Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm reading The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
What are your thoughts? I really enjoyed her writing style in my 20s/early 30s…then she switched to Italian, and I haven’t found the same sense of connection from the back translations. Interpreter of Maladies (short stories) may need to be a re-read for me in 2026!
Lahiri wrote the Lowland in 2013, so I think it predates her writing in Italian (not 100% positive though). I'm about a third in and its excellent. Straddles India and the U.S. in the 1960s. Her writing is so easy to sink into.
NP. I also loved The Lowland.
I read two recent short stories by her and loved the one published in the New Yorker this summer— it was about a summer she spent in London when she was ten. It had her same gorgeous writing style. I think it was semi or completely autobiographical. I read another about an expat living somewhere in Italy (published in Best American Short Stories 2024) and just didn’t connect with it; it was among my least favorite in the collection. I wondered if the first one was written in English and the second in Italian originally and maybe why I felt a bit of disconnect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just started Culpability. So far I’m not sure if I like it.
I just finished the Lion Women of Tehran which is one of the best books I’ve ever read.
Before that I read the River is Waiting which I give 5 stars.
Also loved Lions Women of Tehran. Will look into the River is Waiting - sounds promising.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm reading The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
What are your thoughts? I really enjoyed her writing style in my 20s/early 30s…then she switched to Italian, and I haven’t found the same sense of connection from the back translations. Interpreter of Maladies (short stories) may need to be a re-read for me in 2026!
Lahiri wrote the Lowland in 2013, so I think it predates her writing in Italian (not 100% positive though). I'm about a third in and its excellent. Straddles India and the U.S. in the 1960s. Her writing is so easy to sink into.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just started The Poisonwood Bible for book club…just a few pages in and loving the writing!
I’m also listening to A Breath of Snow and Ashes as my audiobook; will likely be doing so for awhile in parallel with a physical and/or ebook.
Sharing more per later post…
Poisonwood Bible is an earlier Barbara Kingsolver (1998) about southern Baptist missionaries in the Congo in 1959, told from the POV of the mother and four daughters. Gorgeous writing, especially one of the daughters who plays with language in a Nabokovian manner (which I love!).
Breath of Snow is book 6 in the Outlander series…the narrator (especially reading Claire’s perspective) is almost comforting to me at this point; a lot of descriptions of cozy domestic scenes, with some action. Definitely a slow burn; still not a Roger fan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm reading The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
What are your thoughts? I really enjoyed her writing style in my 20s/early 30s…then she switched to Italian, and I haven’t found the same sense of connection from the back translations. Interpreter of Maladies (short stories) may need to be a re-read for me in 2026!
Anonymous wrote:I just started The Poisonwood Bible for book club…just a few pages in and loving the writing!
I’m also listening to A Breath of Snow and Ashes as my audiobook; will likely be doing so for awhile in parallel with a physical and/or ebook.
Anonymous wrote:I'm reading The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
Anonymous wrote:I just started Culpability. So far I’m not sure if I like it.
I just finished the Lion Women of Tehran which is one of the best books I’ve ever read.
Before that I read the River is Waiting which I give 5 stars.
Anonymous wrote:Reading The Correspondent which is an epistolary novel. Interesting self portrait of a woman if not a bit dry but I’m only 1/3 in.
Anonymous wrote:I'm starting The Displacements, by Bruce Holsinger
The premise sounds good, but I'm having a hard time getting into it. Has anyone read it? Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:It really helps if you say what the book is about and whether you’re in enjoying it. I come here often for suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:The Names by Florence Knapp - the story of an abused woman, Cora, and the three different paths her life takes based on what she names her second child. Her abusive husband insists that he be named Gordan (his name, and the name of his father). Their 9 year old daughter suggests another name, and Cora likes a third name. It seems like an innocent premise, but it's a very powerful book, and really shows how abuse permeates generations.
It's not sappy enough for SAPtember, but is a September read nonetheless.