Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finishing The Golem and the Jinn, which I’m loving.
Just started Hamnet for my book club. Only a dozen pages in, but Inreally like O’Farrell’s writing so far.
This is one of my fave books.
It's one of my next in line reads 😍
I read The House in the Cerulean Sea and Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune. About magical children and rules around how magical people live, being true to yourself, accepting yourself, etc. LOVED both. Had them in my shelves for a while and really enjoyed both!! Can't wait for a possible third.
Also just finished Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson. A little meh. About generational wealth, privilege etc. Was supposed to be funny but didn't land it. At first thought I might dnf, then ended up enjoying it a bit, (mostly just Sasha) then the ending/last few sentences kind of ruined any positive feelings I had about the book, just seemed so unnecessary and didn't belong.
Agree on Pineapple Street. Had higher hopes for it and it fell flat. A pretty cover I guess?
I'm just starting Whale Fall about a small island of the coast of great britain and set in 1938 when times are changing for multiple reasons.
Anonymous wrote:The Expat, by Hansen Shi
Wary at first because I couldn't deal with the main character's self-loathing. It seemed almost cliche. But I'm glad I kept going. I'm now at about 40% and quite invested.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finishing The Golem and the Jinn, which I’m loving.
Just started Hamnet for my book club. Only a dozen pages in, but Inreally like O’Farrell’s writing so far.
This is one of my fave books.
It's one of my next in line reads 😍
I read The House in the Cerulean Sea and Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune. About magical children and rules around how magical people live, being true to yourself, accepting yourself, etc. LOVED both. Had them in my shelves for a while and really enjoyed both!! Can't wait for a possible third.
Also just finished Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson. A little meh. About generational wealth, privilege etc. Was supposed to be funny but didn't land it. At first thought I might dnf, then ended up enjoying it a bit, (mostly just Sasha) then the ending/last few sentences kind of ruined any positive feelings I had about the book, just seemed so unnecessary and didn't belong.
Agree on Pineapple Street. Had higher hopes for it and it fell flat. A pretty cover I guess?
I'm just starting Whale Fall about a small island of the coast of great britain and set in 1938 when times are changing for multiple reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm halfway through an epic historical romance written in the 1970s and set in India - The Far Pavilions by M.M. Kaye. I'm loving it. Fantastic setting with lots of detail about late 1800s India and great characters. It's 1000 pages, so I have about 500 to go, but it reads fast.
Did you read The Covenant of Water? Also set in India, across a big span of time. I loved it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm halfway through an epic historical romance written in the 1970s and set in India - The Far Pavilions by M.M. Kaye. I'm loving it. Fantastic setting with lots of detail about late 1800s India and great characters. It's 1000 pages, so I have about 500 to go, but it reads fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Finishing The Golem and the Jinn, which I’m loving.
Just started Hamnet for my book club. Only a dozen pages in, but Inreally like O’Farrell’s writing so far.
This is one of my fave books.
It's one of my next in line reads 😍
I read The House in the Cerulean Sea and Somewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune. About magical children and rules around how magical people live, being true to yourself, accepting yourself, etc. LOVED both. Had them in my shelves for a while and really enjoyed both!! Can't wait for a possible third.
Also just finished Pineapple Street by Jenny Jackson. A little meh. About generational wealth, privilege etc. Was supposed to be funny but didn't land it. At first thought I might dnf, then ended up enjoying it a bit, (mostly just Sasha) then the ending/last few sentences kind of ruined any positive feelings I had about the book, just seemed so unnecessary and didn't belong.
Anonymous wrote:Vera Wang's Unsolicited Advice for Murderer was written for a 12-year old. Simplistic plot and characters. Total waste of time.Anonymous wrote:Vera Wang's Unsolicited Advice for Murderer by Jesse Q. Sutanto. A cute, funny murder mystery that gave me the warm and fuzzies.
That being said, I have read many explanations of NFTs and they still make no sense to me, but that didn't significantly mar my understanding of the plot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai
Two Indian young adults in the US, their parents set them up. So far I like it but I’ve just started.
I recently finished The Night Watch by Sarah Waters and didn’t enjoy it. It is told in reverse chronological order and the first section is over long and dull. I LOVED Fingersmith so I kept at it, but I don’t recommend it.
I read it all and regretted it. The start is good, especially if you are a Jhabvala fan. But it’s too long and became a tortuous recitation of complaints by both lead characters about their miserable lives and how it was everyone else’s fault- especially colonialism. Wish I had spent the time on something else. Read the Anazon 1 star reviews. That’s exactly how I felt. Needed an editor badly at 700+ pages. Plus nothing is memorable except the complaining after having read it.
Anonymous wrote:The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny by Kiran Desai
Two Indian young adults in the US, their parents set them up. So far I like it but I’ve just started.
I recently finished The Night Watch by Sarah Waters and didn’t enjoy it. It is told in reverse chronological order and the first section is over long and dull. I LOVED Fingersmith so I kept at it, but I don’t recommend it.
Anonymous wrote:I really like Kate Atkinson’s writing, she can be quite wry…I loved her recent short story collection (Normal Rules Don’t Apply), which features interwoven stories and has a fantastical element to it. I even liked Case Histories, though I’m not typically a heavy crime/detective fan.
Loneliness readers…I got stuck on Ilan (the self-centered artist)—if I skim past, will I be rewarded? Love the writing and the other characters, but am in a period where I have a low tolerance for a-hole male characters.
Vera Wang's Unsolicited Advice for Murderer was written for a 12-year old. Simplistic plot and characters. Total waste of time.Anonymous wrote:Vera Wang's Unsolicited Advice for Murderer by Jesse Q. Sutanto. A cute, funny murder mystery that gave me the warm and fuzzies.
That being said, I have read many explanations of NFTs and they still make no sense to me, but that didn't significantly mar my understanding of the plot.