Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading the week of October 28, 2012?
The Language of Bees by Laurie R. King - Mary Russell (and Sherlock Holmes) book #92012 - book #162
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)I haven't even opened it yet, but I just finished an Edith Wharton this afternoon.
Teamster Jeff
(1,598 posts)Onceuponalife
(2,614 posts)About 140 pages in out of 800+ and I can tell this is gonna be awesome. It's the first of what looks to be a trilogy, with the second book, The Twelve, currently on the best seller lists in hardback. Written somewhat in the style of Stephen King's The Stand, episodic with very good, thorough character development. Concerns government experiment with death row inmates of what is intended to be a serum that could lead to lives up to 1,000 years old. Instead, because the bumbling government is involved, of course, it creates vicious, vampiric creatures, and harbingers an end-of-the-world scenario. It seems to take place in the 2020's, a world already falling apart (with many more terrorist attacks on the homeland) with nice details like $13.00 per gallon gas and the governor of Texas is revealed to be (shudder) Jenna Bush! This is truly my kind of book, unputdownable, and highly recommended.
Also recently read (finally) Orwell's Animal Farm. I had read 1984 in high school and thought it high time to read Animal Farm. Should be a must read for anyone. Of course the story was already familiar to me, as I have read about it and seen dramatizatiins, etc. It seems to go from a sort of idealized communist paradise to a totalitarian nightmare (Stalinism?) in a short span and shouts a warning of how easy it is to control a sheep-like populace (and horses and chickens, but not donkeys, they're much too shrewd) into believing anything as long as you repeat it enough times (are you listening, Republicans?).
Also just started a really fine SF anthology from 2000 that features some of my very favorite writers, such as Dan Simmons, Stephen Baxter, Joe Haldeman, Ursula K. Le Guin, Larry Niven, and Harry Turtledove, called Redshift.
Also reading a bio of my very favorite Dodger, Sandy Koufax (Sandy Koufax, A Lefty's Legacy by Jane Leavy).
sinkingfeeling
(52,993 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Book 21 of Agatha Raisin series
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/B_Authors/Beaton_M-C.html
My book 97 of 2012
getting old in mke
(813 posts)Something other than Barsoom, Pellucidar, or Tarzan from ERB. Not sure why I picked it up--maybe for nostalgia. American tourist is a dead ringer for the mad king of a mythical German principality. Pure pulp adventure.
Courtesy Flush
(4,558 posts)The library book sale is this week, but I have resolved to make a dent in the books I already own before buying more.
I have no attention span anymore, and have been out of the habit of reading. Forcing myself to get back into the habit.
MotorCityMan
(1,203 posts)I just finished re-reading The Exorcist for Halloween. Read it originally a LONG time ago. Still just as disturbing, but a good read.
Then I did an about face and read Dewey The Library Cat. I'm a complete sucker for pet stories and this one is good.
matt819
(10,749 posts)Also reading Redemption, by Kate Flora, about cranky Portland, ME detective Joe Burgess.
Not great literature, but good police procedural.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Bood 22 of the Agatha Raisin series...
book 98 of 2012