Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, February 10, 2019?
I have The Flood, Ian Rankin's first novel from 1986. It's not a mystery like his Inspector Rebus books but it does have some rather mysterious things going on. And it exhibits his wonderful gift for writing. "The Flood is both a coming-of-age novel and an amazing portrait of a time and place. Dark, atmospheric and powerful, it is a remarkable debut from a remarkable author."
My copy is a reissue from 2012. Evidently the ones from the first printing are now worth a whole lot of money. You might want to check your bookshelves. This later copy has an Introduction written by Ian where he talks about his past and his writing. It's quite a nice addition.
In looking for the original publishing date I came across some fascinating information about Mr. Rankin. For instance, he's in a rock band called Best Picture. They have a couple of videos on YouTube. Also, there was a British TV show called Rebus that ran for four seasons. I will be looking to find that. Plus, I discovered an amazing tale about some mysterious paper sculptures that involves him. Too long to put here so I made a separate post about it.
Listening to Before the Fall by Noah Hawley. A private jet plunges into the ocean with eleven people on board and only two survive. Was it merely some dumb chance that so many influential people perished? Or was something far more sinister at work? Events soon threaten to spiral out of control in an escalating storm of media outrage and accusations. Quite suspenseful.
Thanks for the hearts. I think they must be from people here since you are the only ones who know I exist. I wish I could buy hearts back for all you good folks who post here but alas, I am not able to. So, instead, here. From me to you.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)hermetic
(8,636 posts)Pendergast-the world's most enigmatic FBI Special Agent-returns to New York City to investigate a murderous cult.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)dameatball
(7,603 posts)character from previous stories dies off in this book. Not saying who.....
Even though this is a so-called "stand alone" story, the fates of the characters is not. Still a very entertaining read.
MontanaMama
(24,041 posts)The second book in the All Souls Trilogy by Deborah Harkness. Its total fantasy about witches, vampires and demons and their battles amongst each other. Witches fear vampires and vampires hate witches...demons are troublemakers for all concerned. Im not usually drawn to fantasy but I feel the need to escape our current reality and these are fun reads.
Hiya hermetic! How is winter treating you? We are in a mess on blowing snow and very cold temps here in western MT.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Delighted to see you. We seem to finally be getting our winter here. It's been in the 40s for a good while but now 20s and it even snowed about an inch last night. I know you guys are getting your usual. Think of you often.
Hestia
(3,818 posts)It is not a paranormal book, per se, but more a history of New York in the early-1880's It is not a reimagined history, either, as so many books are these days, but actual bit and pieces of history of the NYC area. A tea room (Fifth Avenue Hotel) is one of the few places that women can go to eat and meet other women, which is where the witches meet their clientele.
Interesting was the delivery of "Cleopatra's Needle" at the same time one of the major characters is moving to NYC from Stony Point.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleopatra%27s_Needle_(New_York_City)
It's mate is in London, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleopatra%27s_Needle,_London
Very well written and engaging characters. I like the quotes from the aunt who follows the suffragette writers of the time -
"Fortune favors the prepared mind."
"Beauty seeks attention. Intelligence commands it."
MontanaMama
(24,041 posts)I put Witches of NY on my want list.
Soxfan58
(3,479 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)One morning there is no water coming out of the taps at all. Needless to say, things quickly get dicey. It's YA, as I think all of Shusterman's books are.
Before the Fall is very good.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)I am glad to see it written for YAs, since they will be the ones dealing with this reality.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,730 posts)Shusterman has written a bunch and I've liked every one of his books that I've read.
Polly Hennessey
(7,476 posts)by Kimberly Belle. Great mystery for a cloudy, gray day. A heart for you. I look forward to you and all the other lovers of books. I have had many great suggestions from all of you.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)We do get some good recs here, that's for sure. Yours there sounds like another...
Princess Turandot
(4,824 posts)#24 in his Inspector Banks series.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)winner from Mr. Robinson.
shenmue
(38,537 posts)hermetic
(8,636 posts)another roller coaster ride of ideas and emotions. Surrender, New York brings to life the grim underbelly of a prosperous nation - and those most vulnerable to its failings.
Sounds intense.
