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The DCUM Book Club
| There There by Tommy Orange for book club. I actually like it - non-linear story telling, about native americans living in oakland CA which is my hometown so i'm enjoying that part. I love books about people living on the edge- on a border. And these people are native americans trying to assimilate yet retain their traditions some how. however I would never pick this up w/out book club. |
Great recap. I really liked that book, too!! |
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What are you reading this month?
The Husbands, by Holly Gramazio What is it about? Fun new release about a single British woman in her mid-thirties who comes home one evening to find her "husband" waiting in her flat. But she's single and has never had a husband! Turns out he came from her attic, and when he goes back up to get something, a new husband comes down. Rinse, repeat again and again. Funny premise with lots of multiverse/alternate lives scenarios, some of which made me laugh out loud. Light read that explores singlehood vs. coupledom, the complexities of who we are and what we want, and all the "what ifs" that go along with that. What do you think of it? I'm about 75% through and like it a lot. Nice change from some of the more literary fiction I've been reading without being formulaic or vapid. (It's a little repetitive at the start, but the plot takes off about 25% through and gets more inventive as it goes.) Why did you pick that particular book to read? I love light multiverse/light time travel/what if type books and movies. (Sea of Tranquility is an all-time favorite. Also enjoyed What Alice Forgot, This Time Tomorrow, and Wrong Place, Wrong Time. Would love other recommendations for books or movies like this!) How did you acquire the book? Borrowed from the library via Libby (audiobook) |
I LOVE Kevin Wilson, but NTSE was my least favorite, which is weird because it's his most popular, I think. I truly love his short stories (even though I'm not usually a short story person) but need to read them one at a time and let them sit before moving on to the next. So much to savor! And The Family Fang cracked me up over and over. Maybe because I'm close to my brother and our parents were kind of odd?
Also really liked Now Is Not The Time To Panic, though I think it got mixed reviews on this board. I thought it was a well-told coming-of-age story with that special Kevin Wilson flair. |
| Salman Rushdie, Knife |
I thought it was one-note and trite. I enjoyed the first 1/3 and then it got repetitive. Made myself finish it hoping that the ending would be an insightful twist - no, it was exactly the twist that I expected. |
Agree with it feeling trite. I can’t even remember the ending now. |
| Reading The Chaperone and thinking it might be one of those rare books which is better on film and maybe I should have watched it on Netflix instead. |
| I’m reading Piranisi after hearing so many people rave about it. I’m a little more than halfway through and I feel it’s getting tedious. |
But the books is great |
I liked the running grave. Then I went into a rabbit hole about the sullivanians and brought my book club with me through the looking glass.
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Wandering Stars, both a prequel and sequel to There There, was just published a few months ago. You may like it if you’re liking his first book. |
Yeah, I thought it was okay. Some cool imagery/ideas but it didn’t grab me. I didn’t understand the rave reviews. |
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I am reading “Network Effects “ by Martha Wells, part of the Murderbot Diaries series. Almost done. Another 50 or so more pages to go.
I’ve been working through the Murderbot books. Got it from Libby app through the library. The first book in the series was a three star for me, but I am so hooked after the second. Such a fun series. After this will move on to the next book, “System Collapse”. |
Good tip. |