Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I Who Have Never Known Men - a post-apocalyptic novel by Belgian author Jacqueline Harpman, first published in French in 1995. It tells the story of a group of women imprisoned in an underground bunker by silent male guards, narrated by the youngest woman who has no memory of the world before the cage.
I like it so far. It's more philosophical than event driven.
You're speaking my language here! What other books that fit this description have you enjoyed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:just started Buckeye and liking it so far but hoping things pick up a bit given the length.
NP. For me, they didn’t pick up. DNF at maybe 30%.
Same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Strangers by Belle Burden
A memoir of a marriage
She’s an incredible writer - it sucked me right it. NYC Mom of 3, former lawyer turned SAHM whose finance bro husband walks out on her during COVID. Fascinating and not bitter.
Thanks for the recommendation.
I read a long article about the author and the book and found it really interesting. Less the basic story and more the bigger questions of how well we can really know another person . . . or even ourselves until external events force us to dig deeper. Safe to assume there's more of that in the book itself?
Also glad to hear she's an incredible writer. I definiely have a soft spot for former BigLaw lawyers who write well in other contexts!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:just started Buckeye and liking it so far but hoping things pick up a bit given the length.
NP. For me, they didn’t pick up. DNF at maybe 30%.
Anonymous wrote:I Who Have Never Known Men - a post-apocalyptic novel by Belgian author Jacqueline Harpman, first published in French in 1995. It tells the story of a group of women imprisoned in an underground bunker by silent male guards, narrated by the youngest woman who has no memory of the world before the cage.
I like it so far. It's more philosophical than event driven.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m about 25 percent into The Night We Lost Him by Laura Dave and it’s ok. I’m not having any trouble putting it down, despite the Whodunnit aspect. I’m finding anything not written by Daniel Mason to be hard to get into at this point.
I’m also rereading one of my favorite collections of short stories called Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century by Kim Fu which is every bit as amazing as I remember it being.
I finished The Night We Lost Him. It was not very good. I cannot understand what I was supposed to be invested in and I didnt find any of the characters or their relationships the least biut compelling. Just a basic pedestrian read.
Anonymous wrote:Strangers by Belle Burden
A memoir of a marriage
She’s an incredible writer - it sucked me right it. NYC Mom of 3, former lawyer turned SAHM whose finance bro husband walks out on her during COVID. Fascinating and not bitter.
Anonymous wrote:I’m about 25 percent into The Night We Lost Him by Laura Dave and it’s ok. I’m not having any trouble putting it down, despite the Whodunnit aspect. I’m finding anything not written by Daniel Mason to be hard to get into at this point.
I’m also rereading one of my favorite collections of short stories called Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century by Kim Fu which is every bit as amazing as I remember it being.
Anonymous wrote:just started Buckeye and liking it so far but hoping things pick up a bit given the length.
Anonymous wrote:just started Buckeye and liking it so far but hoping things pick up a bit given the length.