It's a little slow to start, but maybe that's because I'm on cold medicine.
rzemanfl
(30,289 posts)Ohiogal
(34,903 posts)I have read every one of her V.I. Warshawski books. I am enjoying this one, too, so far.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)TexasProgresive
(12,307 posts)It was a great read featuring Harry Bosch. I have been a fan of the Bosch series, but I have read them out of order as I get them. This one really explains a lot about why Harry is like he is. Not really spoilers but Connelly named dropped Matthew McConaughey who played Lincoln Lawyer, Mickey Haller, Bosch's half brother. Mickey has a few actual lines in the book. Anyway I really enjoyed it although some parts were really sad.
So I am back to Wheel of Time reading The Dragon Reborn. Hmmm nine dragons and one reborn. The nine dragons are 8 mountains near Hong Kong plus one dragon, the emperor. The dragon reborn is a man not a beast. If my reading of this Robert Jordn book is like the last it will take a couple of weeks.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Impressive. Such walls are typically found in imperial Chinese palaces and gardens.
SeattleVet
(5,594 posts)Just finished one of his other novels, 'Fluke'. Absurdist fiction, with a good deal of very good humor. Decided I liked his style, so I put a few of his other books onto my tablet for the Kindle app.
First sentence: "Christmas crept into Pine Cove like a creeping Christmas thing: dragging garland, ribbon, and sleigh bells, oozing eggnog, reeking of pine, and threatening festive doom like a cold sore under the mistletoe."
OK, I was hooked!
hermetic
(8,636 posts)That's a great one.
MLAA
(18,635 posts)SeattleVet
(5,594 posts)same rapid-fire narrative, and throw-away humor lines.
If you like Hiassen, I'm guessing you'll like Moore.
Ohiya
(2,444 posts)"The thinking man's Dave Barry or the impatient man's Tom Robbins."
I'm reading, Sacre Bleu by Moore, it is so so, not nearly as funny as Noir, but it is interesting and it takes place in Paris, so there's that.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)always room for Mo(o)re....
jls4561
(1,548 posts)I am waiting for "Noir" in paperback. I love Moore!
Wawannabe
(6,374 posts)Roared with laughter. Wacky as hell!
It was an audio and so fun having it read to me. I would like to read it/hear it again. Thanks for the reminder.
murielm99
(31,463 posts)"Escaping the Delta," by Elijah Wald.
This is a white guy trying to rewrite the history of the blues. He is into "myth-busting."
Robert Johnson was not the father of the blues. Early bluesmen (and women) played more than just the blues.
Skip this book, especially if you love the blues.
Thanks.
Number9Dream
(1,650 posts)Though this is non-fiction, this is the thread I always post in. It is about a secret plot to assassinate / kidnap George Washington and how it was foiled. I enjoyed it except that it was written in present tense which was slightly annoying.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/39863169-the-first-conspiracy
hermetic
(8,636 posts)back when I was a teenager, reading a story about a plot to poison Washington. It was written like a diary by the perp. He had this nightshade plant's fruit he was going to add to some food. Turned out to be a tomato. I've always wondered if that was true. Probably not.
northoftheborder
(7,609 posts)I don't know for sure if there was a historical plot attempted, but this one is definitely at least partial fiction.
I've listened to a couple of Baldacci books recently: The Innocent, and Total Control. I liked The Innocent better. Baldacci's novels are so good to listen to while doing repetitive boring tasks. Has anyone read "Memory Man" who sustains a brain injury which results in his not being able to forget anything?
MLAA
(18,635 posts)I am a big Carl Hiassen Fan andthought I had read them all. I love his humor, and having spent my childhood in Florida they were kind of reminiscent for me. I just came across a book this one where Mr Hiassen collaborated with Mr Montelbano. So I got it.
Wow, it is nothing, of Mr. Hiassens famous style. Yet it is very good. I also like to read detective/police/crime books especially in other locations than the US (Nordics/Venice/ Barcelona/ Rome/Shanghai). This is, so far a straight up mystery taking place in Beijing and Xian and I am really enjoying it. I lived in Shanghai for a few years and travelled to both Beijing and Xian. But again, there isnt a trace of Hiassen in it!
hermetic
(8,636 posts)I love Hiassen's humor, too.
