" this morning & have a "A Storm of Swords" already checked out. Book two dragged a bit in the middle & I had to force myself through a few chapters, but I closed the book excited to read the next one.
We aren't doing anything special for the holiday but I thought I might bring my ice cream maker upstairs & check it out. I haven't used it in a couple of years. I'll stop by the farmer's market the day before & see what local fruit they have. And I'll read.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Sounds like a nice, quiet day for you. Same here. BBQ something, pop a few movies into the DVD player, play with the kittens.
RamblingRose
(1,098 posts)I may finish all 1096 pages one of these days if I can stay off DU & turn off Rachel
hermetic
(8,636 posts)His stories are always great, though.
Squinch
(52,891 posts)About growing up in urban America as a Native American. So far it's fabulous.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Likened to Sherman Alexie and Louise Erdrich. A must-read for me, then. Thanks!
Alliepoo
(2,490 posts)The newest in her Richard Jury mystery series.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)PennyK
(2,313 posts)Eighteen of them?
Sounds like a great series. I'm going in!
Dr Vegas
(456 posts)hermetic
(8,636 posts)An Obama/Biden caper!
Hope Never Dies by Andrew Shaffer (Quirk Books), a work of fiction, may bring tears to your eyes. Yes, its that good of a whodunit, with its plot tied up neatly with no loose ends. You may laugh until you cry because this book is that funny. But mostly, you may weep with joy for reuniting with a couple of old friends youve missed so much.
Please do report back on that one. And welcome to DU!
Response to hermetic (Reply #39)
Dr Vegas This message was self-deleted by its author.
Dr Vegas
(456 posts)PoorMonger
(844 posts)From the bestselling author of The Yard comes a chilling contemporary thriller about an enigmatic hunter on the trail of a Nazi who has secretly continued his devilish work here in America.
Travis Roan and his dog, Bear, are hunters: They travel the world pursuing evildoers in order to bring them to justice. They have now come to Kansas on the trail of Rudolph Bormann, a Nazi doctor and concentration camp administrator who snuck into the U.S. under the name Rudy Goodman in the 1950s and has at last been identified. Travis quickly learns that Goodman has powerful friends who will go to any length to protect the Nazi; what he doesn't know is that Goodman has furtively continued his diabolical work, amassing a congregation of followers who believe he possesses Godlike powers. Caught between these men is Kansas State Trooper Skottie Foster, an African American woman and a good cop who must find a way to keep peace in her district--until she realizes the struggle between Roan and Bormann will put her and her family in grave peril.
That sounds like quite a satisfying read.
Did you say you had read The Yard? That sounds like reading time well spent, too.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)But Im thinking I will sooner rather than later. I liked this one quite a bit.
PennyK
(2,313 posts)She is good! This is the third book in the Timothy Wilde trilogy. I've also just finished her Dust and Shadow (Holmes vs. Jack the Ripper). Highly recommend her stuff.
Thanks.
Thats a good reminder - I read The Gods Of Gotham years ago when it was new. Must have missed the others if they showed up on shelves.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)Tracy Chevalier brings Shakespeares harrowing drama of jealousy and revenge to a 1970s era elementary school playground.
Arriving at his fifth school in as many years, diplomats son Osei Kokote knows he needs an ally if he is to survive his first day so hes lucky to hit it off with Dee, the most popular girl in school. But one student cant stand to witness this budding relationship: Ian decides to destroy the friendship between the black boy and the golden girl. By the end of the day, the school and its key players teachers and pupils alike will never be the same again.
The tragedy of Othello is transposed to a 1970s suburban Washington schoolyard, where kids fall in and out of love with each other before lunchtime, and practice a casual racism picked up from their parents and teachers. Peeking over the shoulders of four 11 year olds Osei, Dee, Ian, and his reluctant girlfriend Mimi Tracy Chevalier's powerful drama of friends torn apart by jealousy, bullying and betrayal will leave you reeling.