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Memoirs

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  • againstthetide

    Trim That TBR Challenge 2012: COMPLETED BOOKS AND REVIEWS

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    In order to make things easier for Cindy, our PBT official shelver, I think we best have a thread for our reviews. So the other thread will be used for planning and discussion of the challenge . . .but let's make a clean one here for reviews.

    I learned a couple of tips for finding your place in what will be a huge thread.

    1. Our individual posts have permalinks! So bookmark your permalink so you can readily find your own spot.

    2. Ctrl-F can be used to search within a thread. So you can search for your name or for a title you know you've read. (Use Command + F for Mac)

    3. If you want to strikethrough your titles as you go, the html code is <*strike*>text you want to strikethrough</*strike*> . . .but you must remove the asterisks!

    Otherwise, please follow my lead.

    Please record what you've finished/completed/read and any reviews below it in a reply.

    To learn more about the Trim That TBR Challenge, please visit this thread:

    http://www.shelfari.com/groups/21541/discussions/416982/Trim-That-TBR-Challenge---2012-Discuss-and-Plan-?showall=true#9741489

    againstthetide started this discussion 2 months ago (edited). ( reply | permalink )

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  • againstthetide

    againstthetide (edited)

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    Books I Plan to Trim: (completions noted by strikethroughs)

    1. Gods in Alabama by Joshilyn Jackson
    2. Jesus Land by Julia Scheeres
    3. Moloka'i by Alan Brennert
    4. The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
    5. East of Eden by John Steinbeck
    6. Moneyball by Michael Lewis
    7. Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
    8. Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri
    9. The Nine by Jeffrey Toobin
    10. The Awakening by Kate Chopin
    11. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
    12. This Is Where I Leave You by Johnathan Tropper

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • againstthetide

      againstthetide (edited)

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      Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
      by Jonathan Safran Foer
      5 stars

      Ok, I am getting off to a very interesting 2012.

      First, I read Skippy Dies which I thoroughly enjoy reading but find the experience unsatisfying.

      Then, I read this book, and it is the total opposite. I actually didn't really like reading this book - - well the vast majority of it. But, it is absolutely brilliant. There is no doubt in my mind that this book deserves to become a classic and that it is literary gold. Oh my gosh, the writing annoyed me most of the time, and yet it packed an emotional wallop almost as big as The Road. And The Road is my standard for emotional gravity.

      I think I've cried after reading one book, The Road. Now, we can make it two.

      Oddly, this book is promoted as being a story of a very unusual, eccentric and creative 9 year old boy who has lost his father in 911.

      For me, that was a little bit like saying the story of Adam and Eve was about a serpent.

      In my mind, the true heart of the book and the absolute brilliance of it lies in the depicting of the relationship between the boy's grandfather and grandmother. It gave me chills. And it's the reason I'm giving this book the five stars it certainly deserves. The writing and how this relationship is presented is very original.

      The reason I didn't really enjoy reading the book is that the voice of the 9 year old Oskar just didn't enchant me. It's so precocious that it is not really childlike. And the plotline in which he finds a key amongst his father's things and tries to determine what the key unlocks - - well, I didn't really find it very compelling.

      I will say that I read Foer's first book, Everything is Illuminated, and totally did NOT like it. And the storyline of Oskar -- well it just evoked the same things I didn't really like about the first book. I can totally see some people liking this writing style just fine . . .it just is not my cup of tea.

      However, I just feel a need to give credit where credit is due. When I read a classic, sometimes I don't necessarily love it either, but I can still appreciate the work of art that it is. For me, this book fits that mold.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • againstthetide
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      My Second completed review will go here:

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Alli formally awelker
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    Books I Plan to Trim:

    1. Catcher and the Rye
    2. The Color Purple

    3. The Handmaids tale
    4. Water for Elephants
    5. Middlesex
    6. Girl with the Pearl Earring
    7. The Memory Keeper’s Daughter
    8. The Adventure of Tom Sawyer
    9. Band of Brothers
    10. The Lovely Bones
    11. Sarah’s Key
    12. Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Alli formally awelker
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      Catcher and the Rye
      by J.D. Salinger

      2 stars

      This for me was a reread. I read this for the first time in 7th grade. I think at the time I wasn't fully understanding of what was going on in the book let alone to understand topics. Well 9ish years later I find the book tedious and boring. I find Holden's teenage angst kind of a PITA. I hated the continued complaining of everything. I think for most high school students this would be a good read, seeing most are forced to read them in high school but to be honest this book just wasn't for me.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Alli formally awelker
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      The Color Purple by Alice Walker
      3 stars

      **Spoilers**

      Celie is a typical black woman in the mid-20th century; a reserved housewife that hate's her husband and wants him dead. Celie was this way for close to 20 years before she finally said enough was enough and left her husband and moved to Memphis with Shug Avery, her true love. It's at this time that her life truly starts to make sense. She's finally happy and free spirited.

      This book was one that actually took me a long time to read, I'm not sure why I it took so long but once I got through it, it turned out to be an all right book. I don't remember the movie much, just that Oprah is in it. :D

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Lindz L
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    Books I Plan to Trim:

    1. World War Z by Max Brooks
    2. Daydreamer by Janet Quin-Harkin (borrowed from my sister-in-law)
    3. (the following are all borrowed from Nick…) The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury
    4. The Son of Neptune by Rick Riordan
    5. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams
    6. Savage Empire by Jean Lorrah
    7. Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey
    8. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
    9. Dead Man’s Chest by Roger L. Johnson
    10. Legend of Willow Wood Springs by Terry Ellis
    11. The Evolution of Useful Things by Henry Petroski
    12. Smart Women Finish Rich by David Bach (borrowed from my sister)

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • kairilily

    kairilily (edited)

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    Books I Plan to Trim:

    1. Life of Pi - Yann Martel
    2. The Book Thief - Markus Zusak
    3. The Help - Kathryn Stockett
    4. Angels and Demons - Dan Brown
    5. My Sister's Keeper - Jodi Picoult
    6. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society - Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows
    7. The Thirteenth Tale - Diane Setterfield
    8. The Girl Who Played With Fire - Stieg Larsson
    9. Speak - Laurie Halse Anderson
    10. Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
    11. Little Women - Louisa May Alcott
    12. The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • kairilily
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      The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
      5 stars

      There is so much I could say about this book, but I don't think my words could do it justice. I admit that early on I found the book kind of slow moving and couldn't figure out what all the fuss was about, but it wasn't long before I was drawn into the story and couldn't stop reading. I loved the characters; from Liesel to Rudy to Hans to Max to Rosa. They were so well drawn and added color and life to what was such a dark, gray story. I loved the writing and the fact that Zusak had words play such a strong part in the book. I loved that the story was narrated by Death. Death has to be the most original, interesting narrator I've ever had the privilege of reading. The other thing I loved about this story is that it is told from the German standpoint. Most of the books that I've read that are set in Nazi Germany are told from the Jewish point of view. This book allows us a look at the other side and helps us to realize that there were some German people sympathetic and willing to risk their lives to help or save the Jewish people. This is a book I will remember for a long time and I certainly to plan on passing my copy along to someone interested in reading it. This is a book that needs to be recommended and shared.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated Jan 28/12

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Raine
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      I loved this book! It is one of my all-time favorites. I also loved the German viewpoint of the story. I gave my copy to my niece. Her father is from Germany, and in the past kids in school have said things to her. I read this book almost 2 years ago and it is still with me.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • BooknBlues

    BooknBlues (edited)

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    Books I Plan to Trim:
    1. The Real Isadora ~ Seroff Victor
    2. A Soldier of the Great War ~ Mark Helprin
    3. The lecturer's Tale ~ James Hynes
    4. Into the Wilderness ~ Sara Donati
    5. The Road to Omaha ~ Robert Ludlum
    6. The Heartsong of Charging Elk ~ James Welch
    7. The Sheep Queen ~ Thomas Savage
    8. Pigs in Heaven ~ Barbara Kingsolver
    9. What is What ~ Dave Eggers
    10. Daisy Bates in the Desert: A Woman's Life Among the Aborigines ~ Julia Blackburn
    11. The Nearest Exit ~ Olen Steinhauer
    12. Anna Karenina ~ Leo Tolstoy

    Alternates:
    Inside, Outside ~ Herman Wouk
    Fields of Fire ~ James Webb
    The Little Drummer Girl ~ John LeCarre
    Bastard Out of Carolina ~ Dorothy Allison
    True at First Light ~ Ernest Hemingway

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • BooknBlues
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      The Heartsong of Charging Elk
      by James Welch
      3.5 stars rounded to 4
      pp. 440

      It is hard to read a book as The Heartsong of Charging Elk by James Welch which has such a heavy atmosphere of despondency and confusion. As I finish it, I find it difficult to shake the melancholy of the novel, even though it ended on a positive note.

      Charging Elk is a young Lakota who signs up with The Buffalo Bill show and toured through France. He has had a wild adolescence living with a friend in the wild and refusing to go to the reservation, but when the opportunity presents itself he joins the show. Sadly, he finds himself in a hospital and the show leaves without him. He speaks neither French nor English and is unable to rejoin the troupe.

      The novel is about how Charging Elk makes his way in a world he neither understands nor feels a part of. For much of the novel, I couldn't help feeling that Charging Elk is not the sharpest knife in the drawer although he is a good decent man who could survive in the wild. Survival in Marseille is a struggle for Charging Elk and the reader can easily feel impatient with his ineptitude.

      This is a book which I passed over repeatedly in my TBR pile and I cannot help but wonder if it might have been preferable if I had passed over it in the book store, and I most likely would have but for the handsome young man on the cover.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • BooknBlues
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      The Nearest Exit
      by Olen Steinhauer
      5 stars
      pp. 404

      I had forgotten how much I loved spy novels until I read The Nearest Exit by Olen Steinhauer and then I remembered why I had preordered it from Amazon immediately after reading The Tourist the previous book in the Milo Weaver trilogy. Milo Weaver is a tourist, a kind of roving spy who is called upon to do everything from theft, and procurement to kidnapping and assassination. A Milo Weaver book means fast paced excitement that won’t be over until the book ends.

      I commend Steinhauer for crafting The Nearest Exit in a way that made it entirely readable as a stand alone, but deftly providing enough information to remind a reader of his previous novel of the plot and prior events. This is a rare talent for authors of sequels.

      Milo Weaver is a somewhat reluctant spy. He misses his family and is anxious to reconnect with them, but he doesn’t know what else to do or how to do it. He finds himself in a bit of a fix somewhere in Germany and must find the best way out of it and that is where the fun begins. It is a fast action paced book with of course just enough of the unbelievable to make it a delightful read.

      I got a kick out of reading this and can’t wait for the next one, An American Spy and hopefully this time I will remember not to let it molder on my bookshelf.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Barbara M
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      Oh no! Two more books on my TBR! I'll never pare it down :-)

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • BooknBlues
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      It is an endless task, but one I happen to love.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Erin S

    Erin S (edited)

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    Books I Plan to Trim:

    Physical Shelf:

    1. The Hot Zone by Richard Preston
    2. Long Lost by Harlan Coben
    3. I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak
    4. Honolulu by Alan Brennert
    5. Still Alice by Lisa Genova
    6. Horns by Joe Hill

    e-reader:

    7. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
    8. The Choice by Suzanne Woods Fisher
    9. Shakespeare in an Hour
    10. The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
    11. Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr
    12. Stolen Innocence by Elissa Wall

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Erin S
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      cross posted to TITTM and non-tag monthly thread

      The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
      3 stars

      After her parents death, Mary is sent to live with her wealthy, but absent uncle in England. Mary is a spoiled, bad-tempered girl who finds herself more lonely in her new home than she was before. She passes the time by wandering through the many gardens on the estate. Mary discovers a garden that has been locked and abandoned, and with the help of a new friend, Dickon, she works to bring the garden back to life. Mary also discovers that the garden is not the only secret being kept in her new home.

      This may be one of the few times that seeing a movie and play version before reading the book has hurt my enjoyment of the book by comparison. I like the simple story and the idea behind it, but I often found the book to be just boring. Knowing what was going to happen made for an anti-climatic reading which the unknown details did not make up for. I loved The Little Princess by Burnett, so I was disappointed not to have the same love for this book. Also, some books do not ever really feel dated no matter how old, but this one felt very dated to me.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • againstthetide
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      I really enjoyed this book, but I read it as a child. I will admit it is one of the VERY few times where I preferred the movie to the book - - I just loved it. And as many here know, I don't like movies, so that's saying something . . .

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Erin S
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      I really think if i had read this as a child or before I saw the movie, I would have liked it much better.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Erin S
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      (cross posted to Memoir thread, TITTM and Subdue the Shelf)

      Stolen Innocence by Elissa Wall
      4 stars

      Elissa Wall recounts her life growing up in the polygamy based Fundamental Church of Latter Day Saints (FLDS). Her childhood is spent in a strenuous home environment, because the wives of the household do not get along. When her mother complains too many times to the religious leaders, Elissa and her family are taken away from her father, and he is no longer allowed to be a part of their lives. At the age of fourteen, Elissa is told that she has been chosen to marry her first cousin whom she truly dislikes. She pleads with everyone, including the prophet, to not make her marry him or at least wait until she is older. After being continually coerced, the marriage proceeds, and Elissa spends many unhappy years in an arranged marriage. She finds the strength to stand up to the prophet, Warren Jeffs, and testify against him for forcing her underage marriage.

      This was a fascinating and heartbreaking memoir. No one person should ever have so much powerful over so many and then use that power to destroy families and individual choice. The most powerful part of the book was Elissa's recount of being newly married and not knowing anything about sex or where babies come from but being expected to have children right away. She was terrified of what her husband was trying to do to her, because she did not understand. Instead of anyone explaining things to her, she was just told that it was her duty to submit completely to her husband, which meant that he felt he could force her to do anything he wanted. That is just too much for a young girl to have to endure.

