Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading this week of June 11, 2017?
Finished DARK MATTER. Great story. Now I am enjoying watching "Wayward Pines," based on Crouch's other books. Plus, still reading THE BEAT GOES ON, short stories about Inspector Rebus. Good stuff!
What sort of good stuff do you have on your reading list?
PJMcK
(22,889 posts)It's funny that you just read DARK MATTER because I just started a book by the cosmologist, Lawrence Krauss titled A UNIVERSE FROM NOTHING. One of the scientific themes throughout the book deals with dark matter and dark energy which are causing the accelerating expansion of the universe.
Next week, I'm planning on reading an older fictional book by Anne Rivers Siddon titled, OUTER BANKS.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)DARK MATTER is an extremely fictitious idea of how it works but a real page-turner of a story.
That IS an oldie, which I read long ago. Seem to recall it was a good story.
PJMcK
(22,889 posts)I bought OUTER BANKS in a discount book bin maybe 20-25 years ago. It's an original edition with the rough-cut outer edges of the pages. I've been meaning to read it for years but something else always intervened. I decided it's about time to read it!
Enjoy your week, hermetic!
You, too.
Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)hermetic
(8,627 posts)Do you watch GOT? I've never seen it but I know pretty much everybody loves the stories.
Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)I'm following behind in the books. Even though I know the major plot points already as I read it, the incredible detail in the books is so much more than what they could put in the TV version, it adds greatly to the depth of the story.
TexasProgresive
(12,294 posts)From the back:
"Mick Oberon may look like just another 1030s private detective, but beneath the fedora and overcoat, he's got pointy ears and he's packing a wand."
Marmel was recommended by my (bicycle) ride captain. A different book, called "The Goblin Corp." Couldn't locate it but this looks like fun.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)Is this the guy who told you about Spider Robinson? Be sure and let us know what you think after you've finished it.
TexasProgresive
(12,294 posts)Thursday evenings he sends out an email with news of the various people in our riding group and the schedule for the end of week rides. He usually does a little "poem" that is usually not flattering but an honor to be mentioned. Here's a sample from this Thursday:
Sorry, things are still just a bit groggy here. I played a drinking game while watching the Comey Senate hearing this morning. Every time I heard the word collusion, I took a shot of beer. Each time I heard obstruction, I had a shot of tequila. And every time anyone uttered the word inappropriate, I did ten burpees. Thats what I call democracy in action!
As for the regular
The cadre will assemble at 7:30 on Rock Prairie and 7:50 at Pebble Creek.
Friday Follies will roll out at 8:30.
The Girls with Grit rolled out of Eugene, perhaps on their way into Umpqua National Forest, where the forecast calls for a bit of precip. I think that today was a rest day, after a week on the road. Deb tells me that she was rather layered up a few days ago.
Note from TexasProgresive: These two ladies are about my age- one older the other younger. They do long distance trips on bikes once or twice a year. This year they had their bikes shipped to Seattle and they are riding from there across the Cascades, and the Divide to somewhere in Colorado. The following link shows their progress.
http://share.findmespot.com/shared/faces/viewspots.jsp?glId=023L6gCqVqWfoSq59JJ8ts3vJg4auOP5G
The also are posting on their FB page: An American Bicycling Adventure
This is his send of missive for the Girls with Grit BTW that their name for themselves
Sending props to our friends with these words and this wit
Its just one more day on the road for the Girls with Grit
Get out your US map and place your finger us on Seattle
For me to say thats a fur spell just more banal prattle
All gear fastened securely so it wont annoyingly rattle
Buoyed by dear friends and laden with pannier chattel
First campground chore to launder todays well ridden kit
Its just one more day on the road for the Girls with Grit
I predict that pretty soon theyll be using all those gears
Hoping that tonights campsite will offer cold enough beers
Heading out each morning deserving ridiculously loud cheers
Eyes fixed ahead, smiling grimly, as a mountain pass nears
Somewhat sure that later telling will some of the misery omit
Its just one more day on the road for the Girls with Grit
Will the first mountains ridden over bear the name Cascade?
