| “Go Gentle”….I’m really enjoying it! |
| 2024 BASS, edited by Lauren Groff |
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I just finished "We All Live Here" by Jojo Moyes.
It is set in London and is about a woman who is newly divorced with two daughters. Her widowed stepfather is lonely and has slowly moved in with them. Then her biological dad shows up after having been out of the picture for decades. I thought the book was excellent. I think everything Jojo Moyes writes is excellent. |
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One Golden Summer for a light summer read and it fit the bill!
Into the Wild - good and I’m tardy to party! |
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Einstein’s Dreams by the physicist Alan Lightman
In 1905 Einstein was employed in the patent office in Bern, Switzerland while he worked on his theory of relativity. This beautifully written book imagines his dreams for one month during that time period. This short book was not an easy read for me, but touched me deeply. |
This was so terrible. I did read it in one day, but really I think it's the worst of Freida's books. Dear Debbie was enjoyable |
| I’m 60 pages into The True True Story of Raja the Gullible after seeing it suggested here. It is a great read so far. My last few fiction reads have been so-so and this is a solid reset. |
It is soooo good. |
Are you the author or something? What are you even talking about? Given the descriptions, the books would likely not appeal to a lot of the people who post in these threads. There's nothing wrong with stating that. Your response seems so unusual to me in an adult book club where it is very normal to state completely opposing opinions. Also weird that you are randomly assigning value and validity to anonymous posters. Insulting their open mindedness is also an unusual choice, they read the books themselves. |
| Freida McFadden is not a great author. |
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I’m working on a time consuming home project and have been listening to a lot of books on Libby while I work. I cross reference my TBR list with books available now.
Just finished two college themed thrillers The Parents weekend by Alex Finley and The Maidens by Alex Michaelides I have to laugh at some similarities. They each had a student character named Natasha from Russia but the settings couldn’t be more different. Parents Weekend takes place at a small private College in Northern CA, The Maidens takes place at St Christopher’s college in Cambridge UK. Parents Weekend was well done with a wide array of characters though the ending fell apart a little bit for me. The Maidens leaned heavily on Greek Mythology which is interesting but the MC was completely clueless and annoying. I did like the ending though many folks on Goodreads hated the ending and it got very mixed reviews. Also listened to We Used to live here by Marcus Kliewer. I liked this creepy supernatural book but need to read a written copy because I got lost a couple times. |
| Just finished "I Have Some Questions For You" by Rebecca Makkai and I liked it so much that I immediately started "The Great Believers," also by her, and I like it even more |
I finished “The Ghost Map” and enjoyed it; it was published in 2006, and it was interesting to read post-pandemic and given recent shifts in public health management. I’m enjoying “The Midnight Train,” about a man who dies and is being taken back through key moments in his life…fairly light in tone so far (vs Vigil). I’m almost done with Ben Lerner’s “Transcription,” a very short, kind of experimental novel that explores parental relationships and the challenges of modern, affluent parenting (intersecting with tech and the pandemic). Engaging and a bit philosophical; not plot driven. Next up: Ann Patchett’s new novel “Whistler”…I usually love her writing, so especially looking forward to this read. I think I need a nonfiction option in the mix—thoughts on The History of the World in Six Glasses or The Man Who Pays the Rent (Judi Dench on Shakespeare)? |
I’m halfway through listening to it and both the ex and his girlfriend are so over the top mean that they are completely unbelievable. I’m going to get the e-book from Hoopla and finish it at a much faster pace because I do want to find out what happens in the end. I did like Dear Debbie as I’m a big fan of revenge fiction |
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The River is Waiting by Wally Lamb
Overwhelmed father of toddler twins loses job and becomes a temporary stay at home dad while he looks for work. Tragic accident occurs and the book explores the characters and repercussions. Well written but bleak. Some redemption. In good faith, I can’t even pass this book along to other readers I know. Check the trigger warnings before reading. |