      At the trial, the prosecutor emphasizes that it was not a religious case, but a case against child abuse. That very much sums up the book for me. It dealt a lot with her religion and background, but the point of her words to emphasize that what is being done to the young girls is wrong in any situation. I applaud her bravery to stand up to a powerful man, even in the face of what she lost because of it.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Kristel

    Kristel (edited)

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    I plan to Trim:

    1. Ragtime by E. L. Doctorow (book)
    2. Some Experience of an Irish R. M. by Sommerville & Ross (ereader)
    3. Tono Bungay, H. G. Wells (ereader)
    4. The Master by Colm Tóibín (book)
    5. Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
    6. The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler (book)
    7. The Body of Jonah Boyd by David Levitt (book)
    8. Case Histories by Kate Atkinson (book)
    9. The Barrow Boys by Fergus Flemming (book)
    10. Birds Without Wings by Louis de Bernières (book)
    11. Birth of Venus by Sarah Dunant (book)
    12. State of Fear by Michael Crichton (book)

    Alternatives:
    Living to Tell by Antonya Nelson
    The Reconstructionist by Josephine Hart
    Another Country by James Baldwin
    Dinner at the Homesick Resturant, Anne Tyler

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Kristel

      Kristel (edited)

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      Some Experiences of an Irish R.M. by Edith Somerville and Martin Ross (Violet Martin)
      4 stars
      This tale was published in 1899 and is a series of comic tales of Anglo-Irish life dealing with hunting, shooting, horse riding and some drinking. The servants and publicans play minor roles and it is mostly about the elite of society with only a faint hint of struggles of the working class against the landlord class and Irish self government. The lady authors were of the elite class and the story is limited by their vision. Major Sinclair Yeates becomes the resident magistrate of Skebawn. He is of Irish extraction and not quite English but he isn’t Irish either. The scenes are of rural Ireland and West Cork and is pleasantly depicted as green fields, bogs, rivers and coastland. There are many outdoor scenes. The stories are lots of fun.

      Cross posted to the Tag: January, Ireland

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Kristel
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      The Master by Colm Tóibín
      3.75 stars
      This 2004 novel by Irish author Colm Tóibín is a fictionalized biography of Henry James. The time period is the late 1800’s and it reads like a who’s who in literature. Henry James, the author of The Turn of the Screw, The Wings of the Dove and many others was an American who lived his life in Paris, Rome, London and other less known places. Henry James spent some time in Ireland. He didn’t like it even though the James family was from Ireland before they immigrated to the U.S. After the failure of his play, Guy Domville Henry James goes to Ireland to get away from the public. He spent time there with English people who were policing Ireland for the King. Ireland is described as squalor and threatening, those of mendicant class and those with money and manners. Henry James never married and this book present James as sexually inhibited, frustrated man who never married. There is allusions to his being a secret homosexual but this is only speculation based on letters her wrote to the a young Norwegian Hendrik Anderson. Hendrik Andersen was an sculptor who wanted to start a art political system called the World City which would be a Utopia of artist creating a better world. There was a large age difference and the affection expressed could have been fatherly and European in nature and never meant to be sexual. Henry had many sexually suppressed relations with females including Constance Fenimore Woolson. Henry never really wanted to give up his solitude and share his life beyond short periods and he never married.
      I enjoyed this book and now look forward to finishing The Wings of the Dove which has sat on my shelf half read for way too long. The author also describes Henry James way of writing his stories which are really about his observations and his family and himself. In The Turn of the Screw the girl and boy are Henry and his sister Alice. Many of the females in his books are his cousin Minny Temple. This was a very enjoyable read.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Kristel
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      Ragtime by E.L. Doctorow
      5 stars
      Cross posted to Subdue the TBR and the non tag monthly review
      This book, set in the first two decades of the twentieth century is excellent telling of American culture through three fictional families but with so many actual personalities that it almost was like reading a newspaper. The first of the three families was white, living in New Rochelle, New York and only designated as Father, Mother, mother’s Younger Brother, the Boy and Grandfather representing the upper middle class, the second representing the immigrants were a Jewish family known as Tateh and Mameh (Yiddish for father and mother) and the little girl, and the third represented by the “Negro” ragtime musician Coalhouse Walker and his common-law wife Sara and their child. The last two family groups were largely invisible groups in America during this time known as the Progressive Era. The opening remarks by the narrator “There were no Negroes. There were no Immigrants,” reflects the selective vision of the upper middle class. Doctorow includes such personages as Booker T. Washington, Evelyn Nesbit (a Gibson Girl), Architect Stanford White and Harry K Thaw, J.P. Morgan, Ford and Harry Houdini giving the novel rich history. Music (Ragtime) often provides us with a picture of a time in history such as “Acid Rock Era” or the “Jazz Age”. The title centers the book on the African Americans and others that are marginalized such as the Jewish immigrants and political radicals like Emma Goldman. Doctorow has such a way of telling his stories, there never really is a protagonist. You might say that the culture is the protagonist just as the March was the protagonist in his book The March. Partly his story telling reminds me of Michener because of how much historical events are included in the story. If you like historical fiction, I recommend this book. The back cover says that this is “a joy to read and it reads like a streak” and it does.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 28/12

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Kristel
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      Case Histories by Kate Atkinson
      3.5 stars.
      A story of three different crimes that occurred around Cambridge between 1970 and 1994. The first one is the disappearance of a three year old girl named Olivia, the second is the tragic motiveless killing of a lawyer’s 18 year old daughter and the third one is the murder of husband by his distraught wife. Jackson Brodie is a private investigator who comes to be involved in solving the never closed case of Olivia, finding the killer of Laura, the lawyer’s daughter and to search for the missing daughter of the woman who murdered her husband. This is a mystery that was easy to engage and read in just a few days. I liked a lot about this mystery; the negative for me was the degree of sexual content. It’s a complicated set of murders that don’t really seem to have any solutions and then bits and pieces start to come out. It’s filled with many twists and surprises and expected and unexpected resolutions.

      Cross posted: non month tag, Pick a Yea, Subdue the TBR

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 4/12

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • annapi

    annapi (edited)

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    Books I Plan to Trim (among many others):

    1. A Feast for Crows by George R.R. Martin (e-book)
    2. Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher
    3. Remnant Population by Elizabeth Moon
    4. Moon Flights by Elizabeth Moon
    5. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
    6. The Stress of Her Regard by Tim Powers (e-book)
    7. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo (e-book)
    8. The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
    9. Timeline by Michael Crichton
    10. Honolulu by Alan Brennert

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
    • Lisa L
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      2 and 5 are two of my favorite books!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Thirteen Reasons Why made my top 10 this year (I listened to it on audio, which I thought was a fitting way to "read" it). Also really enjoyed The Curious Incident... and Timeline.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Barbara M
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      I listened to Thirteen Reasons too and thought the audio was very well done.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Sara W

    Sara W (edited)

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    I decided to make this a three way challenge with one list each for my physical, virtual/library and e-reader TBR piles.

    Physical TBR

    The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch
    The Hero With A Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell
    Founding Brothers by Joseph J Ellis
    The Nature Principle by Richard Louv
    The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen
    The Children's Hour by AS Byatt
    Housekeeping by Marilynn Robinson
    Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumoa Lahiri
    Rhett Butler's People by Donald McCraig
    The Sound of Butterflies by Rachel King
    Sixteen Pleasures by Robert Hellenga
    A Map of the World by Jane Hamilton

    Library/Virtual TBR

    Love In the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    The Road by Cormac McCarthy
    Farenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
    Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
    Tender is the Night by F Scott Fitzgerald
    Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt
    Animal Vegetable Minereal by Barbara Kingsolver
    The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie
    The Brief Wondereous Life of Oscar by Junot Diaz (I already hear you telling me not to do it Nicole)
    The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery
    In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan
    A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving

    E-reader TBR

    Ulysses by James Joyce
    Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
    Middlemarch by George Eliot
    Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
    Castle Rackrent by Maria Edgeworth
    Rob Roy by Sir Walter Scott
    The House of Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne
    Walden by Henry David Thoreau
    Stupid History by Gregory Leland
    Skipped Parts by Tim Sandlin
    Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese
    The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Tricia
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      I'm SO excited that you're going to read Cutting for Stone!

      I love Marilyn Robinson but haven't read Housekeeping. Have you read Gilead?

      Last King of Scotland was "eh" in my opinion. I didn't like Fahrenheit 451 or Brave New World at all. I'll bet you do since we tend to like different things. LOL

      I realllllly want to read A Prayer for Owen Meany. I hope I can get to that this year!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Sara W
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      Cutting for Stone has been on my Nook since you told me to read it.

      Housekeeping will be my first Robinson but I have heard nothing but good things about all her books.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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    You have been chopped


    The Light Bearer - Donna Gillespie (on the TBR since I finished McCullough's Rome series, circa 2006?) (I plan to start with this)
    The Last of the Just
    The Robber Bride - Atwood
    A Thousand Splendid Suns
    The Good Men - Craig - been sitting here since like 2004?
    Human Croquet - Atkinson
    Wisdom's Daughter - Edgehill 29JAN - so long, bye bye, adios, ciao, sianora
    Little Brother - Doctorow (got it for my b'day the year it came out)
    Beneath a Marble Sky - i put this book on my TBR after seeing Ma Titwonky review it in our old Readers in Thongs Group whose demise brought me to this group
    Krumnugel - Peter Ustinov
    Deadeye Dick - Vonnegut
    The American Girl - my oldest Vine book

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Ladyslott
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      I love Chopped!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      :-)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • punxsygal
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      The fact that you bought a new book today means you stand at -1 on trimming your TBR.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      (shhhhhh)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      Ouch...

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Ladyslott
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      LOL! Three days in and busted!

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    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      Wisdom's Daughter - India Edghill
      2/5

      SUBDUE
      TRIM (thank goodness)

      A Pomegranate seed for my thoughts?

      You can have them for free.

      I read and liked Edghill's Queenmaker, and I'm a fan of biblical fiction. The story of Solomon and Sheba is only 13 verses of the bible. According to the author, "The great love story of Solomon and Sheba comes not from the Bible, but from three thousand years of romantic folklore...."

      I'm not sure if Edghill's attempt was to stretch the 13 verses into 400+ pages, or if she was working off the legend, and at this point, I couldn't care less. This book was a hot mess.

      Parts of the book were readable, and the issues I had with it were primarily poor decisions made by the author with regard to the structure of the book, not the story or the writing per se.

      Such as:

      A massive and rampant overuse of italics.
      Multiple narrators - at least 15? One of them dead.
      Dialog both anachronistic and trite

      The various narrators had me constantly turning to the front to the book to try to figure out who was speaking. Was it Baalit or Bilqis? Abishag or Ahijah? I couldn't keep them straight. To add insult to injury, they all had redundant, whiny, italicized inner monolog. It got to the point where I started thinking in italics. i.e. King Solomon seems like a really good guy. (italics)Solomon sure is a good guy. It's too bad he has to be in this book.(/italics)

      The other issue with the changing narrators is we were told everything twice. Baalit entered the Kings chamber. Change to POV Solomon, Baalit entered the chamber. Blah. Blah. Blah. Words with no purpose. It took 140 pages for Solomon and the Queen to even meet.

      Readers were twice treated to "something" for thoughts ... "A pomegranate seed for your thoughts" - which I obviously cannot get over, and "a pinch of incense for your thoughts." Upon meeting the Queen Solomon proclaimed "Great minds think alike", and and one point one of the lesser (forgettable) characters started out their chapter with "Familiarity breeds content; so claimed an old proverb" - Hmmm ... Solomon was around somewhere between the 7th - 10th century (BC or BCE), and the quote - "Familiarity breeds CONTEMPT" is first documented in the first century AD or CE. Ergo --- not ancient at all, but futuristic.

      That kind of mistake in writing and editing drives me bananas.

      Nitpicking aside, this story could have stayed 13 verses in the bible, and I would have been perfectly content never to know it. The story was slow, the characters hard to distinguish from one another, and structure didn't work at all.

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  • Ladyslott

    Ladyslott (edited)

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    This is subject to change, but only with books I have already - and since that is roughly 400 it shouldn't be a problem:

    Physical TBR:
    Katherine by Anya Seton - It's really long and tiny writing but I am determined to read this.
    The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay
    A Poisoned Season - Tasha Alexander
    Anthology of an American Girl- Hilary Thayer Hamman
    The Likeness - Tana French 1/28/12

    Audio TBR:
    Skippy Dies by Paul Murray
    The Romanov Bride by Robert Alexander
    Christine Falls by Benjamin Black
    The Emperor's Children by Claire Messud

    Kindle TBR:
    Dissolution by C.J. Sansom
    Medicus by Ruth Downie
    The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
    The Redbreast by Jo Nesbo

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    • Ladyslott

      Ladyslott (edited)

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      Already going off the grid, this book wasn't on my list but I have owned it since 2008 and it fit the Ireland tag:

      Title: The Likeness
      Author: Tana French
      Genre: Mystery

      Rating: 3★★★

      The Likeness is Tana French’s sequel to In the Woods, a book I read several years ago and really enjoyed. I’m sorry to say that this book did not measure up. There are some spoilers ahead, so if you plan to read the first book then proceed at your own risk.

      The story begins several months after the events at the end of In the Woods. Cassie Maddox is working Domestic Crimes after her last case “blew up”. She has a boyfriend and has settled into a new life, even if she still has feelings for Rob, her former partner. When a young woman is found murdered she bears an uncanny resemblance to Cassie and she is persuade to go undercover, posing as the murdered woman.

      That’s the bare bones of the plot, but there were enough holes in this plot to drive a truck through. To believe that a woman could pose as another woman and live with her four roommates and nobody suspects a thing is mind-boggling. It gets even more confusing when it turns out the murdered woman is actually using a persona that Cassie had used years ago in another undercover case. When Cassie finds a vital piece of evidence on her first day she withholds that information from her boss. That police officer trying to get back in good graces with her superiors would withhold key information for no fathomable reason was unbelievable. And don’t get me started on Frank Mackey, Cassie’s boss. He is supposed to be an old style police officer, but the fact that he called Cassie babe at every turn drove me crazy. Since when does a superior officer speak like that? It was extremely annoying. The four roommates that Cassie/Lexi lived with were strange to put it mildly. What century did they come from? Their lifestyle was like a country manor from 1900 England, Downton Abby except with cell phones. Throwing in a plotline about a dead girl from 100 years ago that all the villagers were still up in arms about only served to confuse the situation.

