Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On DCUM recommendation I just finished Olivia Manning’s Balkan Trilogy. It was wonderful but also a bit distressing at the end. Understandably given the context. Really well-written and multi-faceted characters. Thanks to whomever recommended it.
I also sped through Faulkner’s An Intruder in the Dust. That is remarkably prescient of current racial unrest to have been written in 1948! Remarkable book, I am surprised it isn’t more famous.
I’m book hunting now, having just wrapped up the Faulkner. I want something lighter for my next read as those two were both quite heavy with amusing moments, but overall heavy.
I'm so glad you read The Balkan Trilogy. I will say I loved the next three - The Levant Trilogy - even better.
Anonymous wrote:On DCUM recommendation I just finished Olivia Manning’s Balkan Trilogy. It was wonderful but also a bit distressing at the end. Understandably given the context. Really well-written and multi-faceted characters. Thanks to whomever recommended it.
I also sped through Faulkner’s An Intruder in the Dust. That is remarkably prescient of current racial unrest to have been written in 1948! Remarkable book, I am surprised it isn’t more famous.
I’m book hunting now, having just wrapped up the Faulkner. I want something lighter for my next read as those two were both quite heavy with amusing moments, but overall heavy.
Anonymous wrote:“Smilla’s Sense of Snow” which was recommended in a thread about spooky books.
It’s really interesting— a dark Scandinavian mystery that’s also a lot about the main character’s Greenlander heritage. Recently I have read a lot about the complicated relationship between Denmark and Greenland (particularly the native Greenlanders) so this novel tied in nicely.
Anonymous wrote:I started Buckeye by Patrick Ryan since it was a Today Show pick. Its historical fiction and is described as "weaving the intimate lives of two midwestern families across generations, from World War II to the late twentieth century". It was just released in Sept but has good reviews.
Anonymous wrote:I just started Remarkably Bright Creatures (I know! So behind the curve on this) and am already completely drawn in. I used to read the author’s running blog years ago and she was a great writer then so I don’t know what took me so long.