Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where the Crawdads Sing
Eleanor Oliphant
Before we were yours
Educated
The only good book among these is Crawdads. Before We Were Yours was awful.
I hated where the crawdads sing. Loved educated. The other 2 ok but wouldn’t really recommend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When breath becomes air
Life changing
Really? Why? I felt so conflicted about that book. His passing is sad, but to be honest, the only good part was the epilogue written by his wife. Also, him going back to work and butchering a surgery felt wrong. He risked someone’s life because he wanted to live fully. Anyway, as I said, I felt uneasy about the book (and bored).
Anonymous wrote:the dutch house
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ulysses Grant’s biography “Grant” by Ron Chernow
This is on my list!
Anonymous wrote:Hearts Invisible Furies
Anonymous wrote:I read about a book a week, so I don’t know that I could go back 10 years, but some of the most engaging, thought provoking reads that come to mind are quirky ones:
Mary Toft, or The Rabbit Queen
Hollow Kingdom
World War Z
the Deep (Alma Katsu, also The Hunger by the same author. Historical fiction, a little scary, and both allegories about something bigger than their main plots)
Others that are more mainstream:
Ask Again, Yes
Song of Achilles (preferred over Circe)
News of the World
Mrs. Everything
Circling the Sun
I loved Homegoing, but it’s intense. I HATED Where the Crawdada Sing
This Is How it Always Is
Anonymous wrote:All the Light We Cannot See
The Overstory
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasn't published in the last 10 years, but for me the answer is The Secret History, by Donna Tartt.
+1
I just started that but couldn’t get into it before the library loan expired. I did like Goldfinch.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing To See Here by Kevin Wilson -- just odd and funny and sweet
Secret History by Donna Tartt -- SOO much better than The Goldfinch. This would have made an amazing film, if done well.
I know these aren't intellectual powerhouse reads, but I really liked them.