      French can write beautifully, however there is no need to write three paragraphs when a few sentences would do. I would find my eyes glazing over at times, wishing the author would please, please get to the point. To say that about 100 pages could have been cut from this book is no exaggeration. The foreshadowing also got tiresome. The most puzzling thing of all was why Cassie seemed to want to become Lexi; the author threw in a lot of psycho babble that did nothing to move the plot forward.

      The ending was anti-climatic and after all the foreshadowing pretty much a foregone conclusion. About the only person in this book I liked was Cassie’s boyfriend Sam, he was the only one who didn’t seem like a caricature, except now that I think about it he was a little too good to be true.

      A disappointment after In the Woods, scores the stars more for the bits of the book that were beautifully written, if you could find them beneath all the dross.

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  • Marnie
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    Books To Trim

    Regular Reads

    1. Small Gods By Terry Prachett
    2. The Joy Luck Club By Amy Tan
    3. Evil Secrets By Kathy Braidhill
    4. The Devil In The White City By Erik Larson
    5. Heaven Below By Joan Lehmann
    6. Bel Canto By Anne Patchett
    7. Blind Assasin By Margaret Atwood
    8. The Thirteenth Tale By Diane Setterfield
    9. Bono : In Conversation With Michka Assayas By Bono
    10. Widow Of The South By Robert Hicks
    11. Son Of A Witch By Gregory Maguire
    12. Candyland By Candy Spelling

    Classics
    1. The Story Of King Arthur And His Knights By Howard Pyle
    2. The Hobbit By Tolkein
    3. Huckleberry Finn By Mark Twain
    4. The Scarlett Letter By Nathaniel Hawthorne
    5. Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
    6. American Psycho By Bret Easton Ellis
    7. Lord of the Flies By William Golding
    8. Sherlock Holmes By Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    9. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow By Washington Irving
    10. Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
    11. Journey To The Centre Of The Earth By Jules Verne
    12. Amistad By David Pesci

    Long Books

    1. Threat From The Sea By Mel Odom
    2. David Copperfield By Charles Dickens
    3. Don't Know Much About The Bible By Kenneth C. Davis
    4. Mary Chestnut's Civil War By Mary Boykin Miller Chestnut
    5. Edgar Sawtelle By David Wroblewski

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Lisa B

    Lisa B (edited)

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    Books I plan to Trim:

    1. Careless in Red - Elizabeth George (currently reading)
    2. Emma - Jane Austen
    3. Stardust - Neil Gaiman
    4. The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver
    5. The Monster of Florence - Douglas Preston
    6. Darkly Dreaming Dexter - Jeff Lindsay
    7. The Help - Kathryn Stockett
    8. Moloka'i - Alan Brennert
    9. This Body of Death - Elizabeth George
    10. Bel Canto - Ann Patchett
    11. Mistress of the Art of Death - Ariana Franklin
    12. Still Life with Woodpecker - Tom Robbins
    13. Paula Spencer - Roddy Doyle

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Christina T.

    Christina T. (edited)

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    Books I plan to Trim off my TBR...12x2 plus 3 alternates

    1)Twin of Fire by Jude Deveraux
    2)Lover Avenged by JR Ward
    3)Smooth Talking Stranger by Lisa Kleypas
    4)Twilight by Stephenie Meyer
    5)Be My Baby by Susan Andersen
    6)Stray by Rachel Vincent
    7)Alone by Lisa Gardner 4 Stars
    8)No Rest for the Wicked by Kresley Cole
    9)Origin in Death by JD Roberts
    10)Devil's Cub by Georgette Heyer
    11)Nice Girls Don't Date Dead Men by Molly Harper
    12)Birthright by Nora Roberts

    1)Blood Roses by Marsha Canham
    2)A Knife to Remember by Jill Churchill
    3)A Hour to Kill by Karin Yapalater
    4)Rides a Hero by Heather Graham
    5)Maximum Security by Tracy Montoya (Harl. Int. #750)
    6)Pocket Full of Karma by Taffy Cannon
    7)Strangled Prose by Joan Hess
    8)Unshapely Things by Mark Del Franco
    9)At the Stoke of Madness by Alex Kava
    10)The Rowan by Anne McCaffrey
    11)The Adventurer by Jayne Ann Krentz
    12)Win, Lose or Die:Stories from Ellery Queen and Alfred Hitchcock magazines

    Alternates:
    Last Known Victim by Erica Spindler
    Lover Mine by JR Ward
    Wild About Harry by Linda Lael Miller

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    • Christina T.
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      Alone by Lisa Gardner
      ★★★★☆

      Synopsis: Alone ... Massachusetts State Trooper Bobby Dodge watches a tense hostage standoff unfold through the scope of his sniper rifle. Just across the street, in wealthy Back Bay, Boston, an armed man has barricaded himself with his wife and child. The man's finger tightens on the trigger and Dodge has only a split second to react ... and forever pay the consequences.

      Alone ... that's where the nightmare began for cool, beautiful, and dangerously sexy Catherine Rose Gagnon. Twenty-five years ago, she was buried underground during a month-long nightmare of abduction and abuse. Now her husband has just been killed. Her father-in-law, the powerful Judge Gagnon, blames Catherine for his son's death ... and for the series of unexplained illnesses that have sent her own young son repeatedly to the hospital.

      Alone ... a madman survived solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison where he'd done hard time for the most sadistic of crimes. Now he walks the streets a free man, invisible, anonymous ... and filled with an unquenchable rage for vengeance. What brings them together is a moment of violence -- but what connects them is a passion far deeper and much more dangerous. For a killer is loose who's woven such an intricate web of evil that no one is above suspicion, no one is beyond harm, and no one will see death coming until it has them cornered, helpless, and alone.

      My Thoughts: Alone was quite good but honestly none of the characters were that likable. I could see how a fan of Gardner's would say that this series is not their favorite. Setting aside the fact that DD Warren was barely a secondary character even though her name is on the cover one would have to go on their thoughts about Bobby Dodge. He is kind of a cowboy who bucks the rules...more like thumbs his nose at them....and has things about himself he would rather not discuss so he lies about them. It was hard to warm up to him and don't even get me started on my thoughts of Catherine. All together this book is filled with broken characters making due with what life has handed them and not necessarily in a way that takes them along the high road. I could sympathize with the characters but not empathize.

      Despite the list of unlikable characters I found myself needing to get back to the book so I could read what the outcome would be, mostly to see if Münchausen syndrome by proxy was why Catherine's child was so ill. I was quite satisfied with the way the book ended and will continue to read this series.

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  • Leah K

    Leah K (edited)

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    1. Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden
    2. Sleep Toward Heaven by Amanda Eyre Ward
    3. Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War by Nathaniel Philbrick
    4. The Hangman's Daughter by Oliver Pötzsch
    5. Home: A Memoir of My Early Years by Julie Andrews
    6. Mattimeo by Brian Jacques
    7. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
    8. John by Cynthia Lennon
    9. Pirate Latitudes by Michael Crichton
    10. The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
    11. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez
    12. The Greatest Generation by Tom Brokaw

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Leah K
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      Sleep Toward Heaven by Amanda Eyre Ward

      ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ + heart

      Description: Amanda Eyre Ward's debut novel is an intimate portrait of three women whose lives collide during a brutal Texas summer. In Gatestown, Texas, twenty-nine-year-old Karen Lowens awaits her execution with a host of convicted serial killers on death row. In Manhattan, Dr. Franny Wren, also twenty-nine, tends to a young cancer patient, and resists the urge to run from her fiancé and her carefully crafted life. In Austin, Texas, brassy Celia Mills, a once-vibrant librarian, mourns her murdered husband. Over the course of the summer, fate pushes these eerily recognizable women together, culminating in a revelation of the possibility of faith, the responsibility of friendship, and the value of life.

      Wow. What an absolutely amazing book. I didn't really know what to expect from this book. I got it for Christmas many years ago and never went back to it. Now I am saddened that it took me so long to read this wonderful story.

      The three main characters – Karen, Celia, and Franny – were so vivid and relatable. I absolutely loved them. Even the secondary characters had a special place in my heart. Once I picked up this book, I was unable to put it down. Left me crying one moment and then laughing. A story about redemption and forgiveness of one's self and others. Letting go of the past in order to move on with the future. A very heartwarming book that didn't get half the attention it deserved when it came out. Beautifully written. This was the first novel by author Amanda Eyre Ward. I will definitely be looking into reading more of work.

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    • Leah K
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      John by Cynthia Lennon

      ★ ★ ★ ★

      I am often reluctant to read memoirs from ex-lovers or ex-spouses of someone quite famous. Sadly, in many cases, it is a desperate cry for fame and “look at me, I know someone famous, you don't” attitude. So I read John by John Lennon's first wife with a weary eye. Little of the information was new to me. I had read much about the Beatles during my History of Rock n' Roll college course many years before (and yes, the class was as awesome as it sounds) but it was interesting to read it from Cynthia's point of view. I believe while she was somewhat harsh with the assessment of some people, it showed her emotions and that even years later she feels the hurt. She does not bash John but is honest in their time together (or so we assume she is being honest, John is not around to dispute it) – life was not perfect with the man before, during, or after their marriage. And I have a feeling that she is less innocent than she leads on in the book. If you're looking for just facts about John Lennon and the other Beatles, perhaps this book is not for you. But this a good book written with dignity from the first, and often forgotten, first wife giving a view of Lennon rarely seen in the public eye.

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  • Care B
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    I will choose my reads for this challenge from books already on my physical shelves as of 1 January 2012. Rather than list them, I am going to try to select which books to read based on the monthly PBT tag and my other challenges.

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Care B
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      (Cross posted to January Monthly Thread-Ireland and PAY)
      Many thanks to Natalie at www.inspringitisthedawn.com for giving this away on her lovely blog and mailing it all the way from Japan!

      1. The Fall of Light by Niall Williams ✰✰✰✰

      Covering a span of years that encompasses the Potato Famine, this is the tale of Francis Foley, his wife Emer, and their four sons, as their lives drift apart and re-converge in 19th century Ireland.

      At times I felt that the plot held a few too many coincidences to be veracious, but that is the single factor which kept this book, which I gave four and a half stars, from being a five star read.

      The prose itself was laden in pathos, gorgeous. I fell in love with Niall Williams’ writing in a way I have not fallen in love in quite some time. The style was absolutely perfect for the subject matter. It is very seldom that I quote from novels in my reviews, but this time I really want to share:

      “He thought of the old man’s boast that their country was bigger than the map-makers had drawn it and he suddenly saw it so. He saw the vastness of the sea was itself part of that wild country as was its great and million-starred sky and he dropped to his knees there in the sand and felt the despair of loss. He put his hands together to pray and turned to the constellations that were cold and impassive and falling through the darkness ages away, and, knowing no God, who knew him, he looked to Pegasus in the south and to it prayed the wordless prayers that rose off his soul.” (page 80)

      “He imagined them, those gaunt figures with ghosthood already immanent, their long thin arms holding cradled the bundle of their world, their hunger and frailty, the mewling of their children, the ragged faded worn quality of their spirits as they journeyed homeless toward the impossible idea of home.” (page 224)

      A reader who wants a plot that moves quickly towards a crashing climax will not find that here. This book is carried by luminous wordsmithing and characters that draw you along on their wrenching journey. For the right reader in the right frame of mind, it is an unforgettable experience, and I highly recommend it.

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    • Care B

      Care B (edited)

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      2. Night by Elie Wiesel ✰✰✰✰✰

      (Cross-posted to the Monthly Thread and Subdue)

      This is not a book that a reader can “critique” or even, for that matter, “review”. To take an experience so personal and traumatic and attempt to filter it through the completely inadequate lens of a reader who has experienced nothing of similar magnitude would be arrogance of the grossest sort.

      For any of my readers who might not have heard of Elie Wiesel or Night, this book is a memoir of the purest sort. It is a first person account of one traumatic year in Mr. Wiesel’s life, the final year of World War II in Europe, the year in which his idyllic life in a small town in Transylvania came to an end and the nightmare that was Auschwitz and Buchenwald began.

      The words which continually surface in my mind as I have pondered this book are: raw, naked, honest, vivid. As a member of the community of mankind, I like to live under the perhaps naive notion that during the darkest hours in our history human beings have risen to display the best that is in them. When I use the words naked and raw I am not just referring to the sheer emotional drain that is contained within the covers of this book. I am referring to the fact that Elie Wiesel does not try to make humanity look noble. He does not try to make himself look noble. Man’s innate selfish quest for personal survival is not shied away from. Indeed, when editors insisted on removing the most raw section with regards to Elie’s response to the final hours of his father’s life, Elie wrote it into his introduction to the book.

      As with most books dealing with the Holocaust, the central theme of this one is man’s inhumanity to man. The unalloyed emotional candor of this book sets it apart from other Holocaust writings; it carved out a piece of my soul. It saddens me to think that in the aftermath of the war Mr. Wiesel could not find a publisher for his work. But for the tireless work of French Catholic Nobel Laureate writer François Mauriac, this powerful work might have been lost to mankind.

      There are two books which I would recommend as tandem reads for Night, one a work of nonfiction and one a novel. The first is Alex Kershaw’s biography of Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg’s time in Hungary during the waning years of the war, The Envoy. I also highly recommend Julie Orringer’s novel, loosely based upon the experiences of her Hungarian Jewish grandparents, The Invisible Bridge. Orringer’s work of historical fiction was my top novel of 2010.

      The book itself is a scant 120 pages. Even if you read both introductions, by Elie Wiesel and François Mauriac, which I strongly recommend, you can finish the 135 pages of the book in under four hours. That four hours will change the way that you view not only the Holocaust, but the way that you view humanity. It is simply a must read.

