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:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yay, January reading thread!
Still making my way through both The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, and 1929. I'm enjoying having both a fiction and a nonfiction book going at the same time.
What do you make of the Loneliness of S&S so far?
I really like it. I enjoy the tension created when you want to reach into the book and grab the characters and tell them to do something differently because you can see what they can't. I am fascinated by the insight into perceptions of America and Americans and India and Indians by Indian people. I love how we get to see all sides of these characters, the sides everyone hides from other people. I find a lot of what is written about class in India to be validating given my discomfort with how it played out when I traveled in India somewhat extensively. It does feel long though, and I'm about 75% of the way through and just want to know what is going to happen with these two, already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yay, January reading thread!
Still making my way through both The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, and 1929. I'm enjoying having both a fiction and a nonfiction book going at the same time.
What do you make of the Loneliness of S&S so far?
Anonymous wrote:I just finished Heartwood by Amity Gaige. It was a really compelling page-turner about a nurse recovering from her hospital covid experience by hiking the Appalachian Trail. In Maine, she goes missing. The book is about the search and is told from multiple POVs.
I really liked this. It isn't perfect, but it is a page turner and I was all in while reading it.
Anonymous wrote:Yay, January reading thread!
Still making my way through both The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, and 1929. I'm enjoying having both a fiction and a nonfiction book going at the same time.
Anonymous wrote:The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America (interested in the premise that "pursuit of happiness" meant something different to them than it does to us today)
And The Black Wolf by Louise Penny - received it as a gift for Christmas from my spouse.
Anonymous wrote:The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America (interested in the premise that "pursuit of happiness" meant something different to them than it does to us today)
And The Black Wolf by Louise Penny - received it as a gift for Christmas from my spouse.