| Pachinko, any Robert Galbraith mystery book (JK Rowling is writing under a pseudonym), pillars of the earth |
I honestly could not have hated a book more. I've been thinking of starting a thread to discuss it so I could understand why it was so successful. |
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Do Not Say We Have Nothing
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Person who recommended The Gold Coast, thank you! I read it and The Gate House after your recommendation and loved them both. DeMille's sense of humor is great. |
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Jonathan Lethem's Fortress of Solitude
Especially if you like richly thematic fiction |
| I just finished Babel and it was a masterpiece. I didn't know ~530 pages could go that quickly. |
I listened to it on audiobook. I enjoyed Yellowface by the same author and wanted to try something else of hers that wasn't all fantasy. |
Plum Island by Demille is quite good, too. |
No. The setting and story are very real. My book-loving friends who are also from Appalachia either couldn't read it or did so essentially feeling heartsick most of the time (I was the latter). We all know our own real-life Demons and Maggots and Aunt Junes and Emmys and Fast Forwards and Doris, often many times over. We all have some version of Devil's Bathtub and "dragging Main" in the Lariat. We know the poverty and the irreparably torn families and have seen most of the horrific things the book describes. Nothing in that book surprised me; nothing in it was something I haven't personally seen. I do think it was a good book, though. Pachinko and Circe were two of my favorite long reads. Half of a Yellow Sun was a rough but rewarding slog. |
PP here. I read Yellowface first for a book club and really liked it and the author's writing style, so I picked up Babel. She has great range. I haven't been in the mood to start a series for a while but I may reconsider to read her Poppy War trilogy. Have you read it? How did it compare to Babel? |
| A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry. Amazing. |
| Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann. |
| Shogun |