Our girls are tough theyve already been up many a steep grade
The result of which is often that unfortunate helmet pomade
But the envy of our cycling peers the bike jersey tan fade
Miles, camps, meals and more make this group so tight knit
Its just one more day on the road for the Girls with Grit
I recommend, uphill or down, maintaining a tempo allegro
A pace that even I might consider to be somewhat mellow
The legs never responding like so much lime flavored jello
Sage advice that will assist you down that road to Pueblo
The magic they carry the aura thats visible as though backlit
Its just one more day on the road for the Girls with Grit
More news from Bill our Scribe:
I have had a ripping good time watching Le Criterium du Dauphine this week. Thomas De Gendt displayed incredible Belgian form on the first stage, riding away from the break, showing a clean set of wheels and soloing in to the race leaders yellow jersey. You might remember le Tour exceptionel that De Gendt enjoyed last year, earning the polka dot jersey for several days and winning the shortened version of the run up Mont Ventoux. At the post race interview, the cool Belgian voiced his optimistic view of Stage 7, which finishes on the iconic Alpe dHuez, a victory which, he said, is included in his bucket list.
In the news, I saw an interesting article in the Sundays Chronicle about cycle commuting. The gist was that with more miles being ridden commuting, the cost of increasing injuries from accidents are costing more money. What really got my attention was the following: The number of bicycle miles traveled annually by people 45 and older went from 1.9 trillion in 2001 to 3.6 trillion in 2009. So, if a Billion worldwide cyclists each ride 3,600 miles each, that equals 3.6 Trillion miles. I wonder where this article got their data.
In the bicycling mecca of Massachusetts, transportation advocates are encouraging vehicle operators to perform what is call the Dutch Reach. Drivers use their right hands to open the door, which will make them more likely to look back for a cyclist potentially overtaking the parked car, lessening the chance of dooring. Ones cell phone can be in the drivers left hand during this operation, perhaps with the additional benefit of promoting ambidextrous texting.
And, for this historical perspective, this indulgence began 5/7/2010 with
Be there or be square,
If you dare,
Get out of your chair,
Be very aware
There will be no bear
Lets be fair
Stay out of the glare
Let down your hair
With nary a care
And whining will be rare!
Thusly (humbley) submitted
Your Scribe
Bill
hermetic
(8,627 posts)I adore people who wax poetic in newsletters.
That map tracker thing is way cool as are the Girls with Grit. I'll have to remember to look them up on FB later. Sure hope they're not getting wet right now. I'm a little southeast of them and it's been pouring here intermittently for the last 24 hrs.
Thanks for sharing that.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)Will look into this author next week!
TexasProgresive
(12,294 posts)Hot Lead, Cold Iron (Mick Oberon, #1)
Hallow Point (Mick Oberon, #2)
Dead to Rites (Mick Oberon, #3)
shenmue
(38,537 posts)hermetic
(8,627 posts)And WOW -- "The nightmare no parent could endure. The case no detective could solve. The twist no reader could predict."
I am for sure going to be looking for this book. Thanks for mentioning it.
shenmue
(38,537 posts)luvMIdog
(2,533 posts)hermetic
(8,627 posts)Sounds like good escapist fare with lots of excitement and intrigue.
luvMIdog
(2,533 posts)pscot
(21,037 posts)Wolfe is a wonderful writer, but it's not always clear what's going on. I've also got one called The American War by Omar El Akkad. Civil war in 2074.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)pscot
(21,037 posts)best known work. Shadow of a Torturer is book 1 of 4. He the most elegant/eloquent sci-fantasy writer of his generation. Maybe of any generation. He's very deft. You never quite know what's going on. You're seeing the shadows projected on the cave wall, trying to gauge the reality behind you. He's an amazing writer.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)The Winters Tale is one of Shakespeares late plays. It tells the story of a king whose jealousy results in the banishment of his baby daughter and the death of his beautiful wife. His daughter is found and brought up by a shepherd on the Bohemian coast, but through a series of extraordinary events, father and daughter, and eventually mother too, are reunited.
