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No One Knows, by JT Ellison
The Two Family House, by Lynda Cohen Loigman Necessary Lies, by Diane Chamberlain Disclaimer, by Renee Knight The Silent Wife, by A.S.A Harrsion |
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The Sisters of St. Croix
Honolulu Shanghai Girls |
| The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society |
Well clearly pp gets her intellectual stimulation by reading DCUM
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| Anything by Elizabeth Berg or Sue Miller |
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I love book threads too.
OP, one thing I do is look up a book I like on amazon.com and then look at "readers also bought" to see what other books are similar. They also have those scrolling recommendations with similar books. I second a lot of other PP recs, like Station Eleven, Life after Life, Anne Tyler, Prayer for Owen Meany. Also try Nora Webster (Irish, no violence); Longbourn (servants in Jane Austen novel); Olive Kitteredge; The Help; American Wife (Curtis Sittenfeld); Stone Diaries; Storied life of AJ Fikry; For a laugh try Sandra Loh's "Madwoman in the Volvo: My year of raging hormones." |
OP. LOVED this book! |
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+1 on Ann Tyler - especially "Digging to America" and "The Accidental Tourist"
"When We Were the Kennedys," a memoir set in small-town Maine. Very engrossing. "Modern Lovers" and "The Vacationers" by Emma Straub - light, fun, well-written. |
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The Blue by Lucy Clarke (also loved Swimming at Night and A Single Breath)
All of Catherine McKenzie's books (Hidden, Arranged, etc...) All of Lucie Whitehouse's books (Keep You Close is the latest one) Also ditto to the Rook. Thank you to whoever on DCUM first cited it. Also love Rachel Bach's books about Eli Monpress or the Paradox Trilogy (sorry I know you said no series). Also Emily Arsenault's books, especially The Broken Teaglass |
I loved Station Eleven, Longbourn, and American Wife. Some others to try: Brooklyn Foreign Affairs (Alison Lurie) Plainsong Nobody's Fool The Rosie Project Three Junes Atonement Crossing to Safety China Court (if you can find it; it's out of print) |
Agree +100. Reading book threads is almost as much fun as the books... OK, good absorbing reads, not to heavy... You've read The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, which was at the top of my head. How about some memoirs? Wild: by Cheryl Strayed. Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller (this one has some "verboten" tragedy, but it is very much not the focus of the book). My Life in France by Julia Child. And while on cooking memoirs, Heat by Bill Buford, is LOL funny, and I rarely actually laugh while reading. Just Kids by Patti Smith is terrific even if you are not a big fan. Lighter fare but still with some substance: The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern (sort of a fantasy book for adults). The Paris Wife by Paula McLain (the story according to Hemingway's wife, if you like that whole scene). I'd second Where'd You Go, Bernadette. |
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Ok I know you said no series books, but these books can be read as singletons.
I love the Maisie Dobbs series, about a private investigator/psychologist in England between WWI and WWII. It's easy, slow, patient, and in every book, the author explores an area (e.g. mapmaking, gypsies) so you learn something. It's interesting and calming at the same time. If you do decide to read the series, it's also interesting to see how Maisie evolves over time, and the country evolves, moving away from WWI into a lull and slowly marching forward to the precipice of WWII. But no gore, no--nothing to upset you, OP. It's a murder mystery series but the dead is dead when you start out, nothing horrible. |
It is adorable that you think Jodi Picoult novels are more "meaty" than the Shopaholic books. Seriously, the PP who asserted you would like books that have been made into movies with familiar actors is correct. |
Have you read both? Dr. Seuss is more "meaty" than the Shopaholic books. |
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Defending Jacob is my favorite book!
You should read Finding Jake and Afterwards. |