Living in Shanghai must have been interesting, as well.
MLAA
(18,635 posts)My husband enjoyed it also. At the end the pollution got really bad, we all joked that while it was an amazing experience it probably cost us a couple of years off our life 😉
yellowdogintexas
(22,753 posts)and one other one
MLAA
(18,635 posts)I just finished Death in China and really enjoyed it. Total mystery vs numerous exploits f his current style, but very good story line and well written.
Srkdqltr
(7,692 posts)Just finished J.D. Robb Connections In Death. Next will be Lee Child Past Tense.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)From your avatar, just thought you might be.
Srkdqltr
(7,692 posts)I'm in the far South East. Between Detroit and Toledo. Hopefully snow will be moderate. If there is a snow day I get the granddaughter tomorrow.
that's a great way to spend a day. Believe me, they grow up way too fast.
Squinch
(52,891 posts)see his talent peeping through this nasty, tawdry, vengeful, gossip-column choice of subject matter. What a waste.
I don't think I can finish it.
That is sad. I read it's supposed to be "witty." Maybe not so much?
Squinch
(52,891 posts)The wit is in there, but it is just as mean as could be.
pscot
(21,037 posts)I started this about 10 years ago and got half-way through. This time I mean business. A fictional bio of Ludwig Wittgenstein might seem like a reach, but philosophers have their troubles, like other men and thereby hangs the tale. Duffy assembles a great cast of characters: Bertrand Russell, G.E.Moore, the roving Lady Ottoline Morrell, the Bloomsbury group, Sigmund Freud. I used to be an admirer of Bertrand Russell, not as a philosopher but as a public man. This book takes some of the gloss off Russell the man. I've read a lot in the past 10 years so I come to this with new eyes, so to speak. It's a great novel. We are in fact snowed in.
Sorry to hear that. Hope you have plenty of what you need to get you through. Sounds like you have some serious reading to keep your mind occupied for a while, at least. Looking at my old stomping grounds that are just buried under snow right now makes me grateful I moved when I did to a place where snow is not so much of a nuisance. Stay safe and warm.
dhol82
(9,449 posts)I was not enchanted. Very convoluted plot.
It had some interesting bits.
It got rave reviews. Not sure why.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)"Michael Ondaatje is not capable of writing anything other than a five-star novel." So begins a GoodReads review. A good many people agree, but there are plenty who don't.
The premise sounds interesting but I know I had some issues with The English Patient that make me pretty sure I won't give him any more of my time. Just personal preferences, I guess.
dhol82
(9,449 posts)Im sure it will have some interesting bits but meander slowly, slowly around the yard.
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,183 posts)I had zero expectations going in. It was a recommendation by a fellow English teacher and a student. They both know I like Rowell's young adult literature and I hadn't read it yet. I had no idea what it was about. Pleasantly surprised. It's very derivative of Harry Potter, but she is putting a very cool spin on the chosen one trope.
I'll likely finish it early this week and update with the next on the list.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)being pleasantly surprised by a book?
This sounds wonderful and the reviews are just raving about it. I will for sure have to read this.
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,183 posts)Trying to work my way through the Pulitzer Fiction books. Really liking this, but Roth is a god, so...
The King of Prussia
(745 posts)so still on "Two-thirds of a ghost". It's very good.
Last week we went to see Steve Forbert play, so next up is "Big City Cat: My Life in Folk-Rock". Non-fiction for a change.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Been a long time since I last heard Forbert. I've always been a big fan of folk music and this recently published book sounds good.
"This insightful and humorous memoir is not simply the tale of a talented survivor, but also a glimpse into a musician's life and the challenges facedas well as the lessons learnedin a changing industry during the last forty years."
Ohiya
(2,444 posts)He's played here a couple of times in the last few years at a small venue. I'm going to place his book on reserve shortly.
I really appreciate the effort you put into these posts. It's like a gold mine!
Thomas Hurt
(13,925 posts)a thriller. Hason is the creator of the Bones tv series.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Sounds worth looking into. Thanks.
