What are you currently reading?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We need a book forum!


No, better to keep books here to "elevate" the conversations (and then let me justify peeking at other guilty pleasures in between reading about books).
Anonymous
I'm reading "On Second Thought" by Kristen Hannah. I have trouble putting it down, it's good. I've read a few of her other novels and they are usually entertaining but this one I'm pretty into and will probably finish it tonight.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ocean Vuong's new collection, Time Is A Mother

and

Emily St. John Mandel's The Sea of Tranquility



In the spirit of DCUM recs, the Ocean Vuong book is now on my to-read list! Thanks PP!
Anonymous
OP here, I just finished a book I randomly grabbed at the library, and I really liked it!

It's called Everyone in this room will someday be dead, and the author is Emily Austin. It's interesting, thought-provoking, somewhat quirky but not in a try-hard way. Easy to read but not fluff.

(maybe a trigger warning, the main character does have some mental health issues and there are some passages describing suicidal thoughts, etc).
Anonymous
I was browsing this forum not too long ago, and someone was asking for CIA operative-meets-romance genre, and I'm like, "I love CIA operative style books, I love romance style books, but what the hell, that combo doesn't exist." And someone suggested the Troubleshooters series by Suzanne Brockmann. It's a 19-part series, and total fluff but also halfway decent crime/Navy Seal style operations. I'm going through a terrible time right now and needed something to read to take my mind off stuff and I'm on book 13 now.
Anonymous
Mercy Street by Jennifer Haigh. It’s very good so far but also depressing so I’m on DCUM instead of reading it. I recently read Lost and Found by Kathryn Schulz, which is gorgeously written and about grief and love. I think I need some fluff next.
Anonymous
OP again, I just started reading Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz, which some folks on here recommended, and so far I can't put it down!
Anonymous
Found an oldie but goodie in a NYC bookstore:
"The Best of Everything" by Rona Jaffe (written in 1958)

The story of young women working in the NYC publishing world.
Anonymous
7 1/2 deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle for bookclub. I hate it.
Anonymous
Slippery Creatures, by KJ Charles and Horrorstör, by Grady Hendrix.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The Vanishing Half by Britt Bennett. It’s very good though I am having trouble getting into it. I think it’s because it’s about sisters and I’m having issues with mine.

I just finished Perfect Tunes by Emily Gould and would recommend, especially if you have ever struggled with holding onto yourself and your pre-kid dreams as a mom.

Next up Hush Hush by Laura Lippmann because I need a good murder mystery. But I’m also very excited to read Circe by Madeline Miller as I’ve been in a Greek myths kick generally lately.


I read Vanishing Half, but liked Bennett's earlier book, The Mothers, better. Vanishing Half felt too deliberately-plotted -- the scaffolding showed; The Mothers isn't a perfect book, but the characters and setting are more alive and organic. (Ok, my wonderful 8th-grade English teacher would make me rewrite that whole sentence.)
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Currently reading Ann Patchett’s “These Precious Days.” It’s a collection of short stories. I’m generally not a huge fan of short stories but I will read anything she writes.


I'm a big Patchett fan and loved this book. Did you know the title comes from Charlotte's Web? I learned that from hearing Kirsta Tippett interview Kate Di Camillo.
Anonymous
I'm reading My Year of Meats by Ruth Ozeki. It's totally weird, but every time I have to put it down, I can't wait to pick it up again.
Anonymous
Empire of Pain by Patrick Radden Keefe, about the invention/marketing of Oxycontin. They say behind every great fortune lies a great crime but the Sackler family was not willing to settle for just one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Currently reading Ann Patchett’s “These Precious Days.” It’s a collection of short stories. I’m generally not a huge fan of short stories but I will read anything she writes.


I'm a big Patchett fan and loved this book. Did you know the title comes from Charlotte's Web? I learned that from hearing Kirsta Tippett interview Kate Di Camillo.


I loved this book, too. Patchett was both very different and very similar to how I would have pictured her all at the same time.
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