| Loved listening to Belle Burden’s new book on audible and my house got really clean because it was so gripping and I needed things to keep me busy as I listened. |
| Bog Queen by Anna North, about a quirky forensic anthropologist who tries to find the cause of death in a well preserved 2,000-year-old body, intertwined with the story of the dead woman, a Druid, and the times she lived in. Beautifully written. |
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Among Friends by Hal Ebbett.
Draws you into thinking it's a lighthearted middle-aged crisis buddy tale, and then things get dark. When the facade gets ripped away, what is underneath is ugly and ruthless. Excellent writing . . . the author's first book. I sense that many people aren't going to like this because of the subject matter and the "unlikeable characters," but I'm not one of those people. I read half of it in one sitting. |
| I finished Stoneyard Devotional last night. I don’t know what I had expected, but this wasn’t what I was expecting. It’s a beautiful and meditative book nonetheless. Some of it is quite hard to read, very sad. |
This one? Nothing, unfortunately. But that's not always the case. |
I read this last month and am still on the fence. I think there was a lot to admire and I love this kind of meditative book, but it just didn't move me or make me think the ways that I was expecting given the accolades. |
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Given the state of the world, I shied away from any heavy fare this month (e.g. put Isola back on Libby hold!):
I am almost done listening to Dolly Alderton's Good Material. Basically a guy's "getting over a break-up" story, except double or triple as well done as I would have expected, and witty too. Also reading Richard Russo's Nobody's Fool, about the (mis)adventures of lovable loser Sully of small town North Bath. I enjoyed Straight Man and thought this one might fit the bill of what I was looking for this January. Nobody's Fool is vivid and funny, but also loooong and meandering--I am halfway through and I think it's fair to say nothing has really happened yet . I think I am moving this one to my "long haul" pile: not really DNF, but may jump in and out of it, depending on my mood, while I start another read!
Any recs for lighter/funny but still well-written reads, DCUM? |
There's a post about the book in another forum - Relationships maybe? Or Off-Topic? |
Have you read anything by Jonathan Tropper? |
| James by Percival Everett and just finished The River is Waiting by Wally Lamb. |
| Finishing Meet the Newmans which is pretty entertaining. If you like fiction set in 1960s southern California (think Lessons in Chemistry, The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo), I highly recommend. I recently read Heart the Lover (it was okay, I wasn't the biggest fan, although I seem to be in the minority on this),The Names (I liked it), and What Kind of Paradise (absolutely fantastic!!). |
PP here. Yeah -- I feel very similarly about it. |
Did you like them? I loved both. Also read both in the last few months! |
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Starting My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante.
Was trying to decide what fiction to read next and this afternoon I scrolled through the NYT list of the best 21st century books so far, and this was number one. |
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I just finished Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult. It's an older book (2007) about a school shooting, told from the perspective of multiple characters. I liked it a lot. It was hard to read in parts and you definitely get the sense of "do I actually know anyone?!", which is kind of scary. It was well written and engaging. Not my favorite book of hers but after some duds I was glad I found something I enjoyed (even if it was hard to read).
To go in the opposite direction, I just started Is She Really Going Out With Him by Sophie Cousens. I really like her books - they're easy to read and generally better than they need to be/you'd expect for that genre. Also just finished We Were Liars on audible. It's sort of a family saga but it's based on the kids (teenagers) and told from the point of view of only one of them. I know it's a show and it has popped up randomly from time to time so I thought I'd check it out. As a family saga, it wasn't great, there are many better ones out there. As a YA novel, the same. It was fine, but I'm not motivated to read the other two that are part of the trilogy. I may check out the show at some point but I hope it's better than the book. |