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hermetic

(8,622 posts)
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 11:42 AM Jun 2022

What Fiction are you reading this week, June 12, 2022?


Fairytale Forest, Netherlands

Still reading and enjoying A Dark So Deadly by Stewart MacBride. Only 200 pages left now. I'm thinking this would make a really good movie.

I am listening to The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin, on Playaway Audio Books! I had never heard of these although my library has a large shelf unit full of them. I always thought they were something you put in a Kindle or other reader. I wanted to get this book and I saw online it said "audio" so I thought it was an Overdrive book to listen to in my browser. I clicked on it and it said it would be ready for me at the library the next day.

I was a little confused but had to go there anyway to drop some movies off so I thought I'd just see what this was all about. So, I picked up this plastic box which contains a little thing about the size of a cassette tape but it has a screen on it and some buttons and instructions. And lo and behold, it's a little audio book that you just pop in a small battery, plug in your headphones and push go. Genius!! I cannot tell you how happy I am about this. How come I never heard of these before? Have you tried them? Evidently not all libraries have them but you might want to check yours because this is an amazing invention. And, this is a really great book. A humorous romantic fantasy. Some real laugh out loud lines.

What books are tickling your fancy this week?

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What Fiction are you reading this week, June 12, 2022? (Original Post) hermetic Jun 2022 OP
"Big Girl Small" by Rachel DeWoskin bif Jun 2022 #1
That does sound quite good hermetic Jun 2022 #5
Books by the Bay cozy series by Ellery Adams SheltieLover Jun 2022 #2
I've never heard of Play Away books! SheltieLover Jun 2022 #3
You bet hermetic Jun 2022 #9
Sounds like it! SheltieLover Jun 2022 #10
#9 in the Dead End Job Mysteries yellowdogintexas Jun 2022 #4
Squeeze Me is definitely hermetic Jun 2022 #8
Squeeze me is hysterically funny! SheltieLover Jun 2022 #11
Love Hiassen! And Squeeze me was hilarious. MLAA Jun 2022 #23
I've got quite a range of genres this week MLAA Jun 2022 #6
The Man Who Died Twice hermetic Jun 2022 #12
I'm anxiously awaiting these two to come out in paperback, you might want to get MLAA Jun 2022 #17
Oh yeah hermetic Jun 2022 #21
I wanted to mention this marvelous book I read earlier this year. It became one of my all time MLAA Jun 2022 #24
I'm reading "The Easy Life in Kamusari," Haggard Celine Jun 2022 #7
Wow. That sounds lovely hermetic Jun 2022 #13
If we have.another hurricane, and we will, and if I get wiped out, Haggard Celine Jun 2022 #14
Dystopian science fiction: cbabe Jun 2022 #15
Hot off the press hermetic Jun 2022 #18
It's the Henry Ford dilemma: cbabe Jun 2022 #25
teen book markie Jun 2022 #16
By Sarah Henstra hermetic Jun 2022 #19
Camino Winds, by John Grisham Chainfire Jun 2022 #20
Good to know hermetic Jun 2022 #22
I had the same impression SheltieLover Jun 2022 #27
Still on "The Root of his Evil" by James M. Cain The King of Prussia Jun 2022 #26
Hey, sorry I missed you hermetic Jun 2022 #28

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
5. That does sound quite good
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:23 PM
Jun 2022

"a scathingly funny and moving book about dreams and reality, at once light on its feet and unwaveringly serious."

SheltieLover

(59,610 posts)
2. Books by the Bay cozy series by Ellery Adams
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:13 PM
Jun 2022

Set in coastal NC.

Good reads, but not great, as was Adams' Secret, Book, & Scone series.

Lacks humor & the quirky characters I enjoy.

But a versatile, prolific author, a NYT best seller. Just not really compelling page turners for me. 😏

yellowdogintexas

(22,722 posts)
4. #9 in the Dead End Job Mysteries
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:22 PM
Jun 2022

also still reading The Sea Turtle Did It . read it in my purse size Kindle when I am out of the house.


I forgot this one last week: Squeeze Me by the incomparable Carl Hiassen. A must read! I finished it on Sunday so I guess it counts as last week.

It was a very fun read! Highly recommend; even by Hiassen standards, it is awesome!!!

