| I am listening to the 5 types of wealth while walking my dog. The 5 types of wealth are: social, physical, mental, financial, and time. I generally like it. |
| Finally read Wild Dark Shore and thought it was ok. Loved the atmosphere and some of the scenes; however there were others that struck me as cringeworthy and melodramatic. |
Same here. Loved the atmosphere more than the plot itself. Also, I finally read Atmosphere after seeing recs here a while back (started at position 942 on the public library waitlist…). I enjoyed the cinematic storytelling and the characters were endearing, but the musings about god/the universe and the teachings about stars felt like fluff. Trying to read The City and its Uncertain Walls by Haruki Murakami but I don’t think I’ll be able to finish it. |
Yes I heard my favorite actor/pod-caster raving over her series of books - just raving! So i tried to read Normal People and got so mired between the angst and the ennui. No thank you! Too bad b/c I thought i had something there - oh well. |
The Hulu series Normal People, based on the book, is fantastic. It’s quite hot. Highly recommend. |
I’m the person who posted I was reading it. It was awful. I made myself finish though. It’s repetitive. She’s incredibly unlikable. She’s an unreliable narrator. I call BS on a lot of it. |
I found Beautiful, Terrible to be just ok. I recommend How to Stay Married by Harrison Scott Key. The male betrayed perspective was interesting, and the book was quite funny at times while still feeling devastating. It is my favorite on the topic. |
| I'm reading Hope Rises, book two in a new series by David Baldacci. So far it's keeping my attention but at this point (about 25% in) I think book one was better and made me remember why I enjoy his books. |
| Just finished James by Percival Everett. Absolutely loved it. |
Yes loved it- hope you read Huck Finn to go along with it! So fun |
Hmm. Well, I've got 2/5. Sigh. |
I liked it too. |
Extremely repetitive. And I call BS on a lot of it too. And even if it is all true ... it's boring as hell. So she liked to break into people's houses and stand there. Who cares? |
I was there too... basically lost most of March to well, the downward pull of outside world and events. Slowly getting back into it after finding the book I had been reading before my hiatus, but mislaid in a suitcase: Shipping News by Annie Proulx, which is great--both dark and hopeful--and thus somehow fitting for this time. Also listening to the Correspondent which is pleasant and well-done, though agree with an earlier PP, not exactly knock your socks off literature. |
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Wild Thing: A Life of Paul Gaugin
It's really good. Has me wanting to pick up the book in any spare moment I have. What an fascinating time and place Paris of the mid 1800s was. Such creative energy. Might plan a quick trip to Paris just to hang out there for a weekend or something because I'm so inspired by this. |