Anonymous wrote:I jsut reread Natalie Zina Walschots Hench, about a young woman who finds herself working as a temp on the Villain side doing spreadsheets. She is terribly injured by a "hero" and gets laid off, and starts working on tallying the human cost of heroes. And goes on from there. I loved it as much the second time! Re-read because it was published in 2020 and the sequel, Villain, just came out a couple of weeks ago so that's on my to read list.
I just started American Fantasy by Emma Staub. It's got a fairly low raiting for goodreads, so I'm curious to see how it goes (I'm only on page 50). A 40 (50?) something woman goes on a 4 day cruise dedicated to fans of an aging boy band (think New Kids on the BLock on a cruise today) where guests can interact and hang out with the boy band. She ends up befriending one of the band members. If this was a straight romance book by a well known romance author, the concept would be a home run. So very curious why the low rating. The blurb says it's a richly textured, uplifting story about the magic of revisiting youthful feelings, and the even greater magic of starting anew.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dudes. Dungeon Crawler Carl. You will not regret it.
I started reading Dungeon Crawler Carl! I am listening on Audible. I just got to the part where Princess Donut starts talking. It is hilarious!
Isn't this a graphic novel? How does it work on audio?
No it’s not a graphic novel.
I picked up Land today by Maggie O Farrell. I haven’t read any of her other books so I’m excited.
Anonymous wrote:I jsut reread Natalie Zina Walschots Hench, about a young woman who finds herself working as a temp on the Villain side doing spreadsheets. She is terribly injured by a "hero" and gets laid off, and starts working on tallying the human cost of heroes. And goes on from there. I loved it as much the second time! Re-read because it was published in 2020 and the sequel, Villain, just came out a couple of weeks ago so that's on my to read list.
I just started American Fantasy by Emma Staub. It's got a fairly low raiting for goodreads, so I'm curious to see how it goes (I'm only on page 50). A 40 (50?) something woman goes on a 4 day cruise dedicated to fans of an aging boy band (think New Kids on the BLock on a cruise today) where guests can interact and hang out with the boy band. She ends up befriending one of the band members. If this was a straight romance book by a well known romance author, the concept would be a home run. So very curious why the low rating. The blurb says it's a richly textured, uplifting story about the magic of revisiting youthful feelings, and the even greater magic of starting anew.
Are you the FD author? I heard that she’s a local, lives in VA.Anonymous wrote:I just started Ann Patchett’s new book Whistler. Really enjoying it so far.
I’m the one who made the original comment about enjoying the Finlay Donovan series, despite their often ridiculous plots. Thanks to those who stuck up for me and the books back on page 2 of this thread.
Anonymous wrote:I’m about 100 pages into London Falling and am pulled into the story. It’s very engaging going non-fiction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is everyone reading this month?
What is the book about?
What is your opinion of the book?
A Perfect Hand by Ayalet Waldman.
I know there's love/hate for her; she's married to Michael Chabon and has said some stuff about marriage and motherhood over the years that has ruffled peoples' feathers. That's an aside though because this book is an utter delight. I've never read her before and it is so wonderfully written. Dialogue, language, inner discourse, ideas, romance, upstairs/downstairs, class, etc. Highly recommend the audiobook!
This sounds great. I hope someone brings it up in future threads, because DCPL doesn't even admit that it exists yet so I can't add it to my list (published under a month ago)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is everyone reading this month?
What is the book about?
What is your opinion of the book?
A Perfect Hand by Ayalet Waldman.
I know there's love/hate for her; she's married to Michael Chabon and has said some stuff about marriage and motherhood over the years that has ruffled peoples' feathers. That's an aside though because this book is an utter delight. I've never read her before and it is so wonderfully written. Dialogue, language, inner discourse, ideas, romance, upstairs/downstairs, class, etc. Highly recommend the audiobook!
Anonymous wrote:What is everyone reading this month?
What is the book about?
What is your opinion of the book?
Anonymous wrote:Once or twice a month, I sit down with this thread and my library app, and add things to my wishlist. I so appreciate the posters who tell us something beyond the title and author! Just "it's a fictional account of an 18th century sea voyage, and it's melancholy and beautiful," or "I love the characters and the tension but I hate the rampant rapiness". Or just... something.
Thank you to my fellow book lovers who take the extra minute to give me an idea if something might work for me, and save me the effort of looking up each one![]()