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hermetic

(8,622 posts)
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 12:31 PM Mar 2022

What Fiction are you reading this week, March 6, 2022?

Last edited Wed Mar 9, 2022, 09:48 AM - Edit history (1)


Kyiv National Library

Reading Beyond Black by Hilary Mantel, a story about two women. A charismatic, corpulent professional psychic whose connection to the spiritual world torments her, and her shy assistant. There's also a nasty little demon who travels with them and is quite amusing in a rather revolting way. Review says: "insightful, darkly comic, unorthodox, and thrilling to read." Only 70 pages in but finding it quite enjoyable.

Listening to Last Night at the Lobster by Stewart O'Nan. I just started this one, thanks to recs from dedicated reader PoindexterOglethorpe. Thanks, PO. You are right. O'Nan writes wonderfully, his words painting vivid pictures. Very down to earth and sometimes funny.

What books would you recommend this week?
29 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What Fiction are you reading this week, March 6, 2022? (Original Post) hermetic Mar 2022 OP
Murder Under Cover, Kate Carlisle SheltieLover Mar 2022 #1
This message was self-deleted by its author jfz9580m Mar 2022 #2
Never heard of it hermetic Mar 2022 #3
It was televised here The King of Prussia Mar 2022 #5
Yeah, hermetic Mar 2022 #7
Confession The King of Prussia Mar 2022 #20
It is so amazing hermetic Mar 2022 #22
I'll give it a go The King of Prussia Mar 2022 #23
This message was self-deleted by its author jfz9580m Mar 2022 #11
I read this trilogy in the seventies. Ohiya Mar 2022 #15
This message was self-deleted by its author jfz9580m Mar 2022 #17
Mervyn Peake trilogy... ultralite001 Mar 2022 #13
I can still picture some of the scenes, some forty years after reading it! Ohiya Mar 2022 #16
So glad you are liking Stewart O'Nan. PoindexterOglethorpe Mar 2022 #4
Last Night at the Lobster hermetic Mar 2022 #6
I really liked PoindexterOglethorpe Mar 2022 #10
Cool hermetic Mar 2022 #12
Please do. It is amazing. PoindexterOglethorpe Mar 2022 #26
finally getting around to All the Light We Cannot See..... bahboo Mar 2022 #8
Oh yes hermetic Mar 2022 #9
Re-reading "Titan" by Stephen Baxter Jeebo Mar 2022 #14
That sounds awesome hermetic Mar 2022 #18
"What they knew" by Marion Todd. The King of Prussia Mar 2022 #19
DI Clare Mackay series hermetic Mar 2022 #21
Charles Finch's An Extravagant Death question everything Mar 2022 #24
That sounds good hermetic Mar 2022 #25
Just finished an oldie: A Time for Mercy by John Grisham. Paper Roses Mar 2022 #27
That does sound good hermetic Mar 2022 #28
Reading 'Day of the Locust' by Nathanael West. panader0 Mar 2022 #29

Response to hermetic (Original post)

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
3. Never heard of it
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 01:16 PM
Mar 2022

It sounds fantastic, though. Written by Mervyn Peake. "The fertility of incident, character and rich atmosphere combine in a tour de force that ranks as one of the twentieth century's most remarkable feats of imaginative writing."

I'll have to look into that one. I did absolutely adore Lord of the Rings.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
7. Yeah,
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 01:35 PM
Mar 2022

I was looking to see if there were DVDs made of it. I wouldn't mind seeing that.

I gotta tell you what I just got: The Complete Detectorists Series. I got it from the library last month and totally fell in love with it. Then I found it on sale online and bought it so I can watch it over and over. Best show ever.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
22. It is so amazing
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 03:36 PM
Mar 2022

I belong to an online group of people from England, Scotland, Australia, the U.S. and everyone says it's some of the best TV they have ever seen. It's not a crime/mystery series but by the end of the second episode it will start warming your heart and the theme music will have you humming. It's quite funny and you can't help but fall in love with some of the characters. You just want to be there with them. I sure did, anyway.

Response to hermetic (Reply #3)

Ohiya

(2,432 posts)
15. I read this trilogy in the seventies.
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:41 PM
Mar 2022

I've re read the third book a couple of times. For me, the third book makes the trilogy worth reading.

Response to Ohiya (Reply #15)

ultralite001

(1,139 posts)
13. Mervyn Peake trilogy...
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:23 PM
Mar 2022

Dark... dark... dark...

yet glorious...

