Anonymous wrote:This is the most basic bitch reading list I have ever seen.
Just go on Amazon and buy whatever is the top seller.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spoiler alert, but Poisonwood Bible has at least one of the things on the OP's "no go" list. I am having a hard time thinking of adult books that have no violence or deaths of children.
If OP reallly wants books with no violence at all, she probably should just stick with fluflfy books like Shopaholic.
I didn't say no violence at all. I said no violence to children.
Such as a nonfiction book about children in African who become soldiers. That's a no go for me.
Are you referring to What is the What? That book made me cry and scream - literally.
What is the What is one my favorite books ever! I was just looking at it longingly on my bookshelf (i'm weird)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fates and Furies - Lauren Groff
Rules of Civility - Amor Towles
Midwives - Chris Bohjalian
Life after Life - Kate Atkinson
The Interestings - Wolitzer
11/22/63 - Stephen King
I could ot get through Fates And Furies
I posted the rec - I didn't say I LIKED F&F but it seemed up OPs alley. I hated all the characters - even when I got to the end, I STILL Hated all of the characters. Insufferable. And when I don't have someone to root for, then I don't end up liking the book - that said, it was well written, evenly paced, and interesting.
I feel like I hate read this until the end, and then I felt like I got something from it. It does make you think a lot about marriage and life!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the Shopaholic books by Sophia Kinsella?
WAY too fluffy for me! I like bestsellers, but they need to be a bit more meaty than that.
It is adorable that you think Jodi Picoult novels are more "meaty" than the Shopaholic books.
Seriously, the PP who asserted you would like books that have been made into movies with familiar actors is correct.
Have you read both? Dr. Seuss is more "meaty" than the Shopaholic books.
Yes, I've read both. Jodi Picoult writes hackneyed, formulaic commercial fiction that is the literary equivalent of a Big Mac. A female Dan Brown, if you will. If you don't notice the bad writing, I can't explain it to you.
Anonymous wrote:Since you like John Irving, try Hotel New Hampshire and A Prayer for Owen Meany
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fates and Furies - Lauren Groff
Rules of Civility - Amor Towles
Midwives - Chris Bohjalian
Life after Life - Kate Atkinson
The Interestings - Wolitzer
11/22/63 - Stephen King
I could ot get through Fates And Furies
I posted the rec - I didn't say I LIKED F&F but it seemed up OPs alley. I hated all the characters - even when I got to the end, I STILL Hated all of the characters. Insufferable. And when I don't have someone to root for, then I don't end up liking the book - that said, it was well written, evenly paced, and interesting.
I feel like I hate read this until the end, and then I felt like I got something from it. It does make you think a lot about marriage and life!
Anonymous wrote:The new Ann Tyler, "Vinegar Girl", based on The Taming of the Shrew sounds good.
Of course I love anything Ann Tyler, though never read her last book, "The Blue Spool"
The new Laura Lippman also sounds good, "Wilde Lake", set in Columbia, MD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spoiler alert, but Poisonwood Bible has at least one of the things on the OP's "no go" list. I am having a hard time thinking of adult books that have no violence or deaths of children.
If OP reallly wants books with no violence at all, she probably should just stick with fluflfy books like Shopaholic.
I didn't say no violence at all. I said no violence to children.
Such as a nonfiction book about children in African who become soldiers. That's a no go for me.
Are you referring to What is the What? That book made me cry and scream - literally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fates and Furies - Lauren Groff
Rules of Civility - Amor Towles
Midwives - Chris Bohjalian
Life after Life - Kate Atkinson
The Interestings - Wolitzer
11/22/63 - Stephen King
I could ot get through Fates And Furies
I posted the rec - I didn't say I LIKED F&F but it seemed up OPs alley. I hated all the characters - even when I got to the end, I STILL Hated all of the characters. Insufferable. And when I don't have someone to root for, then I don't end up liking the book - that said, it was well written, evenly paced, and interesting.