At the height of Palm Beach’s charity ball season, Kiki Pew Fitzsimmons, a prominent member of geriatric high society, suddenly vanishes during a swank gala. Kiki Pew was a founding member of the Potussies, a group of women dedicated to supporting the President, who spends half the year at the “Winter White House” just down the road. Meanwhile, Angie Armstrong, wildlife wrangler extraordinaire, is called to the island to deal with a monster-sized Burmese python that has taken residency in a tree. But the President is focused on the disappearance of Kiki Pew. Never one to miss an opportunity to play to his base, he immediately declares her a victim of rampaging immigrant hordes. This, it turns out, is far from the truth, which now lies in the middle of the road, where a bizarre discovery brings the First Lady’s motorcade to a grinding halt. Irreverent, ingenious, and uproariously entertaining, Squeeze Me perfectly captures the absurdity of our times.

SheltieLover

(59,610 posts)
11. Squeeze me is hysterically funny!
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:33 PM
Jun 2022

Read it twice.

Still looking for funny cozy series I haven't inhaled at least once.

I might just reread his work as it's been awhile!

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
12. The Man Who Died Twice
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:42 PM
Jun 2022

has just become available to me at the library. I've been on a wait list for it for several months. The Thursday Murder Club books are very popular so I'm looking for to finally getting this one.

Home Stretch sounds really good. “compelling, bighearted, emotionally precise page-turner”

Looks like Alice Gaines has written over 82 books so there's a lot to offer there.

Haggard Celine

(17,025 posts)
7. I'm reading "The Easy Life in Kamusari,"
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 12:29 PM
Jun 2022

by Shion Miura. It's free for Prime members to read. I'm only about 20% into it, but it's about an 18 year-old in Japan, from Yokohama, who gets sent by his parents to a small village in the mountain forest to work in forestry for his first job. He's upset at first and wants to go home, but the laid-back lifestyle is beginning to be attractive to him. It makes me want to go live up in the mountains away from everything. It's very appealing, especially with the way things are today.

Haggard Celine

(17,025 posts)
14. If we have.another hurricane, and we will, and if I get wiped out,
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 01:03 PM
Jun 2022

I'm taking the insurance money and moving some place like that. I'd like to have internet access, but I might be able to live without that. The slow pace, along with living life on a deeper level appeal to me.

cbabe

(4,163 posts)
15. Dystopian science fiction:
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 01:15 PM
Jun 2022

Water Knife by Paola Bacigalupi. Recommended by du poster.

Near future of drought stricken west and high tech/bio tech. Refugees vs wealthy in towers (castles).

What would you do to keep your family safe and alive? Chaos. Terror. Characters struggle to adjust from ‘old’ ways to new reality. Well written. Plausible.

Also Anthem by Noah Hawley.

Only half way through so I’m undecided.

A catalogue of world troubles. Adults are frozen in in-action. Globally kids begin committing suicide in ever increasing numbers. Wealthy kids sent to therapeutic clinic in hopes of keeping them alive.

Mystery man appears to send kids on the quest. Don’t know the what or who or why.

Writing is dense and compelling page turner.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
18. Hot off the press
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 01:49 PM
Jun 2022
Anthem The first big novel of 2022: an epic literary thriller set where America is right now, in which a band of unlikely heroes sets out on a quest to save one innocent life -- and might end up saving us all.

I read several reviews. Words like depressing, terrifying, unforgettable. Water Knife sounds to be similar.

We humans sure have done a lousy job here.

cbabe

(4,163 posts)
25. It's the Henry Ford dilemma:
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 02:31 PM
Jun 2022

Unintended consequences. Ford meant to set us free to travel the world. He didn’t mean to kill it.

hermetic

(8,622 posts)
19. By Sarah Henstra
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 01:57 PM
Jun 2022

"Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe meets I'll Give You the Sun in an exhilarating and emotional novel about the growing relationship between two teen boys, told through the letters they write to one another."

5-star, award winner. Should make for an interesting discussion.

 

Chainfire

(17,757 posts)
20. Camino Winds, by John Grisham
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 02:00 PM
Jun 2022

I am a big Grisham fan, but this one was a dud. It reads like his publisher was demanding a new book so he whipped it out over night. The story was weak and I didn't give a damn about any of the characters. Other than that, it was a boring read.

26. Still on "The Root of his Evil" by James M. Cain
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 06:10 PM
Jun 2022

Had to break away from it to read the current selection for our village book group - "A Game For All The Family" by Sophie Hannah. An author I like, but this one started out very well then deteriorated. And then became preposterous. Not her best work.

Happy reading!

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