The Blue Flower
(5,640 posts)So far a very entertaining read about life in Soviet Russia from the beginning of the revolution in 1920.
jls4561
(1,548 posts)hermetic
(8,636 posts)who post here have read that and really liked/loved it. It is special and memorable.
marigold20
(921 posts)I've recommended this book to all my relatives. It's just wonderful.
Ohiya
(2,444 posts)saidsimplesimon
(7,888 posts)This great literary master never envisioned the dark ages of rumpublicans, or did he?
hermetic
(8,636 posts)But, we could have asked him! Yesterday!! He was in New York City on a book tour but I only just found this out because I also just found out he's on Twitter so I started following him. https://twitter.com/Beathhigh
Dang.
BHDem53
(1,078 posts)alfredo
(60,146 posts)I love her writing
sfwriter
(3,032 posts)I will finish reading the Hugo Winning novels in 5 books. I finish Simak's Way Station tonight. Great stuff ahead, I hope, including Arthur C Clarke's Fountains of Paradise and Rendezvous with Rama, Robert Sawyer's Hominids, Blish's A Case of Conscience, and Zelazny's Lord of Light. I may reread Farmer's To Your Scattered Bodies Go, David Brin's Startide Rising, and Fred Pohl's Gateway. I haven't read those since Reagan was President.
Ohiya
(2,444 posts)I read nothing but SF for about a decade sometime last century! Lord of Light was my favorite book for quite a while. I wrote a paper on Lord of Light when I took a course in college called Introduction to Science Fiction. That was an easy "A".
Enjoy!
yellowdogintexas
(22,753 posts)It was a re-read but it's been so long since I read it the first time that I had forgotten most of it
I am also reading "Dreamland" an interesting non fiction about all aspects of the opiate crisis.
Well written
radical noodle
(8,686 posts)by Bryn Greenwood. I'm just now beginning to worry about where it's going.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Growing up in the Midwest among meth dealers and all that implies. Heavy.
radical noodle
(8,686 posts)I've just been dragged headlong into the narrative. No matter where it's going, I have to finish it.
Wawannabe
(6,374 posts)By Christopher Paolini
It is audio and unabridged version.
My son and I read the Erogon series together as they came out, so I know the story, but there does seem to be new info in this version. Even more details if you can imagine.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)This is the much-anticipated, astonishing conclusion to the worldwide bestselling Inheritance cycle.
Puppyjive
(594 posts)Pretty good read. Hoping to shed some light on Nebraska. My father grew up in Nebraska and had one of the most strongest work ethic I have ever seen. He passed a little over a year ago. I miss him so much.
snpsmom
(791 posts)and enjoyed it. Led me to other Cather.
TeapotInATempest
(804 posts)by Sharon Kay Penman.
Very enjoyable if you like well-researched medieval historical fiction.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Squinch
(52,891 posts)TeapotInATempest
(804 posts)I always love finding out I have more to read from an author I like.
radical noodle
(8,686 posts)Thanks!
snpsmom
(791 posts)by Maurice Carlos Ruffin. Good stuff!
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Hes a alumnus of my grad program and I am lucky to be in a writing group with him.
matt819
(10,749 posts)I can't remember (and am too lazy to check) whether these were on last week's book post.
I'm about half way through the audiobook of Pillars of the Earth. I know this sounds crazy, but if I could time travel, I'd love to go back to the Medieval period. Well, at least for a short time.
Finished Robin Cook's Pandemic. Meh! Annoying characters.
Reading Gregory Benford's Rewrite. Benford is a physicist, and the novel is a take on the concept of the multiverse. Very entertaining. It would be thought provoking if there were at least some evidence of multiverses. At the very least, Benford has tossed the idea of Star Trek's prime directive and the central stricture on time travel. Don't fuck (too much) with changing history. Only about 100 pages in. Enjoying it.
Victoria Helen Stone's Jane Doe. Narrator is a sociopath on a mission to rain down wrath on a man who caused the sociopath's best friend to commit suicide. And, yes, she does address the issue of a sociopath having friends. A bit grim, but having fun so far.
