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hermetic

(8,622 posts)
Sun Aug 9, 2015, 04:42 PM Aug 2015

What are you reading the week of Sunday, August 9, 2015?

Summerland by Michael Chabon.

This was another thrift store find and I have always been a fan of Chabon's books. It's a fantasy and very light reading which I was in need of due to a very rough week. Quite enjoyable, definitely a YA book.

Shout out to our Scarletwoman. Hope things are going well for you. We miss you.

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What are you reading the week of Sunday, August 9, 2015? (Original Post) hermetic Aug 2015 OP
The Girl on The Train by Paula Hawkins d_legendary1 Aug 2015 #1
I could not put this book down - the creepy factor I guess womanofthehills Aug 2015 #6
Creepy and Mysterious d_legendary1 Aug 2015 #7
I started "Childe Morgan" by Katherine Kurtz shenmue Aug 2015 #2
Hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, hermetic. Enthusiast Aug 2015 #3
Finished reading Medicine Walk by Richard Wagamese and thought it japple Aug 2015 #4
Thank you, japple. I appreciate your suggestion very much. Enthusiast Aug 2015 #5
The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto eissa Aug 2015 #8

d_legendary1

(2,586 posts)
1. The Girl on The Train by Paula Hawkins
Sun Aug 9, 2015, 05:16 PM
Aug 2015

Borrowing it from a friend of mine. Doing it since I need to read more. First forty pages creep me out. Trying to figure out why this book is so popular.

d_legendary1

(2,586 posts)
7. Creepy and Mysterious
Wed Aug 12, 2015, 08:37 AM
Aug 2015

I was about to put it down after the first forty pages (Rachel....ohhhhh boy!). Now I'm halfway done. Not usually a fan of these sorts of books but I figure I needed to expand my horizons. Its an interesting read so far.

But yeah the drinking does get tiresome.

shenmue

(38,537 posts)
2. I started "Childe Morgan" by Katherine Kurtz
Sun Aug 9, 2015, 05:25 PM
Aug 2015

Also, "Midwinter Blood" by Mons Kallentoft. Both very good. I'm a huge Kurtz fan, been reading her books since junior high. I actually got a few books behind in the Dernyi series, which is unthinkable for me. I need to catch up.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
3. Hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, hermetic.
Sun Aug 9, 2015, 06:20 PM
Aug 2015

Last week I read The Coroner's Lunch by Colin Cotterill. I thoroughly enjoyed The Coroner's Lunch. Thank you for the recommendation, scarletwoman. Now I'm reading Galore by Michael Crummey. Galore reminds me of the other Crummey books I have read—Sweetland and River Thieves. These books make me want to visit Newfoundland.

Mrs Enthusiast read The Wreckage by Michael Crummey. She liked it just as much as the other three Crummey books she has read. After The Wreckage Mrs. Enthusiast enjoyed reading The Coroner's Lunch by Colin Cotterill. She found The Coroner's Lunch appealing in much the same way I did. Now she is reading All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot. Mrs. Enthusiast has great affection for animals so I believe this will appeal to her.

japple

(10,321 posts)
4. Finished reading Medicine Walk by Richard Wagamese and thought it
Sun Aug 9, 2015, 06:40 PM
Aug 2015

was a sad and wonderful tale, beautifully told. Anyone who likes Native American literature will enjoy this one.

Enthusiast, I hope you will give The Shipping News audio book a try. I listened to it several years ago when I was recovering from eye surgery and the reader was marvelous. I don't know if yours is the same one I listened to, but, if so, it gave me many hours of pleasure during an otherwise dreary recovery period. If you are going to do any traveling/commuting, maybe you could save it for that time.

ETA: Forgot to say that I've started on John Twelve Hawk's new book Spark.

eissa

(4,238 posts)
8. The Notebooks of Don Rigoberto
Wed Aug 12, 2015, 02:02 PM
Aug 2015

I was at the library and decided to see which of Llosa's books they had in stock. Of the handful that were available, there were only two that I had not read yet, this being one of them. I didn't realize that this book was a sequel to "In Praise of the Stepmother," a book (along with "The Green House&quot which I really didn't care for; I find the sexualization of children to be repulsive, and in both the aforementioned book and this one, little Fonchito is sort of in a male Lolita role, which makes me cringe.

The musings of Don Rigoberto -- on topics as far ranging as pornography to membership in Rotary, to addressing his many phobias -- are entertaining. His yearning for his separated wife make one almost envious of the love he has for her. The book goes back and forth between the reality of their separation, and the fantasies they both harbor, both while together and apart. While certain passages did make be recoil for the reason I stated above, overall this is a deeply erotic work that doesn't cross into vulgarity (which I realize is quite subjective.)

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