Anonymous wrote:I just read The Funeral Ladies of Ellerie County. It was a recommendation I found on last month's reading thread. It was a sweet story. Nothing fabulous, but worth a read if you need something between holds!
Anonymous wrote:Spent the weekend absolutely buried in Lonesome Dove, by Larry McMurtry. Could not put it down and was very sad to leave the world when it was over. I didn't think the subject matter would interest me (no previous interest in Westerns) but I love epic novels and this was recommended and wow, is all I can say. The characters, the settings, the interpersonal relationships, the humor and tragedy, the internal monologues, all of it was totally absorbing. Highly recommended.
Anonymous wrote:"Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle Zevin
Just finished it and just found it meh. While I can relate to the difficult nature of a platonic friendship that evolves from childhood into adult life, I found the characters to be mostly unlikeable and the story to be unrealistically tragic. It reads like mediocre YA but with a big vocabulary, and it has one standout first-person POV chapter that doesn't redeem the rest of the book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:James, by Percival Everett. This is the reimagining of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn told from the enslaved point of view of Jim.
Sounds good! Report back.
Anonymous wrote:"Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle Zevin
Just finished it and just found it meh. While I can relate to the difficult nature of a platonic friendship that evolves from childhood into adult life, I found the characters to be mostly unlikeable and the story to be unrealistically tragic. It reads like mediocre YA but with a big vocabulary, and it has one standout first-person POV chapter that doesn't redeem the rest of the book.
Anonymous wrote:Reading Orbital which won the Booker Prize. Beautiful prose.