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    • Care B
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      The Bonesetter’s Daughter by Amy Tan (✰✰✰✰)

      (Cross-posted to non-monthly thread, Subdue, Pick a Year)

      This novel is a tossed salad of ingredients that I like very much and those that leave me wanting something more. After reading a number of reviews of Amy Tan novels I felt that I should choose which one I wanted to read with some care, as it sounded as if the themes were very similar from one novel to the next.

      Perhaps my favorite element is the relationship between the daughter, Ruth, and her mother, LuLing. It becomes apparent within only a few pages that LuLing is a very opinionated, domineering woman, and anyone who has a mother (aunt, sister, neighbor, etc.) of similar makeup can not help but identify with Ruth. However, as the story progresses Ruth, and the reader, begin to see that LuLing is suffering from Alzheimers.

      As Ruth faces an apex in her life of her various relationships and her career, she also, by means of a memoir written by her mother some years before, comes to see beyond the domineering yet failing woman she has always known.

      After a rather slow beginning, the novel finally gains steam as we travel back in time to the China of LuLing’s youth. Aside from the plot, which I enjoyed immensely, I loved how I was forced to completely reassess my picture of LuLing. I gained a new respect for her and was reminded that elderly people often have fascinating pasts that their frail exteriors fail to divulge. Day to day life in early 20th century China was very well depicted and the story of the Peking Man was nicely woven into the story, lending a fun historical element which was also tied in with the theme of Chinese medicine.

      Things which I would have liked to have seen fleshed out a bit more included the history of China in the time in which LuLing grew up, and Ruth’s experience as an Asian-American. She seemed to have a normal American upbringing-I didn’t feel any culture clash at all, which seemed odd to me. There were a number of relationships which seemed very cliched to me, such as that of Ruth with her very stereotypical step-daughters and Ruth’s relationship with her agent.

      Overall, the strong points definitely outweighed the bad, and I thoroughly enjoyed this read. I am a little hesitant to pick up another book of Ms. Tan’s, as I have been warned that they are all fairly similar, but I would certainly recommend her work to anyone who has not read one of her novels and who has an interest in Chinese culture and Chinese Americans.

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  • Isabelle S

    Isabelle S (edited)

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    1. Time Traveler's Guide to Medieval England by Ian Mortimer
    2. Stonehenge by Bernard Cornwell
    3. Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel
    4. A Very Long Engagement by Sebastien Japrisot ✓ February 6
    5. The Colony by John Tayman ✓ Jan. 19
    6. Baghdad Without a Map by Tony Horwitz
    7. Game of Sorrows by Shona Maclean
    8. The Well and the Mine by Gin Phillips
    9. I Have Lived a Thousand Years by Livia Britton Jackson
    10. Whistling Season by Ivan Doig
    11. The Tenderness of Wolves by Stef Penney
    12. Tomorrow River by Leslie Kagan
    13. Deafening by Frances Itani

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      The Colony, The Harrowing True Story of the Exiles of Molokai by John Tayman
      3.5 stars, round to 3

      The Colony attempts to tell the story of the leper settlement at Molokai from the struggles of the very first patients not to go there, to the struggles of the final patients not to leave. Tayman uses patient and physician journals, Board of Health edicts, letters and newspaper accounts to construct the history.

      The chapters on the initial set up of the colony are heartbreaking, but then the narrative settles into a repetitive rhythm as the numbers grow but not much changes except the names (dozens and dozens of names) of administrators, politicians and patients. Tayman states in his intro that he worked from over 8000 pages of primary source material, and sometimes it seems as though he's determined to use all of it whether it makes sense as a narrative or not. I was listening on audio, so I'm not sure how much of the confusing syntax is Tayman's own or from the originals, but it's a frequent occurrence. (For example, you read that eight patients were treated and all four died, and you're left not really sure what just happened.)

      As the story approaches modern times, Tayman focuses on a handful of Kalaupapa residents, providing so much detail and personal information that I wasn't really surprised to learn that most ceased cooperation with the author before the book was published. At least one couple hired a lawyer to try and get their info removed before publication. They charge that Tayman embellished and exaggerated their histories to fit his narrative.

      The Colony is not sold in the bookstore on Molokai, in accordance with the wishes of the residents. The most obvious point of contention is the cover, which depicts section of the Amalfi Coast in Italy. A NY Times article about the controversy over the book quotes Hansen's Disease patient advocate Anwei Law: "He's missed the point," she said. "The cliffs of Molokai are very important to the people there. When things were bad, they would look at those cliffs and get strength from them. When you've changed that, you've missed something very significant. It's like, 'Oh, well, any cliffs will work.' " (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/27/books/27wils.html?pagewanted=all)

      Four stars for the first third of the book, then Tayman seems determined to make you feel the tedium of being stuck in the settlement, so 3 overall.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • Isabelle S
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      A Very Long Engagement by Sebastien Japrisot
      3 stars

      In the waning days of WWI, dozens of soldiers were arrested for self mutilation. The preferred method was shooting oneself (or allowing oneself to be shot) in the hand, an injury the soldiers mistakenly believed their superiors would never suspect they'd done themselves. One group of five men is marched to a trench at the front lines known as Bingo Crépuscule, and forced over the top into "no man's land." Later, five bodies are recovered and buried.

      One of the men, a fisherman called Manech, left behind a girlfriend named Mathilde. Crippled by an accident as a toddler, Mathilde is one of the more stubborn and tenacious heroines you'll ever read. Hungry for news of Manech's fate, she visits an old soldier who tells her about leading the men to the fateful trench. His story gives her clues to follow to unfold the entire story.

      I think I just wasn't in the mood. Mathilde annoyed me and the unfolding story seemed circuitous and repetitive.

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  • Book Worm

    Book Worm (edited)

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    Books I plan to Trim;

    1) Naked in Death J D Robb
    2) The Killing Floor Lee Child
    3) Snare Katherine Kerr
    4) Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death M C Beeton
    5) The Interpretation of Murder Jed Rubenfield
    6) The Inferno Dante
    7) The Redbreast Jo Nesbo
    8) The American Boy Andrew Taylor
    9) Reading Lolita in Tehran Azar Nasy
    10) Flowers for Algernon Daniel Keyes
    11) Elizabeth Costello J M Coetzee
    12) The Year the Flood Came Margaret Atwood

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Care B
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      Reading Lolita is one of my very all time favorite books.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • againstthetide
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      Oh good because even though Reading Lolita is not on any of my challenge lists, I just ordered it from PBS to read before I see the author speaking in February.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Kate
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      oh! Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azar Nafisi is one of my favorites! I didn't care for her other book as much as this though.

      I'm jealous Againstthetide! I would love to see her in person.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      I nominated Reading Lolita for my book club for later this year. Haven't read it yet, but will closer to the time we discuss it (not sure yet which month it will be, but sometimes after May).

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      Fantastic choice for a book club, Cin.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Worm
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      Looking forward to reading it now

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Worm
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      The American Boy Andrew Taylor
      4 Stars

      Set in the early 1800's this is an intriguing murder mystery loosely based around the early life of Edgar Allan Poe his fathers mysterious disappearance and his time spent in England.

      While the key facts are true Poes father did disappear and Poe was adopted by the Allans who took him to England the main part of the story is pure fiction.

      The American Boy is actually a minor character within the novel however he is the catalyst that brings people together and causes certain events to occur.

      The murder mystery is cleverly laid out and the reader is manipulated along with Thomas Shield the narrator.

      The appendix written by another minor character much later sheds extra light on the events of that time.

      London of the 1800's is well captured by the authors descriptions and this is a book that leaves you thinking and wondering what clues you missed along the way.

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      The Interpretation of Murder Jed Rubenfield
      3 Stars

      Set in 1909 at the time of Freuds one and only visit to America this is an atmospheric murder mystery.

      A beautiful society lady is found whipped, cut and strangled in a hotel room, shortly after another society heiress Nora Acton is found another victim of the same attacker only this time she has survived.

      The coroner using evidence found on the body sets out to convict his suspect, while the policeman Littlemore using evidence at the crime scene persues another avenue entirely.

      As Nora has lost her memory Stratham Younger a disciple of Freud is allowed to psychoanalyse her in the hope of helping her regain the suppressed memories and to name her attacker before he comes back to finish the job.

      A complicated story of love, jealousy, anger and possession that leads the reader down many dead ends.

      The character of Nora is based on Freuds most controversial case that of the woman he called Dora.

      In the background to the murder Freuds theories of the role of sex and the Oedipus complex are being undermined.

      A well researched novel that uses several well known events and characters to add colour and depth.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
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  • cpauley929

    cpauley929 (edited)

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    Books I plan to Trim:

    1.) Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
    2.) Written on the Body by Jeanette Winterson
    3.) Another Fine Myth by Robert Asprin
    4.) V for Vendetta by Alan Moore
    5.) Furies of Calderon by Jim Butcher
    6.) Peter and Max by Bill Willingham
    7.) Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
    8.) Ex Machina by Brian K. Vaughn (the first three of this graphic novel series)
    9.) Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller
    10.) Palimpsest by Catherynne M. Valente
    11.) The Sharing Knife: Beguilement by Lois McMaster Bujold
    12.) Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank
    13.) A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Ladyslott
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      Damn, so many of you are reading Gargoyle, one I considered but now may need to reconsider. It's back in NY, but my husband can send it down if I decide to go for it.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • cpauley929
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      I've had it since it was published. I'm almost certain I'll enjoy it, I just keep putting it off in favor of other things. It didn't help that for quite some time now I've been less than enthusiastic about reading. I didn't want to start a book that I want to enjoy while feeling apathetic.

      Anyway, more info that you needed. Hope you'll consider reading it with us :)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Nicole R
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      I really enjoyed The Gargoyle. It was one that I didn't really know what to expect going in, but thought it was brilliantly done.

      Prior to reading it though, I would do a little skim of the wikipedia page for Dante's Inferno. That made the read a bit more enjoyable for me because of the comparisons

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • cpauley929
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      Thank you for the advice, Nicole, and I will definitely take it. I have, sadly, not read Dante's Inferno. I wonder if I shouldn't give it a try first? I'll consider it. But I'll definitely check out the wiki page.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Nicole R
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      I did not read the whole Inferno...that seemed too much for me! lol.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Jen M
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      Love love love Dante's Inferno; it was a focus for a lot of my work during my senior year in college. Provided you can find a really good translation of it, you'll be amazed at how much it's referenced in pop culture, from movies to music to video games and beyond.

      Purgatorio and Paradiso weren't as interesting but then the "bad" stuff is always the fun bit, no?

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    • Sara W
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      I had to read Dante's Inferno in college and recall very much enjoying it.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      Jen, Inferno is a work I have long wanted to read, because as you say it is often referenced in other places. After reading this thread I went exploring and really can't find any information about one translation over another. Do you have a translation that you would recommend? Generally, I prefer a translation that reads well, that flows and imparts the spirit of a sentence, as opposed to one that accurately translates every word but reads rather choppy as a result. If you have any suggestions I would appreciate it.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Jen M
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      This may seem odd but of the 3-4 I've read, so far the one I've liked the best was the one included in my Norton Anthology. I'll take a look at it in the morning to see if there's any notation regarding who did it or if there's publishing info separate from the Norton, but they had not only a nice translation but LOTS of footnoting on the historical people/places referenced.

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    • Care B
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      I would appreciate the info, Jen.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • cpauley929
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      Palimpsest by Catherynne Valente
      3.75 stars (round to 4)
      Cross posted to non-tagged monthly thread

      Palimpsest - a manuscript on which two or more successive texts have been written, each one being erased to make room for the next. -dictionary.com

      Strange tattoos, a dream city, seedy clubs, and a house that practices its smile. All of these things make up Valente's Palimpsest. To enter into the city means to fall in love with it, means to bear its mark on your skin forever, means to enter into a world few would choose. Entering the city is a dangerous business of intimacy, sex and desperation. Ludovico, November, Amaya Sei and Oleg are inextricably linked by a bond they formed upon their first day in Palimpsest. They have been welcomed into a city alive and searching for more people, because it wants what all cities want: to thrive. A war has been fought over the immigration of outsiders. And all roads but one have been closed to those who wish to live within this living city. Impossible things exist there. Impossible to forget in the waking hours, in the "real" world.

      Valente's imagination knows no bounds. I cannot even begin to comprehend the mind that could create such a place where trains are wild creatures privy to their own whims and mating seasons, where vermin and insects are manufactured, where a house practices its smile. Surreal, beautiful and not a little disturbing, the author builds this city around you. The characters are important, but they seem more a vehicle to tell the story of Palimpsest, than subjects of the story in and of themselves. This is one of the more bizarre pieces of fantasy that I've ever read, but also one of the more brilliant. Dark and lonely at times, but an education in imagination. I really enjoyed it, though it's not my favorite by this author.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • cpauley929

      cpauley929 (edited)

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      Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller
      4.5 stars

      Cross posted to monthly and admin tags.

      Alexandra Fuller, or "Bobo" as she is called throughout the book, tells her story of growing up in Africa during the Zimbabwean war for independence. The war sets the backdrop for a life in an unforgiving land, and a family too stubborn to give up. Born in England, Bobo spend nearly her entire life until her university years moving from god forsaken land to god forsaken land through out Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi. Always the "muzungu" outsider, her white face and upbringing set her entirely apart from her African peers. Her father is a rugged and determined man. Her mother is slowly loosing her mind, and sadly some of her children to the harsh life afforded in the African desert.

      Almost unbelievably, her family continues to find ways to thrive in Africa despite having lost Rhodesia to the new Zimbabwe and the dangers that seem to lurk everywhere. From "terrorists" (their name for the Zimbabwean independence army) to land mines at any turn in the road. Her parents slept with guns in their hands, and drank to dull the pain of their sometimes terrifying existence.

      Fuller writes in such a way that she evokes the sights, sounds and smells of Africa so completely that you feel like you are there. She describes the heat by the sound it makes, the colors by the smells she associates with them, the smells by the emotions and tactile senses they evoke. The story is captivating, her parents are almost unbelievable. Her mother's not-so-slow descent into insanity, her sister's quiet strength, and the constant and unyielding Africa make for such an engrossing story that I could hardly put it down. It made me miss Zambia with a longing I didn't know I felt for the country. It was wonderful to be taken back there through her eyes.

