| I am trying to read Less Than Zero but not enjoying it. |
|
Anyone read Her Last Breath?
I just read Emma Straub's American Fantasy and meh. |
Alice Feeney's books can be hit or miss. I recommend skipping I Know Who You Are. Based on what you've said, you would absolutely hate it. It has a terrible ending. I recommend His & Hers and Rock, Paper, Scissors. I haven't read it, but a lot of my friends really liked Daisy Darker. Have you read anything by Sally Hepworth or Shari Lapena? You might like them as well. |
I’m afraid I can’t help with Her Last Breath, but I had the same reaction to American Fantasy. Perhaps it would resonate more with fans of either boy bands or cruises, but I thought it might shed more light on the fandom of both, and it just didn’t for me. |
I read it. I thought it was well done and had a very visceral reaction to the descriptions of the cave. So claustrophobic but well done for a thriller. |
This is a top five for me. Poignant. |
I finished I who have Never Known Men and I really do tihnk it's the weirdest book I've read in a long time. (I posted on the I who have never known men post, so double posting my thoughts here). One thing I never see mentioned is that the main character defines herself - in the title of the book and at least two places, if not more in the text, as never knowing men. It's like the entire book is about the Male Gaze. I'm perplexed by the book. I also finished Poirot Investigates, which is a collection of (very good) short stories, most of which were adapted for the Poirot TV series. |
| I am reading The Incident at Badamaya by Dorothy Gilman, circa 1989. A friend at work said I should try it and it is so cozy. Reminds me Frances Hodgson Burnett. Colonial era Burma. A quick, maybe YA book. |
I love it, but I read it at the age of 16 in 1986 at at time and place in my life where, embarrassingly, I wished I could be just like them. (To a depressed girl growing up in a college town in the midwest that felt stifling and boring, the Less-Than-Zero glamour was blinding, and the nightmare kind of hid behind all of the glamour for me.) |
| I just started a nonfiction book called No One’s Coming: The Rogue Heroes Our Government Turns to When There’s Nowhere Else to Turn by Kevin Hazzard. It takes place during the ebola outbreak in 2014. Two American medical volunteers get infected and it becomes a seemingly impossible situation to get them home. Phoenix Air is a small company with the only planes in the world that are equipped for this mission. It is fascinating. |
|
I just finished "What have you done" by Shari Lapena.
The story is set in rural Vermont, about 10 miles from the New Hampshire border. A small town where nothing ever happens. Until one day when a farmer finds the body of a teenage girl in his fields. This was the first book I have read by this author. A couple months ago someone here on DCUM book club recommended the book, "She didn't see it coming" by this author. The poster made the premise of that book sound really intriguing so I kept checking Libby to see if that book still had a wait list. Since it did (still does) I decided to try out this book by this same author. I thought it was good. Most of the characters in this book were teenagers, but I didn't feel like I was too old to relate to the story. |
Finished this book and moving to Throne of Jade”, next in the series. I feel like this series should be more popular! The dragons are so awesome. Love their unique personalities. |
Ugh same here. I like Emma Straub too but none of it clicked for me. |
Agreed that London Falling is really good! I read vs listened, and could not put it down this weekend. |
| Just started Kin, pulled me in pretty quickly and I like the writing. |