In The Gap of Time, Jeanette Wintersons cover version of The Winters Tale, we move from London, a city reeling after the 2008 financial crisis, to a storm-ravaged American city called New Bohemia. Her story is one of childhood friendship, money, status, technology and the elliptical nature of time. Written with energy and wit, this is a story of the consuming power of jealousy on the one hand, and redemption and the enduring love of a lost child on the other.
Cheers to CrispyQ for reminding me to look into these more. I went to this one first because I think it was the first to get done in the series but I'm really looking forward to the adaptation of The Taming of the Shrew too!
hermetic
(8,627 posts)I would like to be able to read all of those adaptations.
Jeanette Winterson has one book here, LIGHTHOUSEKEEPING, which I plan to read now. "One of the most original and extraordinary writers of her generation, Jeanette Winterson has created a modern fable about the transformative power of storytelling." Oh yeah.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)From Jackson Browne's 1977 release Running on Empty ; the song is refrenced within the story twice and connects with various themes. It also has the distinction of being a cover of ( a Maurice Williams original 1966) so I thought it was even better suited to this adaptation that Winterson herself refers to as a cover of the original tale.
Paladin
(28,776 posts)Just finished it after a day and a half...couldn't put it down. Best Lucas Davenport novel yet---and I've read almost all of them. Highly recommended.
CozyMystery
(652 posts)John Sandford is one of my top 3 favorite authors.
Now I'm reading "The Devil's Triangle" by Catherine Coulter and J. T. Ellison. The series is called "A Brit in the FBI Thriller".
Paladin
(28,776 posts)PoorMonger
(844 posts)The woman of his dreams isn't what she seems.
Michael Beaumont is head over heels with the woman of his dreams. The minute he and Alison saw each other across a crowded bar, there was a powerful, immediate connection. She's everything he could ever want in a woman--charismatic, beautiful, intelligent, compassionate, and so much more.
But Alison is harboring a dangerous secret, one that threatens to break loose once Michael introduces her to his last remaining relative. Michael's grandmother Rose, who raised him from childhood, isn't quite the woman she used to be--her memory is failing her, and she's prone to fits of wild emotion. But something about Rose's outburst upon meeting Alison seems like more than just a simple delusion. And something about the string of murders terrorizing London, with incidents occurring just blocks from Michael, feels like more than just a coincidence.
What is Rose not telling Michael? What is Alison hiding? Every relationship in Michael's life is a bridge, and he'll discover that there are some he shouldn't cross.
hermetic
(8,627 posts)Sounds like there's a lot of troubled waters in his life. Plus, the grandmother sounds like a bit of legend, in her own family anyway, if you get my drift. (How'm I doin, boss?)
PoorMonger
(844 posts)Though, I'm only on page 40 and there are lots of themes to consider already. Your post will just give me a chance to dig a bit deeper. Cheers
PoorMonger
(844 posts)PoorMonger
(844 posts)What if you could fix the worst parts of yourself by confronting your worst fears?
Dr. Jennifer Webb has invented proprietary virtual reality technology that purports to heal psychological wounds by running clients through scenarios straight out of horror movies and nightmares. In a carefully controlled environment, with a medical cocktail running through their veins, sisters might develop a bond they've been missing their whole liveswhile running from the bogeyman through a simulated forest. But
can real change come so easily?
Esther Hoffman doubts it. Esther has spent her entire journalism career debunking pseudoscience, after phony regression therapy ruined her father's life. She's determined to unearth the truth about Dr. Webb's budding company. Dr. Webb's willing to let her, of course, for reasons of her own. What better advertisement could she get than that of a convinced skeptic? But Esther's not the only one curious about how this technology works. Enter real-world threats just as frightening as those created in the lab. Dr. Webb and Esther are at odds, but they may also be each other's only hope of survival.
With her new novella Final Girls, bestselling, award-winning author Mira Grant has conjured a heartstopping, gut-wrenching story filled with as many twists as it is versions of reality. Grant offers a chilling exploration of how surviving horrors might define us all.
PoorMonger
(844 posts)hermetic
(8,627 posts)That was totally awesome to watch.