      The one thing I found difficult about the book was her constant jumping in timeline and how she spoke of everything in present tense. Most of the time I could flow with that, but occasionally it would take me completely out of the story while I tried to put things into order in my head. Otherwise, it's an amazing memoir.

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
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  • LibraryCin

    LibraryCin (edited)

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    Here is a tentative list of books that have been on my tbr (virtual, physical or otherwise) for 2+ years. I won't likely stick to this list specifically, but I am aiming for 12 books that have been there for 2+ years.

    In actuality:
    1. Strip Tease / Carl Hiaasen
    2. Julie & Julia / Julie Powell
    3. Blink / Malcolm Gladwell
    4. Fruit / Brian Francis
    5. Such a Pretty Fat/ Jen Lancaster
    6. Making Rounds With Oscar / David Dosa

    1. Pandora / Anne Rice
    2. The Last Summer (of You and Me) / Ann Brashears
    3. King Leary / Paul Quarrington
    5. Deafening / Francis Itani
    6. Natasha and Other Stories / David Bezmozgis
    7. Isobel Gunn / Audrey Thomas
    8. Country of my Skull / Antjie Krog
    9. Slammerkin / Emma Donoghue
    10. Pajama Girls of Lambert Square / Rosina Lippi
    11. Pug Hill / Alison Pace
    12. Tabloid Love / Bridget Harrison
    13. Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do / Tom Vanderbilt
    14. Beginner's Greek / James Collins
    15. Chasing Windmills / Catherine Ryan Hyde

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • LibraryCin

      LibraryCin (edited)

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      Ok, this wasn't on my original list (no surprise!), but I have had it for more than 2 years, so it counts!

      1. Strip Tease / Carl Hiaasen
      4 stars

      Erin is fighting her ex-husband (and wheelchair thief), Darrell, for custody of their only child. Unfortunately, this means very big lawyer bills, so she finds a job at a strip club to pay those bills. One night, while dancing, a drunk man comes on stage and wraps his arms around her. Immediately after, another man runs on stage and starts beating the first man with a champagne bottle. The man doing the beating is an upstanding U.S. Congressman, David Dilbeck..

      I actually think this may be my favourite book by Hiaasen so far. I've only read four, but this one seemed to have a more complex storyline than the others. I also really liked some of the characters. I do normally enjoy his environmental viewpoint, but the funny thing is - even though this is probably my favourite by him - the environmental stuff was really very minimal background stuff in this one.

      posted 4 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • LibraryCin

      LibraryCin (edited)

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      Again, not on my original list, but it has been "mouldering" on the tbr since the movie came out, which I'm sure is more than 2 years ago!
      Also, cross-posted to tittm and memoir.

      2. Julie & Julia : 365 Days, 524 Recipes, 1 Tiny Apartment Kitchen / Julie Powell
      3.5 stars

      Julie Powell is coming up on her 30th birthday and is a secretary. She decides she will embark on a one-year project - to cook all the recipes in Julia Child's cookbook, Mastering the Fine Art of French Cooking, and to blog about it.

      I liked this. Not as much as the movie, but the movie also incorporated My Life in France by Julia Child, so it was a mix of the two (and I haven't read My Life in France yet, but I plan to). But I still quite enjoyed this. I am not a foodie, but this may even be more enjoyable for those who are, with all the descriptions of the food. Actually, I'm a picky eater and some of that food... well, eeew! But, it was fun to read about Julie's mishaps in the kitchen! I don't like to cook, and I have to say that this book just says it all! It's just way too much effort!!! But, fun to read about. I also enjoyed the relationships that Julie made with her "bleaders" (what she called her blog readers), and how those developed.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      I knew I wouldn't stick to my list, but the next book is actually from it. This one... is not. But, it has been on that tbr for at least a couple of years!

      3. Blink / Malcolm Gladwell
      3.5 stars

      Malcolm Gladwell is studying first impressions and our unconscious reactions to our encounters with various people and things. I'm not sure I'm summarizing very well, but I think first impressions and unconscious reactions do mostly sum it up.

      I thought this was quite interesting. Some anecdotes that stuck out for me include how the New Coke came about and the reason for its downfall, how some people can just read people... I guess a lot of it is that they are trained, whether for a specific purpose (to watch married couples discuss a point of consternation or just trained in facial expression) or for a job. I also thought the info on facial expressions was fascinating! Overall, good book, very interesting.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Woohoo! This one was actually on the list!
      x-posted to the non-month tag and admin tag threads

      Fruit / Brian Francis
      3.75 stars

      It's the mid 1980s. Peter Paddington is 13-years old and in grade 8 in a school in Sarnia, Ontario. He has two older sisters and is overweight. He knows he is not normal and suddenly his nipples start talking to him.

      I enjoyed this. Peter is quite humourous in trying to figure out what's going on with his body and in his head (and what's with those talking nipples!) I loved the 80s references (mostly tv and music, but fashion and probably other references I'm not thinking of are there, too). Peter has such interesting daydreams! This was a really good, really enjoyable coming of age novel.

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
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    • LibraryCin
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      Also not on the list, but has been on the tbr a few years. This was the first book I decided I wanted to read by Jen, but I decided I'd read them in order, so it took a while to get to it.
      Cross-posted to memoir thread

      Such a Pretty Fat / Jen Lancaster
      4 stars

      In Jen Lancaster's third memoir, she is chronicling her attempt at losing weight.

      This is another funny, entertaining book by Jen. I particularly identified with her in the first half of the book - she knows she should lose weight, but the motivation just isn't there: "I'm certainly thinking about <dieting> 24/7. Then my mind goes back to a life not eating cookies and I wonder why I'd even bother, since life wouldn't be worth living." Jen does try a few different diets, and she hires a personal trainer to help motivate when it comes to exercise. (Like her, I need some kind of motivation for both, diet and exercise!) I have to admire her husband Fletch for being able to put up with Jen on her various diets! I actually really like their relationship, and how they play off each other. I didn't find it as hilariously funny as Bright Lights, Big Ass, but I found I liked this topic much better, and there are still plenty of funny bits!

      posted 8 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      LOL! This is why I didn't make a list this year! Last year I made this carefully researched list and mapped out 12 specific books for the Pick a Year challenge; I ended up reading one-my January book! This year I just pulled all the titles off my TBR that fit for Pick a Year and printed up a list, and I make sure I check books I own for the monthly tag before choosing other books, thus covering Trim That TBR. It is more fluid and open to what I feel like at the moment, so I am enjoying it and sticking to it better; last year's Pick a Year ended up being mostly audio books that I listened to in the last quarter of the year to make my quota.

      posted 7 days ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Yeah, I love doing lists and research for games, but for challenges that are so open, it's so much easier for me to just include what fits that I might be reading for other reasons as well. I am limiting what I'm using here to stuff that (I'm pretty sure) has been on my tbr for at least 2 years (but I have lots of that!). I think some of what I put on my list is amongst the very oldest stuff on my tbr, so I do hope I get to a few more of them... :-)

      posted 6 days ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin

      LibraryCin (edited)

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      Not on the original list
      Cross-posting to memoir thread.

      Making Rounds With Oscar: The Extraordinary Gift of an Ordinary Cat / David Dosa
      4 stars

      Oscar was adopted into the Steere House, a nursing home in Rhode Island, when he was a kitten. He lived on a floor with patients with dementia (including Alzheimer's patients). Even as a kitten, he seemed able to sense when one of the residents was about to die. Although he wasn't usually overly friendly with people, if he sensed someone was going to die, he would go lie beside them and purr for hours, to keep them company and to provide support - support to both the patient and the family. This book, told by one of the doctors there, is more than Oscar's story - it tells the stories of the patients and their families and everything they are dealing with.

      I first heard about Oscar a few years ago via a news story. I was excited when I found out a book about him was published. This was a fast, really enjoyable read. It wasn't only about Oscar; I learned a little more about dementia and what the people and their families go through. I thought there might be more tears in this one, but there weren't as many as I expected (though, of course, there were some). I can only hope there is cat by my side someday when I go.

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
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  • SouthWestZippy

    SouthWestZippy (edited)

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    Here is my tentative list
    1.Ghoul Interrupted by Victoria Laurie--READ JAN
    2.Making Rounds With Oscar by David Dosa, M.D.
    3.With Love and Laughter, John Ritter by Amy Yasbeck
    4.Cry Myself to Sleep by Joe Peters
    5.Let's Roll! by Lisa Beamer
    6.Brothel by Alexa Albert
    7.King of the Road: True Tales from a Legendary Ice Road Trucker by Alex Debogorski
    8.Dewey's Nine Lives by Vicki Myron
    9.Population: 485: Meeting your neighbors one siren at a time by Michael Perry
    10.Fire on the Mountain: The True Story of the South Canyon Fire by John N. Maclean--READ February
    11.PS, I Love You by Cecelia Ahern--READ JAN
    12.Who's the Dummy Now?: Winner of America's Got Talent by Terry Fator

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • SouthWestZippy
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      P.S. I Love you by Cecelia Ahern
      3 stars
      Holly and Gerry are young and in love and have the normal ups and downs of a marriage. Then things take a horrible turn when Gerry is diagnosed with a terminal illness. Holly is given a package with letters from her late Husband to be open one at a time, once a month. They have simple to complex instructions meant to help her live without him.

      I love parts of this book and other parts dragged on. The story line pulls you in but long winded dialect turned me off.

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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

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    • SouthWestZippy
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      Ghoul Interrupted by Victoria Laurie
      5 stars and a heart
      M.J. and Gilley must put aside thier reality ghost hunting show. M.J.'s boyfriend Heath's uncle has been killed and they head to New Mexico to go to the funeral.
      Once they arrive they learn there are family secrets,stolen artifacts,a demon has been released and is trying to wipe out the WhiteFeather descendants.

      I am so happy to see more of Gilley. I just love his humor. The story line is inviting and intense at times making it a great mystery. I was wanting her to end this series but after reading this book I don't wish for it to end, if she keeps up story lines like this one.

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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

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    • SouthWestZippy
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      Fire On The Mountain by John N. Maclean
      3 stars
      On July 2, 1994 7 miles west of Glenwood Springs, Colorado near the base of the Storm King Mountain lighting sparked a fire. The fire became a concern for the residents of Canyon Creek Estates so on July 5 firefighters were sent into the rugged terrain along with smokejumpers. Due to "danger from rolling rocks" the fight was called off in the night. On July 6 Hotshots out of Prineville, Oregon joined the efforts to battle the quick moving fire. The fire got ahead of the fireline,14 Firefighters lost thier lives on July July 6.
      Book is filled Intense stories of survival and death. Also reveals how the lack of communication and egos hampered the firefighting efforts.

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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12

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  • serenity

    serenity (edited)

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    Here is my trimming list:

    1. The Princess and the Dragon by Roberto Pazzi
    2. Hood by Stephen Lawhead
    3. The Secret Bride by Diane Haeger
    4. Moloka'i by Alan Brennert
    5. The Epicure's Lament by Kate Christenson
    6. Abundance by Sena Jeter Naslund
    7. Helen of Troy by Margaret George
    8. P.S. by Studs Terkel
    9. Pompeii by Richard Harris
    10. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough
    11. The Sixth Wife Suzannah Dunne
    12. The Life of Elizabeth I by Alison Weir

    Alternates:
    Love Walked In by Maria de los Santos
    In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez
    Girl with a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier

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    • serenity
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      Hood by Stephen Lawhead
      4 stars

      This was a fast-paced quick read offering a twist on the Robin Hood story. This book takes place in Wales in the eleventh century, around the time when the English have really targeted the area for conquest. Bran is a prince of a small kingdom in this area whose father is brutally murdered by an English lord who has overtaken his lands. This first volume of the trilogy really deals with Bran's discovery of himself as a leader and coming to terms with the enormous responsibility he has to his people. It is the beginning of the merry band in the forest and took a lot of time setting up events to take place later I feel. I enjoyed the history lesson of this tumultuous time and the way the story moved along with no dragging places. I look forward to seeing how the trilogy continues, so I will put the next volumes on my wishlist.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Ack! A trilogy? Shoot... I have heard this one mentioned before and I am interested in reading about Robin Hood, but I"m not sure I want to add the beginning of another series. Well, it will reside in the back of my mind, even if not officially on the tbr.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

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  • Jeremiah C

    Jeremiah C (edited)

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    My plans to trim, from real and virtual shelves:

    1. Catcher in the Rye (Wish List)
    2. Atonement (Virtual)
    3. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Kindle)
    4. Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet (Kindle)
    5. Shadow of the Wind (Kindle)
    6. The Old Man and the Sea (Wish List)
    7 The Connected Child (Virtual)

    Not sure beyond this.

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • Jen M
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      I've read the first three on your list, and liked them all. Probably Atonement best of the three, but hope you enjoy!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Jeremiah C

      Jeremiah C (edited)

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      The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway

      4 out of 5 Stars

      (Cross Posted to the non-tag monthly thread)

      Hemingway is one of my all time favorite authors, and yet for some reason I had never managed to get around to reading this very short novel. After doing so, I can say that I was honestly not disappointed and fell in love with the writing of Hemingway yet again. There are many things about his writings that I enjoy.

      First of all, I love his ability to take what is a very simple story line and transform it into a story about human existence. Who else could have taken an old man and his struggles being a fisherman and express what it is to be an American male. The metaphor for the struggles men face was tremendous. The inside look into things such as being an appropriate example to youth, finding ourselves when we are unable to do the job we have always done, and the inherent nature of a struggle in which the opponent is unclear. Amazing what Hemingway is able to do with his insight into human nature.

      Second of all, I love the abbreviated writing style. The use of short sentences with words that don't venture into sophistication. The works of Hemingway become more accessible and engaging because it sounds like your neighbor talking rather than a successful writer of novels. The story does not lack depth or beauty, but yet those goals are reached through a manner that is quite uncommon.

      Finally, the mixture between positive and negative, good and evil, and satisfaction and disappointment. I love the fact that Hemingway honors the fact that every real story ends with a mixture of these emotions. This work does the same. Certain elements of the story reflect great levels of satisfaction for the characters and yet great disappointment in the same breadth. This is often the essence of true existence.