No adaptation can match the visions captured and displayed in the mind's eye...

Ohiya

(2,432 posts)
16. I can still picture some of the scenes, some forty years after reading it!
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:44 PM
Mar 2022

The third book blew me away!

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,727 posts)
4. So glad you are liking Stewart O'Nan.
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 01:18 PM
Mar 2022

I just finished Henry, Himself, and reread Emily, Alone. I have the third book about them, Wish You Were Here on hold at my library.

At the moment I'm not reading any fiction. Moneyball by Michael Lewis is what I'm working on. I need to read more of what he has written.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
6. Last Night at the Lobster
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 01:30 PM
Mar 2022

is a story about a Red Lobster restaurant that is going out of business and it's just a couple of days before Christmas. So, all sorts of interesting scenarios come up, as you might well imagine.

Wanted to let you know there is a new show at the Blue Rain Gallery, going on til Mar 12. Appears to be some really nice art, in case you're looking for something pleasant to do.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,727 posts)
10. I really liked
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:09 PM
Mar 2022
Last Night at the Lobster. Have you read The Good Wife by him? It has absolutely NOTHING to do with the TV series by the same name. I constantly recommend it but get few takers.

I don't often get downtown, but perhaps I can try to get to the Blue Rain this week.

bahboo

(16,953 posts)
8. finally getting around to All the Light We Cannot See.....
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 01:54 PM
Mar 2022

it is thus far, as excellent as expected. And very relatable to these present times....

Jeebo

(2,278 posts)
14. Re-reading "Titan" by Stephen Baxter
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:40 PM
Mar 2022

I read it once before, in the late 90s when it came out.

-- Ron

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
18. That sounds awesome
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 02:59 PM
Mar 2022

Possible signs of organic life have been found on Titan, Saturn's largest moon. A group of visionaries from NASA plan a daring one-way mission that will cost them everything. In the orange methane slush of Titan's icy surface the astronauts will discover the secret of life's origins.

Impressive.

19. "What they knew" by Marion Todd.
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 03:07 PM
Mar 2022

Number 4 in one of my favourite detective series. Set in St. Andrews. It's a cracker.
Just finished "In A Lonely Place" by Dorothy B. Hughes. I found it a real struggle.
Before that I read "The Holiday" by T.M. Logan, which was also on the TV this week. The book was good. The TV adaptation was a DNF.

question everything

(48,808 posts)
24. Charles Finch's An Extravagant Death
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 05:15 PM
Mar 2022

The last, so far, in the series of Charles Lenox, an amateur detective in Britain of the mid 1800.

I like mysteries that take place before fingerprints, phones, DNA analyses etc. Just logic and observations.

In this book he visits "the colonies" - i.e. the United States. In her Majesty service.

But he is called to Newport to investigate a brutal murder of a young woman.

As a parallel, it takes place in 1878 and Lenox is introduced to the forms of "Society" in New York and in Newport. I have been watching "The Gilded Age" on HBO, nicknamed Downton Abbey New York. Same people, the old establishment, the "Knickerbockers" the upper crust of New York Society led by Mrs. Astor and aided by Mr. McAllister both are mentioned here.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
25. That sounds good
Sun Mar 6, 2022, 05:59 PM
Mar 2022

And it just came out last year. "...promises to be a breakout in Charles Finch's bestselling series." Oooh, and it's on audio, too. On my list, it is. (I loved Downton Abbey).

Paper Roses

(7,506 posts)
27. Just finished an oldie: A Time for Mercy by John Grisham.
Wed Mar 9, 2022, 02:12 PM
Mar 2022

I'm a Grisham fan and enjoyed this book, I think it was one of his his best. Long read but worth the time.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
28. That does sound good
Sun Mar 13, 2022, 11:13 AM
Mar 2022

Filled with all the courtroom machinations, small-town intrigues, and plot twists that have become the hallmarks of the master of the legal thriller.

panader0

(25,816 posts)
29. Reading 'Day of the Locust' by Nathanael West.
Tue Mar 15, 2022, 08:04 AM
Mar 2022

It's a re-read for me, first read in the 70's. My old paperback has "Miss Lonelyheart" and
'The Day of the Locust' in one book as they are short novels. Dark and biting satire of the
newspaper world (Lonelyheart) and Hollywood (Locust). I recommend them for the writing.
West died at 37 in an automobile accident in El Centro, California in 1940.

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