It took me ages to get through this book. It was really wild. I ended up feeling pretty "meh" about it. |
The Wager was fascinating. |
Very sorry to the PP. Oddly enough when I get stressed, I like reading about situations that were worse that we prevailed. Like, I read a book about the Spanish Flu during Covid. And reading about other times in America where politically things were very unstable. |
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I'm reading The Best Minds by Jonathan Rosen.
So far it's interesting, but there is some odd inconsistency in his writing where I feel like it's not very fluid. |
| Wifey by Judy Blume, based off of the inappropriate books thread. A quick, juicy read. I was certainly bored in Sandy's marriage. Still she went from 0 to 100 in a few short weeks. |
| 12:22, I took a year to finish The Best Minds. Putting it down when I felt restless with the writing. I only recently finished it and was glad that I did. The second half was a much better pace and more fluid/readable. |
You have a lot of fortitude to take that approach. |
DP- thank you, this is encouraging. /another reader trying to make it through Best Minds |
I'm still waiting my turn on the library hold list My sister DNF it though, so I decided to just wait it out instead of buying.
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I read all of the Hilderbrand novels during Covid, and I’m feeling a lot of parallels to early 2020 right now. I hope the books are as much as an enjoyable escape for you now as they were for me then! I liked Love Season best. |
| I'm reading to The North Woods by Daniel Mason, a booker finalist for other works. It's the story of a cabin/house in rural western Mass and the stories of the inhabitants over 300 years. Really wonderful, especially since I grew up in a similar house in Vermont. |
The North Woods was a DNF for me. |
Agree. I barely finished this one! |
I love her! But I’m trying to read them all more slowly - 2 a year or so
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Unlike the PPs who disliked it, I think North Woods is a masterful, magical book. I liked it a lot on the first read and loved it on the second. The creativity in this novel is just unmatched and so clever. It's packed with quiet, subtle gems. It's like Daniel Mason trusted his readers to be intelligent, thoughtful readers instead of spelling everything out and hitting us over the head. |