      I don't know that this work surpasses The Sun Also Rises and A Moveable Feast but I did enjoy it very much.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Jeremiah C
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      The Connected Child: Bringing Hope and Healing to Your Adoptive Family
      Dr. Karyn Brand Purvis

      4 out of 5 Stars

      (Cross Posted to Admin Tag and Non-Memoir Thread)

      In this well-written and easy to read book, Dr. Purvis explains a variety of needs and approaches for helping an adoptive family to function in peace and harmony. Dr. Purvis comes with no illusions that the information presented in the book is a full proof method nor that it will be an overnight silver bullet type of solution. However, because the research addresses the needs and the solutions for children that spent the earlier years of their life in a very difficult situation parents that use the information will see at least modest results very soon.

      While this book is focused on families of adopted children, there is a large percentage of the information that is just as useful for parents of biological children. Information dealing with brain chemistry, dealing with defiance, and emotional connectedness is beneficial for not only all parents but anyone in a postion where they are a caretaker or educator of a child.

      I believe this book is even more needed in the modern society we find ourselves living in that any time in the past. The family unit is the basic building block for the entire society, and in particular for schools and churches. Those of us with a mind to do so must educate ourselves and create family units that will help to preserve our churches, schools and society in general. This book clearly does not replace morals taught in our spiritual life, but helps us better connect with our children to pass on our values.

      posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Jen M

    Jen M (edited)

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    Trim-trimmery, trim-trimmery, trim trim my reads;
    I'd like to scrub off more, but let's start with these...

    'Tis by Frank McCourt
    A Walk to Remember by Nicholas Sparks
    Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
    While I Was Gone by Sue Miller
    Gap Creek by Robert Morgan
    Conspiracy in Death by JD Robb
    Loyalty in Death by JD Robb
    False Memory by Dean Koontz
    A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
    Sleepwalk by John Saul
    The Street Lawyer by John Grisham

    From virtual TBR:
    Confessions of a Shopaholic (Shopaholic #1) by Sophie Kinsella

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 16 replies
    • Ladyslott
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      LOL! You always make me smile!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      I didn't notice you're initial comment till Linda added her comment. Funny, I just watched Mary Poppins for the first time ever on New Year's Eve!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Jen M
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      @Linda - :D, it just fit so well!

      @Cindy - First time ever ever ever? Wow! And?

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Yup! For some reason, it never really appealed to me, but there wasn't much on on NYE, so I thought I'd try it. I had seen bits and pieces before, and I knew the songs, but I'd never seen the movie. I liked it a lot more than I expected to. It was good. I'd watch it again. I really liked the dancing to Step In Time. Though the little boy was kind of funny-looking! :-)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • kairilily
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      I have NEVER seen Mary Poppins! It just never appealed to me.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      One of our local movie theaters (the kind with comfy sofas and food & (adult) beverage service ran a sing-a-long version of Mary Poppins last summer. I took my two young friends and we had a blast singing along!

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      Kairilily: I bet your girls would love Mary Poppins! You should get it from the library or a rental place and watch it with them. My kids love both it and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, another movie I think is from the same era.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Isabelle S
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      I found my 16 year old curled up on the couch watching Chitty Chitty Bang Bang last weekend. She said "I haven't seen this in years and I love this movie." Since I have a weakness for young Dick Van Dyke, I watched it with her. We sang horribly but exuberantly along. "Me ol' bam-boo, me ol' bam-boo, you'd better never bother with me ol' bam-boo..."

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • kairilily
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      I don't know Care. My girls are a bit different. They almost never watch anything (even though I don't restrict them; I don't have to!) unless it involves animals. The only thing we've watched in two days is Flipper (the original series) on Netflix. Before that, it's been educational sea life videos for about two months! Ugh...

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Jen M
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      Confessions of a Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella
      Rating: 3.5 stars

      Review: Rebecca Bloomwood seems destined for a Suze Orman intervention. While outwardly having it all together, behind the scenes she's in desperate financial disaster status. Having become so well-practiced in covering up the problem with avoidance and lies, Becky strings things along to the breaking point, all while trying to resist the siren song of acquiring more, more, more.

      While on the surface it's a very humorous story and a quick read, below it covers a really serious problem, and certainly not one belonging solely to the UK, where the story takes place. I think there are many Americans who will nod vigorously (if secretly) at some of the avoidance tactics and emotion-numbing tricks used by Becky; I've seen elements of them in my own life from time to time.

      I think, however, that Becky Bloomwood takes things a bit too far and that things end up a little too pretty, too convenient. As a fictional character, I can enjoy the extremes that she goes through and feel relieved for her in some ways, but I couldn't help thinking that, were this a real person, she'd have been in serious court trouble by now. At the very least, all of her lies would have caught up to her and I think people would have turned away from a real Becky Bloomwood, rather than think she's oh so adorable and charming.

      I think, too, this is why the movie actually worked better for me than the book. Though quite a bit of detail was changed for the movie plot, I found the movie-Becky to be more realistically overwhelmed and over her head than the book-Becky who found it so easy to drown herself and then blame someone else. It was hard for me to believe that anyone could have been that dysfunctional for that long and no one noticing. Enjoyed it as a leisure-read on a winter afternoon when sick in bed; but with quite a bit of eye-rolling along the way.

      (crossposted to nonmonthly thread and my Trim TBR)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

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    • Jen M
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      'Tis by Frank McCourt
      Rating: 3.5 stars

      Review: The follow-up memoir to his popular Angela's Ashes finds little Frankie McCourt returned to New York, the land of his birth though he spent most of his childhood in an Irish slum. Now a young man in search of a better life, Frank sets out to find a way to pull himself out of the shame of his past. At times equally encouraged and baffled by his own ambitions, Frank is torn between the ties of his childhood, and what he's managed to come out of, and the glistening promises that seem so symbolic of America.

      Frank takes us through the earliest years, when money and food are still scarce and confusion of the hierarchy in society has him questioning perceptions versus reality. As he works his way through various menial jobs, he clings to one ambition: to go to school and become an educator. Even once achieved, though, Frank finds he still struggles to establish his right to be there, challenged by colleagues and students alike to prove his worth.

      Though still containing the rambling charm of his first memoir, there was a repetitiveness in this second book that, at times, made the pages seem like simple filler rather than a furtherance of the story. On more than one occasion I found myself thinking "yes, you already covered that" and I wasn't as eager to continue on as I had been with Angela's Ashes. Still, overall, Frank McCourt's story is pretty inspirational, and charming in a very bleak way. There is a lot about it that makes one wish they could travel back in time and offer the hungry young man a sandwich and coffee, or maybe an extra blanket for his icy cold apartment. It was humbling to read, and made me grateful for my warm toes while reading about his broken shoes.

      (crossposted to monthly thread, TiTTM, Trim TBR, Pick A Year)

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Jen M
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      A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
      Rating: 3.5 stars

      Review: Love and family fight to survive against the bcakdrop of anarchy and revolution in this story of a young French aristocrat who escapes the heavy mantle of his inheritance to invent a new life for himself in England. There, as a simple teacher, he creates a loving life for himself and his wife, and her father who was once a prisoner of the Bastille. As turmoil rages in their native France, with commoners overturning the power of the aristocracy, Charles and Lucie Darnay, and Doctor Manette, quietly raise their little girl until a note arrives from an old associate, begging Darnay's return to rescue him from certain death.

      I found it interesting to read this book for the first time during our point in modern history, drawing some parallels between the fever striking the citizens of France who have had enough with being tampeled on and ignored, and the current Occupy <insert city> movements that are peppering the United States and even into parts of the world. The manic bloodthirst depicted in the book, with cheers erupting each time the head count increases and a knitting society occupying the front row at every day's beheadings, calls to mind stories coming now from the Middle East about riots and deaths in the streets while the wealthy host dinner parties indoors. It doesn't seem like much has changed from Dickens' reality to ours, and like the addage says, "We are doomed to repeat mistakes when we refuse to learn their lessons."

      Aside from his short story A Christmas Carol, the only other Dickens I've read thus far has been Great Expectations. While there were a number of grim, gothic elements to GE, in general I found a lot of humor to it as well. This was vastly different, for even the occasional moment of levity seemed heavily weighted by the surrounding story. There are a lot of characters introduced here, and it's made more complicated by the fact that many people have duplicate or even anonymous identities, so keeping people and situations straight takes a concentrated effort. I'm not sure I can say I enjoyed the book in the traditional sense of the word, but I do enjoy knowing that I've now read the story that comes after one of the most well known and oft-quoted first lines in literature: "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..."

      (crossposted to nonmonthly tag and Trim TBR)

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated Feb 4/12

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    • Jen M
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      The Street Lawyer by John Grisham
      Rating: 3.5 stars

      Review: Michael Brock is a big-deal lawyer in a big-deal firm when he ends up on the business-side of a gun as one of many hostages. Surviving the ordeal for everyone else means going back to work.. For Michael, it means asking the questions about why the person did it. As he starts to unearth the reasons, he begins to discover that his heart is no longer in the big bucks world of the major law firm. Instead, he becomes an advocate for the street people, and starts finding ways to bridge the gap between the classes.

      While it contains some elements of the intrigue and thriller-moments that some of his other books do, this is very much a social commentary about poverty and the ways and means of the homeless. I was in the mood for something thrilling and fast-paced when I started this, and though there are sections of such, this isn't that type of book. Still, I was drawn into the compeling stories of some of the specific people Michael tried to help, wondering all the while if the big firm was going to get away with "it" (can't explain the "it"--might be a spoiler, so you'll have to read it yourself).

      As the gap between the rich and everyone else grows wider, and as the line between everyone else and homelessness becomes ever-thinner, this felt like a very era-appropriate novel. In some ways, it was a bit of a warning about the direction things are going if we choose to avoid looking at those that are experiencing the worst of things. It made me feel very grateful that I did know where my next meal was coming from, and that I had the ability to shower or turn on the heat when I wanted to. It made me firm up my resolution made last fall that each time I return a book or books to the library, I will also bring in a canned food or jar of peanut butter for the food donation barrel in the lobby. It's something very small in a very big ocean, but at least it's something. I'm not sure what goal Grisham had in mind when penning this novel, but if awareness is at least part of it, it definitely worked for me.

      (crossposted to non-monthly thread, Subdue, Trim)

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Vonnie
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    My trimming list:

    1. Passage by Justin Cronin
    2. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough
    3. Outcast by Cheryl Brooks
    4. The Strain by Gullermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan
    5. The Afterlife by Douglas Clegg
    6. Fudoki by Kij Johnson
    7. Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman
    8. Becoming Americana by Lara Rios
    9. Undead and Unwed by Mary Johnson Davidson
    10. Lo que esta en mi corazon by Marcela Serrano
    11. Local Girls by Alice Hoffman
    12. Face by Cecile Pineda

    *books are subject to change*

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • cpauley929
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      Love Neverwhere. I'll look forward to your review of the Alice Hoffman book. I've read a couple. Loved one, did not enjoy the other.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Tricia
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    The Beautiful Miscellaneous by Dominic Smith
    A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray
    Living History Hillary Rodham Clinton
    The Brethren Bob Woodward
    To America Stephen Ambrose
    Ali and Nino: A Love Story Kurban Said
    Their Eyes Were Watching God Zora Neale Hurston
    Master and Commander Patrick O'Brian
    The Alchemist Paulo Coelho
    Sorceress Celia Rees
    The Omnivore's Dilemma Michael Pollan

    E-reader book so I can hit 12:
    When She Woke Hillary Jordan

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • cpauley929
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      Their Eyes Were Watching God was a wonderful book. I'll be interested to know what you think of the Coelho. His philosophy appeals to me generally, but I have yet to appreciate his writing and delivery.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Michelle H

    Michelle H (edited)

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    Books I plan to trim during 2012

    1. United States of Americana : backyard chickens, burlesque beauties, and handmade bitters : a field guide to the new American roots movement by Kurt B. Reighley
    2. Against the Odds: Insights from One District's Small School Reform by Larry Cuban, Gary Lichtenstein, Arthur Evenchik, Martin Tombari, and Kristen Pozzoboni
    3. The Rivals: Chris Evert vs. Martina Navratilova: Their Epic Duels and Extraordinary Friendship by Johnette Howard
    4. Fire Sale by Sara Paretsky
    5. On Her Majesty's Secret Service by Ian Fleming
    6. Private Practices by Stephen White
    7. The Church of Facebook: How the Wireless Generation Is Redefining Community by Jesse Rice
    8. Higher Authority by Stephen White
    9. The Bicycle Book: Wit, Wisdom & Wanderings by Thomas Hylton
    10. Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu
    11. Miles from Nowhere: A Round the World Bicycle Adventure by Barbara Savage
    12. Tales of the South Pacific by James A. Michener
    13. Crunch Time by Diane Mott Davidson

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 7 replies
    • Michelle H

      Michelle H (edited)

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      Against the Odds: Insights from One District's Small School Reform by Larry Cuban, Gary Lichtenstein, Arthur Evenchik, Martin Tombari, and Kristen Pozzoboni
      4 stars

      The book goes through the decisions behind and changes made in Mapleton Public Schools. They decided to go from a "normal" district to a small school district. It was a very interesting read.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Michelle H
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      On Her Majesty's Secret Service by Ian Fleming
      2 stars

      I had a very hard time getting through the book. Maybe it was because the pace of the book is nearly not as fast as the movies, which I love. Most books I can imagine the characters and the events in my head, but I could never get that with this book. I thought it would be easier since I have seen the movie and have the images already pre-defined.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Michelle H
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      The Rivals: Chris Evert vs. Martina Navratilova: Their Epic Duels and Extraordinary Friendship by Johnette Howard

      4 stars

      This books is a great read for anyone who remembers the "rivalry" between Marina and Chrissie. It seemed like every Sunday they were playing against each other for the championship of some tournament. This is a great behind the scenes look at women's tennis and even women's rights during the early 70s, the friendship between the two, and what was happening with each during that time.

      posted 12 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Michelle H
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      Private Practices by Stephen White
      4 stars

      Stephen White writes a great suspense/mystery novel. He really kept me on the edge of my seat wanted to read more to find out who really was the bad guy, I changed my mind so many times, I couldn't keep track myself. In this book, there are several people who have many ties to each other...from owning property to owning part of a restaurant to having the same therapist. It all takes place in Boulder, CO and the surrounding area which also makes it interesting for me. The places where things happen really so exist so I can picture everything so much better.

      posted 18 hours ago. ( permalink )
  • Ellen R
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    Trim My TBR!

