Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finished Children of God, the sequel to The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell. Enjoyed it very much and a nice satisfying ending. Based on these books at least, I think she is a fabulous author, the writing makes everything feel so real.
Just started Buckeye by Patrick Ryan. Only about 50 pages in, but I'm enjoying it so far.
Just finished The Sparrow and looking forward to Children of God. Great way to start the new year in reading.
Anonymous wrote:Finished Children of God, the sequel to The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell. Enjoyed it very much and a nice satisfying ending. Based on these books at least, I think she is a fabulous author, the writing makes everything feel so real.
Just started Buckeye by Patrick Ryan. Only about 50 pages in, but I'm enjoying it so far.
Anonymous wrote:Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books -- it's about a woman who goes on a book banning crusade and sets up a little free library with what she considers appropriate books, but someone swaps out all the books with banned books (leaving the wholesome dust jackets). It's very light and so far all the bad people are getting their comeuppances and the good people are triumphing and it's kind of what I needed to read right now.
I still have 14 people in front of me for The Black Wolf.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just downloaded on my kindle, "Wellness." It is a fictional story about a couple who meets in college, follows them through marriage, life, etc. Oprah book.
Come back and tell us what you think of it PP when you're done.
I enjoyed this when I read it about two years ago. The pacing was a bit odd, and plot loose, but the satire of UMC morays and child-rearing was funny (and in its deliberately exaggerated way, spot on).
Anonymous wrote:Its one of few Philip Roth's books noted for having very little sex in comparison to some of his other, more famous and lurid works. He’s overrated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just finished The Plot Against America by Philip Roth. Received this as a gift otherwise was not on my reading list. An alternate history told from the POV of a 9 year old Jewish boy in NJ in which Charles Lindbergh was elected President in 1940. Roth is a great story teller , with great characters and love his descriptions of family dynamics. Also interweaves humor throughout. A great book!
I think they made this into a TV series during the pandemic? It was terrific but I haven’t read the book.
Anonymous wrote:Just finished “The Names” which I put on hold a while ago after hearing about the idea behind the plot here on DCUM. I think I forgot in the mean time that the book centers around domestic abuse and it was hard to read but also pulled me in so I just read it super fast- it kept me up the first night after I started it because it has some parallels to someone I know trying to leave a differently abusive marriage and I have been reflecting a lot how much having kids with someone ties you them and makes it so hard to get out of a terrible marriage. It was really good in a hard way.
I will definitely read something lighter next.
Anonymous wrote:Its one of few Philip Roth's books noted for having very little sex in comparison to some of his other, more famous and lurid works. He’s overrated.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just finished The Plot Against America by Philip Roth. Received this as a gift otherwise was not on my reading list. An alternate history told from the POV of a 9 year old Jewish boy in NJ in which Charles Lindbergh was elected President in 1940. Roth is a great story teller , with great characters and love his descriptions of family dynamics. Also interweaves humor throughout. A great book!
I think they made this into a TV series during the pandemic? It was terrific but I haven’t read the book.