I have about 300 books on my mp3 player (yes, you read that right - mp3 player - from the days before devices enforced digital rights management). Sadly, I am unlikely to live long enough to listen to all of them. No, I'm not ill or dying. It's just a lot of books, and I only listen on my errands and short commutes to/from work. So many books, so little time.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Hopefully there will be an afterlife where all literature is available for us to peruse throughout eternity. Once can hope, right?
TeapotInATempest
(804 posts)I must have been about 30 years old at the time when, standing in a bookstore full of books I wanted to read, it occurred to me that people were just going to keep writing books and that I'd die long before I could read everything I wanted to. It was quite the revelation to me.
TeapotInATempest
(804 posts)although not in a plague year, naturally.
Pillars of the Earth was fun to read, don't you think?
dlk
(12,409 posts)TeapotInATempest
(804 posts)Thanks!
BarbD
(1,226 posts)I was moved by a quote from Lewis: "When fascism comes to America it will be wrapped in a flag and carrying a cross."
Beowulf42
(235 posts)At present I am rereading "Tess of the d'Urbervilles". Since last summer I have been on a trek to read more novels about women. Started with "Madam Bovary", went to "Rebecca", then to "Jane Eyre", so the logical next choice was to read "Tess". Hadn't visited her since college in the early 60s.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)about women get mentioned in these weekly posts. You might want to check out Mary Russell novels by Laurie R. King which are quite enjoyable.
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,183 posts)The dark Victorians just suck me in.
hostalover
(447 posts)large portions dealing with WWII and the horrors of the Philippines, Bataan Death March, etc. I've read it before and don't care to again. The last portion is the legalese for which Grisham is famous and it was bor-r-r-ing! The ending of the book was horribly unsatisfying! There! Have I convinced anyone about this book?
hermetic
(8,636 posts)happybird
(5,146 posts)I've read the DT series before, but (and this is kinda weird), around a month ago I had a dream about Blaine the Mono. I have no clue why that crawled out of my subconscious after a decade. It was a weird ass dream, lol! I couldn't stop thinking about it. A few days ago I decided to reread the book, in hopes that would kill it off.
I thoroughly enjoyed revisiting that story/world and am now trying to decide if I should go on to Wizard and Glass or go back to very beginning and do the whole series again.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)a fictional character will visit my dreams. I enjoy it.
Cuthbert Allgood
(5,183 posts)Waste Lands is such a good novel.
happybird
(5,146 posts)I've seen your name around the boards and took it as another sign, the final straw that made me dig out the book.
I don't recommend Blaine dreams. I was thinking about him so much I was starting to feel a little like Jake.
Chalco
(1,359 posts)Excellent!
hermetic
(8,636 posts)A powerful, darkly glittering novel about violence, love, faith, and loss, as a young Korean American woman at an elite American university is drawn into acts of domestic terrorism by a cult tied to North Korea.
northoftheborder
(7,609 posts)Have had it on my list for a while. It's long.
hermetic
(8,636 posts)Should keep you wrapped up for a good while. See you in the spring. JK
MuseRider
(34,383 posts)those I follow. One of those is Stephen King. I saw him recommend a trilogy by Don Winslow. He said he was a great storyteller. These are not the kinds of books I read or stories I listen to but he peeked my interest so I dove in. He is such a great storyteller himself I figured why not?
It is a trilogy of fiction that starts with The Power of the Dog. It is about cartels and the US and the drug trade along the border. He is quite obviously not a Trumper and the story is fabulous, at least for me who does not read this kind of thing. I think some here might like it.
As a story it is horrific at times, well mostly awful but he creates the story and characters and it weaves together and I had trouble stopping the first book when I just had to think of other things. The Cartel is the second book and it is also good but I am kinda tired of the torture and back and forth. I will pick it back up some day because SK was right, he is a master storyteller. It seems very real and Mr. Winslow has some background that would allow him to write about this realistically. He also researched it well.
Anyway, I had to stop. It is heavy for me so I am taking the advice of others up thread and have started the trilogy Pine Cove by Christopher Moore. I could not resist after reading what others have written above, it seems like the antidote to War Lord lit. On to Practical Demonkeeping. Just downloaded and will listen to as I drive this afternoon to another town and back. YAY for books and drives! Thanks for all the good recs here, I always forget to add and share.