    1. Dead Simple - Peter James
    2. Isolation Ward - Joshua Spanogle
    3. The Hundredth Man - Jack Kerley
    4. Crazy in Alabama - Mark Childress
    5. Dress Codes - Noelle Howey
    6. Okay for Now - Gary Schmidt
    7. Betrayal - John Lescroart
    8. Victim Six - Gregg Olsen
    9. Without a Map - Meredith hall
    10. Whey You Are Engulfed in Flames - David Sedaris
    11. After You'd Gone - Maggie O'Farrell
    12. Without A Backward Glance - kate Veitch

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
  • Book Concierge

    Book Concierge (edited)

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    Trim My TBR! (Note for it to count, I've decided I must actually OWN the book, not just have it on my TBR spreadsheet)
    1. Tomorrow River - Lesley Kagen (✓ - done Jan 3)
    2. The Tiger's Wife - Tea Olbrecht (✓ - done Feb 5)
    3. The Sisters Brothers - Patrick DeWitt (✓ - done Jan 26)
    4. The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver
    5. The Last Tortilla & Other Stories - Sergio Troncoso (✓ - done Jan 28)
    6. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks - Rebecca Skloot (✓ - done Feb 12)
    7. The Elephant's Journey - Jose Saramago
    8. Say Her Name - Francisco Goldman
    9. Tea Time for the Traditionally Built - Alexander McCall Smith
    10. The Vagrants - YiYun Li
    11. Girl in Translation - Jean Kwok (✓ - done Feb 8)
    12. The Cookbook Collector - Allegra Goodman

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 13 replies
    • Book Concierge
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      NOTE CIN ... review is already posted in the pick a year challenge ... so use that one

      Tomorrow River - Lesley Kagen
      3***

      Everyone in Rockbridge County VA knows the Carmody family –the richest and most powerful clan in the area. Shenandoah and Jane Woodrow Carmody are 11-year-old twins living with their father, a judge, and their housekeeper Louise Jackson. As the novel opens, their mother has been missing for nearly a year, and their father has clearly descended into an alcoholic depression. So Shenny decides the time has come to find their mother and bring her home.

      This is an interesting premise and Kagen can write a suspenseful thriller, but she didn’t quite pull it off in my opinion. For one thing I quickly got tired of the “Southernisms” with which Shenny expressed herself. I also grew frustrated with how unreliable she was as a narrator. I enjoy a suspense/thriller where I come to dread the “evil lurking in the hearts of men.” But I also want a sense that the protagonist has some control and is making headway in uncovering the truth. I didn’t get that here.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      will use the review in pick a year. Thanks!

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      Note to Cin - review is already in the Subdue the Shelf challenge ... use THAT one

      The Sisters Brothers - Patrick deWitt
      3***

      Eli and Charlie are infamous gunslingers in the employ of a powerful man, known only as the Commodore. This time the job takes them to California, to find a man who has crossed their employer. And so they set off from Oregon City to San Francisco, encountering on their way a witch, a couple of bears, a dead Indian, a house full of drunken “ladies,” a murderous gang of fur trappers, and a frontier dentist who introduces them to the wonders of mint-flavored tooth powder.

      DeWitt has written a wonderful take on the traditional Western. The book reminded me a little of the comic crime capers of Donald Westlake. The main reason I don’t give it more stars is the narration by Eli. He relates the story with a nearly flat affect. In some places this device works wonderfully to lend humor to the tale, but much of the time I found myself just wondering when I was going to really get engaged in the story. I was curious about what was going to happen, but I didn’t really care what was going to happen. Still, I enjoyed it and I might recommend it, especially to my brother and others who love Westerns.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      will do! tags added, Jan 28/12

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      The Last Tortilla & Other Stories - Sergio Troncoso
      3***

      In the introduction to the collection of short stories, Ilan Stavans comments about Troncoso – “He makes art out of ordinariness.” I couldn’t say it better.

      In the title story, siblings struggle to celebrate a traditional Christmas following the death of their mother, and their father’s remarriage to a woman the children do not like. Angie Luna tells the story of a college student home for the holidays who falls for an “older” woman who lives across the border in Juarez. In Punching Chickens a teenage boy recounts his first job. In another story, a chubby boy struggles with teasing by schoolmates and dreams of getting a 10-speed bike. An elderly couple struggle to dispel each other’s demons and fears of impending death in The Abuelita. My favorite story is probably The Gardener, wherein an elderly widow tricks her equally aged gardener into accepting her invitation to share her home.

      Troncoso gives us stories of Mexican-American life along the US / Mexico border, but also stories that will speak to all of us. He covers universal themes of love, death, coming-of-age and family life, but also touches on the clash between Mexicans living in America vs those still in Mexico, and the difficulty faced by young Latinos who don’t speak Spanish but don’t feel they fit into the American mainstream either. A couple of these stories were very hard to read because of their difficult subject matter (home invasion, violence among children), a couple left me dissatisfied with what I felt was an abrupt ending. A few of these stories were truly wonderful. The star rating reflects an average across the collection.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated Feb 4/12

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge

      Book Concierge (edited)

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      cross-posted to Subdue the Shelf

      The Tiger’s Wife – Tea Olbreht
      3.5***

      In an unnamed Balkan country, a young woman tries to find answers to her grandfather’s death. She knew he was ill, but not why he was in a small town far from home when he died. As she searches for answers she recalls stories he had told her over the years of his own youth, and of the tiger’s wife.

      When I was a little girl I was frequently mesmerized by the stories my grandmother and her cousin Maria would tell about our family history. They were full of interesting people, foreign (to me) locations and unexplainable magic. Some of these stories were cautionary tales, meant to teach me important lessons. All were told as factual recollections. This book reminded me of those stories, and I think it is what attracts me to magical realism in literature.

      Olbreht’s writing is beautifully evocative. I can feel the bitter winds, relish the warmth of a fire, smell the musky scent of the tiger, and taste the bile of fear. If I have a complaint about the book it was that the constant jumping around in time and place made me lose focus. I appreciate that it made the book read much more like the oral traditional stories I heard as a child, but as an adult reader I would be frustrated when I was caught up in one story only to be yanked back (or forward) to a different tale. As a result I was captivated by certain sections, but not by the book as a whole.

      Two of my F2F book clubs are discussing this book later this month, and I really look forward to those discussions.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      NOTE to LibraryCin ... Cross posted to SUBDUE THE SHELF - Use THAT one

      Girl in Translation – Jean Kwok
      3***

      A semi-autobiographical novel of a young girl’s journey from Hong Kong to New York with her mother, and their pursuit of the American dream.

      Eleven-year-old Ah-Kim Chang and her mother arrive in Brooklyn in late autumn from Hong Kong. They’ve been sponsored by her mother’s older sister, Aunt Paula, and her husband, Uncle Bob. They expected to live in the family’s house on Staten Island, but after a week Aunt Paula moves them to an inexpensive apartment building owned by her father-in-law. The apartment is without any heat, and infested with roaches, mice and rats. Ma’s job at the factory is piece work and she quickly discovers that the only way to make deadline is for Kimberly to come to the factory after school and help. But Kim and her mother know that the key to success is a good education for Kim and she puts all her energy into this.

      I was completely caught up in this story from the outset. Kwok uses “phonetic” spellings to highlight Kim’s difficulties with immersion English; this was effective at first, but I got tired of it over time. The same was true with her use of Chinese sayings and then “translating” them for the American reader. My main complaint is my disappointment with the last third of the book, especially the epilogue. I was quite engaged in the tale and then …. Well, it seems that Kwok ran out of story and the plot descended into a sort of romantic chick lit soap opera. Still, I think it was a good effort for a debut novel. I was pulled into the story and interested in the characters. I liked the way Kimberly matured and the strong relationship between mother and daughter.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Lisa L
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      I really liked this book but I remember having the same issue with language and the translating.. Sometimes I wonder what ti was she said because sometimes she'd just say that her mother told her something Chinese but never what was said!

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12.

      Will use the other review for GiT.

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      Note to Cin - Cross posted to monthly tag (memoir), Pick a Year, and Subdue the shelf
      - use STS or Monthly Tag review

      The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks – Rebecca Skloot
      5*****

      In 1951 Henrietta Lacks died of an aggressive form of cervical cancer, but a tissue sample from the tumor that killed her lead to the strain of HeLa cells that live on and have been used in countless research projects. Yet the donor of this remarkable gift to science was never acknowledged, and, in fact, her family was unaware of her contribution for decades. This is the story not only of the HeLa cells, but of the descendants of Henrietta Lacks.

      Skloot joins the ranks of Laura Hillenbrand and Erik Larson in crafting a work of nonfiction that reads like a thriller. I was totally immersed in the book. The scientific story was both fascinating and understandable; the personal story was inspiring and heartbreaking. If I have any complaint at all it’s that the book ended – I wish I were still reading it.

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12. Used one of the other reviews I already came across. (May have been pick a year, though - not sure if it was that or STS. I can't remember which I came upon first. Is it ok if it was the Pick a year one?)

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Book Concierge
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      Whichever is fine ...

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Sarah C

    Sarah C (edited)

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    The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu
    The Ashes of the World by Kevin J. Anderson
    This is Your Brain on Music by Daniel J. Levitin
    Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis
    Baba: A Return to China Upon my Father's Shoulders by Belle Yang (Finished Feb 13)
    3001: The Final Odyssey by Athur C. Clarke (Finished Jan 12)
    A Lion Among Men by Gregory Maguire
    The Rose Labryinth by Tatania Hardie
    Ella: Princess, Saint, and Martyr by Christopher Warwick
    Books 4,5, and 6 in The Lost Books series by Ted Dekker

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Sarah C
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      3001: The Final Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke
      3 stars


      Believed to be dead for the last one thousand years, the body of Frank Poole is recovered and restored to life. After acquainting himself to the year 3001, he is ready to resume the voyage HAL terminated. But first he needs to re-establish contact with Dave Bowman and face what he and HAL have become.

      The last book in the series is by far the best to me. This is what the other books should have been. The writing seemed so much clearer to me with a storyline that actually went somewhere. Not a bad ending to the series.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Sarah C
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      Baba: A Return to China Upon my Father's Shoulders by Belle Yang
      2.5 Stars

      Cross- Posted to February tag of the month

      The author recounting her father's memories of growing up in China during WWII. The book is illustrated with the autor's traditional Chinese art.

      Ugh the author should stick to art. This could've been good but it wasnt. There was no timeline, just a bunch of random stories that didnt give you any look into life at that time. I just stop caring after awhile and finished it because it's for Trim TBR challenge. The art in the book makes it slightly more interesting.

      posted 9 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Kentucky Reader (Margaret H)
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    1. Echoes, Maeve Binchy
    2. The Thirteen Problems, Agatha Christie
    3. The Scarpetta Collection, Patricia Cornwell's 1st 2 in series
    4. Can't Wait to Get to Heaven, Fannie Flagg
    5. Three Junes, Julia Glass
    6. Iron Lake, William Kent Krueger
    7. No Man is an Island, Thomas Merton
    8. Boone, Robert Morgan
    9. Patron Saint of Liars, Ann Patchett
    10. House Rules, Jodi Picault
    11. Home, Marilyn Robinson
    12. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Betty Smith

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Kentucky Reader (Margaret H)
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      Cross post to Subdue the Shelf
      Thirteen Problems, Agatha Christie
      4 stars

      This is a small book but it has taken me forever to read it. I typically don't mind reading short stories in an anthology one after the other, even when they're mysteries, but I discovered that if I wanted to get the maximum enjoyment out of these little gems, I needed to read only one story then close the book for another time. Otherwise, I got clue overload.

      Christie wrote several of these stories for a magazine, after the success of her first Miss Marple novel. The basic premise is a gathering of friends, over a period of several evenings, who take turns telling a mystery for the others to solve. Miss Marple's nephew, a young author visiting in her home, is in the early stories, along with a few of his friends. Miss Marple sits in the corner knitting throughout the story telling, but to everyone's surprise she always correctly solves the mystery after everyone else makes an incorrect guess.

      The guests in the early stories also include a couple from a neighboring village and their house guest, one of Scotland Yard's finest. In the second half of the stories, except for the final one, Miss Marple is visiting those same neighbors, who are again hosting their friend from Scotland Yard. Naturally, the story telling continues.

      Miss Marple always explains her crime solving ability as being based on observation of human nature in St. Mary Meade. even though nothing happens in the little hamlet. In the final story though, there is a murder in the village and Miss Marple goes to her friend from Scotland Yard, who is conveniently visiting her neighbors again, with the name of the murderer. All he has to do is prove it before the wrong person is arrested.

      I love Miss Marple, and have probably read and re-read all the novels, but I had never read these short stories. The last story is my favorite, even though they're all excellent.

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Kentucky Reader (Margaret H)
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      Cross post to Subdue the Shelf part 2 and Memoir Tag

      A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
      5 stars and a heart

      First published in 1943, this is a wonderful novel of how a family emphasizes education as a way out of poverty in the early 1900s. I basically knew the story since it's a classic, and I had even watched and loved the movie on TV when I was a girl, so I had wanted to read the book for a long time but just never got around to it. I also always knew the story was autobiographical, but I hadn't realized until reading the book's introduction that it was originally written as memoir. The publisher insisted it be rewritten as fiction. That struck me as ironic when today's publishers are allowing so much fiction to be published as memoir.

