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Theo Of Golden!
I don't buy many physical books anymore, but after finishing this, I ordered 6 copies to give to my favorites. The audible version was great but I need to read it again with a highlighter. |
These were both so good! |
| Just started Canticle, about a group of religious women who live in a commune and refuse to answer to the church in the 13th century in Belgium. Really liking the first few chapters. |
It was really good. |
Also maybe for you and not sure what age your kid is but I read Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder as a young adult before a trip to Greece and I loved how it made the early history of philosophy come alive (not a sentence I've ever said before or will ever say again). |
I can never remember much about books after I read them but I loved this one. It's just an impressive novel (but admittedly can't remember the gross bits). |
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I'm reading Rhine Journey by Ann Schlee, which is a slow mover but really captures that feeling of being infantilized and held hostage as a single middle aged woman in the 19th c.
Earlier this month I read The Gallows Pole by Benjamin Myers. I'm new-ish to Myers--this was my second of his--but he writes all sorts of different things, with this one being very different from the first one I read by him, which is called The Offing. The Gallows Pole is an obviously meticulously researched (though occasionally anachronistic) novel about a community of "coiners" in the moors and dales of North Yorkshire in the 18th century. Coiners clipped shavings off coins and turned them into counterfeit coins, and so it's part history and part intrigue of whether the king's exciseman is going to catch them or not. Rough and brutal and also apparently was turned into a BBC series. |
I just finished Cate Kay. I liked it, but the framing grew tiresome. Just tell the damn story. |
| I resolved to start listening to (light) audiobooks while doing chores, instead of just podcasts, and just finished Remarkably Bright Creatures, which was reasonably charming, about an octopus and an older woman who works in the aquarium where it lives and who lost her son many years ago. It was fairly charming though I don’t feel like they explained very well why it took so l oh g for the protagonists to figure out the little “mystery” at the heart of the book when the octopus gave them alll the info they needed pretty early on! |
Amazing story. Wonderful story. You won’t be disappointed. They made it into a movie with Meryl Streep, Antonio Banderas - it is good too! Meryl Streep plays a role of wife phenomenally. |
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Just finished My Dark Vanessa
Dark, heavy read, but very insightful. Read like a memoir, to me. Now on to The Mad Wife. So far, enjoying it! |
I've finished this one, rating it four stars. It really isn't fairytale at all, and I'm very satisfied with the ending. Now I've started The Irish Goodbye by Heather Aimee O'Neill - Irish American family deals with the long term fall out of a boating accident in their teenage years, and the ripple affects through everyone's lives. |
Finished this . . . dark and intense, but well worth the read. Revolutions of all kinds tend to be anti-intellectual at their cores . . . those who work in or question the gray areas are perceived as threats, and often the revolutionaries who once fought for freedom and independence are intent to take it from others once they find themselves in power. I've now moved on to "The Covenant of Water," and have been drawn right in. I have a soft spot for multigenerational, epic novels, and this one so far is not disappointing me. |
| Just started The Names. It’s interesting so far, but I’m worried how it will end. It’s giving A Little Life vibes in a way. Very foreboding. |
| The Director by Daniel Kehlmann, enjoying it immensely |