      The story is basically the day-to-day life through the childhood and adolescence of Francine Nolan, a child who is very intelligent, an avid reader who loves to learn. She also lives in poverty, along with her little brother and parents, in Brooklyn, and is often cold and hungry. She has a close and loving relationship with her father, even though he's an alcoholic and doesn't always make the best decisions for his family. She also dearly loves her beautiful and hard-working mother, but can't feel close to her because she sees little brother as mother's favorite child. The children are also surrounded by love from extended family, especially their numerous aunts, and a grandmother who is uneducated but wise. Grandmother's proclaimed key to success in America is to work hard, save for a plot of land of your own and get an education. She has a method for saving, even in the midst of poverty, that is ingenious.

      The book portrays profound hardship and sadness, but may also portray some of the strongest women in literature. It ends on a hopeful note of a better life for the Nolan children, including the education Francine wants so badly.

      My all-time favorites list has included another of Betty Smith's books, Joy in the Morning, since I read it as a teen. Now I've added this beautifully written book to my favorites.

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Regina L
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    1. The Lotus Eaters by Tatjania Soli
    2. Innocent Traitor by Alison Weir
    3. The Heretic Queen by Michelle Moran
    4. Guenevere, Queen of the Summer Country by Rosalind Miles
    5. Honolulu by Alan Brennert
    6. World Without End by Ken Follett
    7. The Monuments Men by Robert Edsel
    8. The Painted Veil by Somerset Maugham
    9. Nicholas and Alexandra by Robert Massie
    10. Mao by Jung Chang
    11. The Mozart Question by Michael Morpurgo
    12. Captain Corelli' s Mandolin by Louis de Bernieres

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 7 replies
    • cpauley929
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      I have Mao at home as well. I really liked Wild Swans, so I thought that one might be fascinating. I look forward to hearing what you think of it.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Regina L
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      I almost put Wild Swans on my list. I have read a lot of Chinese HF lately and really want to get to Mao this year.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Sara W
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      I read Queen of the Summer Country years ago when I was in my King Arthur phase and recall enjoying it but not thinking it was anything special. On the other hand I loved Corelli's Mandolin.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Kristel
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      I read The Painted Veil last year and it was very good. Also watched the movie. Good, too. Loved Captain Corelli's Mandolin and a fave for me.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Ladyslott
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      Guenevere is one book I did not like. Very "romancy".

      I liked Innocent Traitor very much and loved Captain Corelli.

      I haven't read Heretic Queen but very much enjoyed Madame Tussaud and Cleopatra's Daughter.

      I liked World Without End, it was very similar to Pillars but I read them about right years apart so it didn't bother me as much as people who read them close together.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      I, too, really liked Innocent Traitor, but then, I've always been interested in Lady Jane Grey.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Regina L
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      If it is romancy (Guenevere) maybe I'll trade it out.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Charisma

    Charisma (edited)

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    Trim That TBR (✓)

    1. A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift (eBook) (✓ done 1-5-12)
    2. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee (eBook) (✓ done 1-8-12)
    3. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John le Carré (eBook) (✓ done 1-15-12)
    4. A Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne (✓ done 1-18-12)
    5. The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (✓ done 1-21-12)
    6. Incarceron by Catherine Fisher (✓ done 1-24-12)
    7. The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas, père (eBook) (✓ done 1-29-12)
    8. Battle Royale by Koushun Takami (eBook) (✓ done 2-2-12)
    9. The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (✓ done 2-12-12)
    10. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens (✓ done 2-15-12)
    11. Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel (eBook) (✓ done 2-16-12)
    12. Catch-22 by Joseph Heller (eBook)
    13. Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris
    14. Destined by P. C. and Kristin Cast

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 13 replies
    • Charisma

      Charisma (edited)

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      Cross-Posted in January Ireland Thread

      A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/221582/A-Modest-Proposal

      4★

      After I read a review and the comments to it in some other thread I just couldn't resist reading the 'proposal' myself. If I only knew about such a thing existing, I would have read it a long, long time ago...

      If you think about it seriously, it might seem disturbing, but if you look at it from a different angle you'll see the irony and all the parts will fit nicely. Even though it was published in 1729, it is relevant today as well. Look at all the beggars of the female sex, followed by three, four, or six children, all in rags, and importuning every passenger for an alms in Russia, Ukraine, or Romania... or a number of other countries...

      Reading it actually reminded me of the joke we had back in Ukraine:

      "Woman gave birth to the child and is walking home with it when she sees that the child's weight is not marked in the documents. She comes into the butcher's shop, gives the child to a butcher and says:

      - Can you weigh the baby, please?

      The butcher leaves and in a couple of minutes returns with a plastic bag:

      - Five pounds without bones."

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma

      Charisma (edited)

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      Cross-Posted in January Non-Tag Thread

      To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/10041/To-Kill-a-Mockingbird

      4 ★s

      It is not that I'm really divided in my thoughts about the book, I'm probably more confused with the amount of time I spent reading it and countless breaks I took along the way. For me the book started very easy and I imagined loving it to the bone. It seemed that this book will be very good on audio and I ordered one. I think it was my first mistake. I didn't like the reader, and the book didn't really appeal to me, and I also had to wait till I can be on my own to listen to it...

      Well, given that and another longer read I had a rather longer break in reading it, before I gave it another try by reading further. I was much better, I tell you. Just didn't get to getting my heart...

      *** SPOILER ALERT***

      All-in-all, the book was quite engaging and very well written. I enjoyed the story, and was very sad about Tom giving up. (Maybe it was the best ending possible to that story, we'll never know.) I also didn't quite expect to 'see' Boo Radley at the end of the book. That was a very nice surprise!

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma

      Charisma (edited)

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      Cross-Posted in Subdue the Shelf Thread

      Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John le Carré
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/87449/Tinker-Tailor-Soldier-Spy

      3 ★s

      *** SPOILER ALERT ***

      I'd love to say: "I knew it!" But I would be lying. I didn't know till the very end "who the mole was."

      It's hard to describe how I feel about the book. In 6 words it would have something like: I did not really like it! But if I went on longer, I'd say that there are other things, that made it kind of all right...

      In general the book had too many details for me to enjoy it: too much background information, too much history, too many people, names, places, you name it... Not only I was getting lost, my attention span was getting lower and lower with every passing page. In short, I was getting bored. And with "bored" comes the "do I really want to continue?" part.

      Well, I knew I had to, and I'm glad I did. It was bearable in the second part of the book, and towards the end I was already anxious to know the answer Smiley was after.

      What I really liked about the book was the parts about Russians, Czech, Polish, etc. names and places. In general the author did a very good job in figuring out the proper pronunciation, names, transliteration, and all the rest of it. I didn't have to stop and think while reading the names for Russian spies, delegates, etc. They just were there and I knew what they were. I also liked some French bits in the book, not that I could understand them all, but they gave a nice taste to the story.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma

      Charisma (edited)

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      Cross-Posted in Subdue the Shelf Thread

      A Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/31800/A-Journey-to-the-Center-of-the-Earth

      4 ★s

      It was a nice experience to finally read the book. (I've seen numerous movies on the subject and they've all been fun to watch, but I don't remember myself ever reading the book.) I liked reading about the journey and all the unexpected things that happened to the main characters. I absolutely loved the character of professor Lidenbrock and was constantly frustrated with his nephew Axel. What I didn't expect was a very short story. The name of the book suggests a full-blown longer-than-a-lifetime adventure, but there was very few things happening if you think about it. (The whole journey took approximately two months in length which is not much, especially when you travel by foot.

      There was a lot of confusion with the dates during that journey. There was one in particular (I was too busy reading to keep checking the accuracy of the rest of them) which was totally 'wrong': First there is a mention of a Monday, July 1st; and then there was Tuesday, June 30th. (I thought it being the translation error, but my English version has the same error.

      Lovely book, I'm happy to have read it.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma

      Charisma (edited)

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      Cross-Posted in Subdue the Shelf Thread

      The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/19796/The-Picture-of-Dorian-Gray

      3 ★s

      *** SPOILER ALERT ***

      "Sin is a thing that writes itself across a man's face."

      So true indeed. So often we read others' past in the wrinkles on their faces, in the mysteries of their eyes or in the buried secrets of their souls.

      How many of us would have thought it wonderful to stop a moment of pure happiness, to let it never move forward, to never change and always stay young and beautiful. Oh, but how dreadful it would have been if we really could get what we wished for. Poor, dear,.. stupid Dorian Gray got his wish and... it didn't bring him happiness. Unfortunately...

      But why should I speak of someone I didn't really enjoy or care about, why not to tell you of my favorite one? I absolutely adored Lord Henry. Oh, what a character is he, the views he shares, the influence he has on others is just incredible, unspeakable of. I haven't met many people who are so not afraid to say what they think about anything, about everything:

      "Always! That is a dreadful word. It makes me shudder when I hear it. Women are so fond of using it. They spoil every romance by trying to make it last forever."

      "When a woman marries again it is because she detested her first husband. When a man marries again, it is because he adored his first wife. Women try their luck; men risk theirs."

      I don't know, I might be wrong, but it does sound right to me:

      "The things one feels absolutely certain about are never true."

      Every time Harry wasn't in the picture, I was getting bored with the story. I wanted to hear more of him, about him, from him. I don't even think he was such a bad person or influence to others. I think he was rather the voice of truth:

      "As for being poisoned by a book, there is no such thing as that. Art has no influence upon action. It annihilates the desire to act. It is superbly sterile. The books that the world calls immoral are books that show the world its own shame."

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma
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      Updated as requested.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Thanks so much!

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma
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      Cross-Posted in Subdue the Shelf Thread

      #30. Incarceron by Catherine Fisher
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/1621148/Incarceron

      4 ★s

      *** SPOILER ALERT ***

      To say the least, the book was unique. (At least with my reading experience.) If I think more about it, it was probably a mixture of The Matrix and some medieval fairy tale. A nice twist about The Princess saving Prince Charming added to my pleasure of walking strolling through the story. There are a lot of details, a lot of little twists and turns that keep you alert most of the time. (I could guess where the story was going, but it was set very well and not many could have done better.)

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 28/12

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma
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      Cross-Posted in Subdue the Shelf Thread

      Battle Royale by Koushun Takami
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/463052/Battle-Royale

      4 ★s

      For some unexplained reason I thought that Battle Royale (the movie) was done prior to Battle Royale (the novel). Apparently, the book was released a year before and I don't remember all of the details in the movie, but it seemed pretty close to the story in the book. (With the exception of little unimportant in my opinion details.)

      My knowledge about the theme of the book started about 8 years ago when I first watched the movie Battle Royale. It was powerful and quite original, and I was happy to have had such experience. Then I forgot all about it, until last year when I picked up The Hunger Games trilogy and then it all came back to me. For some time I couldn't understand why the storyline was so familiar, until I realized that it reminded me of the Battle Royale. Later on, reading some reviews and articles I found out that there is a book and ever since then I wanted to read it.

      Well, I finally did, and I don't even know what to say. It was terribly close to what I remember about the movie, and all I wanted to do is—compare one to the other. It was a bit hard to remember all the names and who's who for characters that were merely mentioned. The detailed explanations or 'student' numbers helped quite a lot, as I didn't feel like scrolling back and forth between the first pages and my current location to find out the relations of the characters mentioned to the main characters.

      All-in-all I did like the book: the topic itself is so complex, I was glad the structure of the book was as simple as it gets. And easy read, you'd say... I think such language allows you to imagine and have your own experience instead of dragging you through the plot.

      ***SPOILER ALERT***

      There were a few things I absolutely adored in the book.

      Hiroki Sugimura's quest to find Kayoko Kotohiki. For almost full duration of the book he's been walking across the island in search for Kayoko and all he has to aid him in his search was a tracking devise which he used to check each and every 'dot' on his screen. The dots for the most part were his dead classmates, but fortunately not her, not Kayoko. And when he finally found her, the girl was so scared she shot him:

      He closed his eyes again and said, "It's all right." He was smiling. He looked content. "I was going to die soon anyway."
      Kayoko then finally noticed he had another wound on his side, soaked in liquid that wasn't rain.
      "So...go now. Please."
      Kayoko sobbed convulsively and touched his neck gently. "Let's go together. Okay? Stand."
      Hiroki opened his eyes and looked at her. He seemed to be smiling. "Forget about me," he said. "I'm just glad I got to see you."
      "What?" Kayoko opened her tear-stained eyes wide. What? What did you just say? "What...what do you mean..." Her voice was trembling.
      Hiroki exhaled deeply, as if to bear the pain, or maybe it was a long sigh. "If I tell you, will you go?"
      "What? I don't get it. What do you mean?"
      Hiroki said without hesitating, "I love you, Kotohiki. I've loved you for a real long time."
      Kayoko once again didn't understand Hiroki. What's he talking about?
      Hiroki continued. He was looking up at the sky raining down on them. "That's all I wanted to tell you. Now...go."
      Kayoko then uttered, "But I thought...you and Takako..."
      Hiroki looked into her eyes again. He said, "You're the one."

      And a little bit later:

      "It's all right," Hiroki said kindly. He closed his eyes slowly. "Kayoko..." he called her by her first name as if it were a precious treasure. It was probably the first time he had ever called her by her first name. "I don't mind at all... dying because of you. So please, please go. Or else..."

      In all the horror of the situation I didn't expect that to happen. But, I guess, it gave a nice lyric side to the book. (I had to sit and weep over such unfortunate circumstances. Oh, I wish it could have ended differently...)

      Another one of such sweet, romantic moments was stretched throughout the book itself—Shuya Nanahara's feelings were growing stronger and deeper with each passing hour, while he was working hard on keeping Noriko Nakagawa alive, and surviving the game of course. (Can you imagine the peer pressure of that? Even if you manage to survive and escape, you cannot ever be safe again. At least not in you own country. An you're only 15 years old.) He started with filing responsible to protect her in place of his best friend—Yoshitoki Kuninobu, later he discovered that he liked her too, and he had learned to care for her more than he thought could be possible in such circumstances. I found it very romantic that people are shown to find/recognize love at a time like this, in the middle of constant, indescribable horror, that people can learn to care for each other no matter what, no matter how long they have left to do it, that they feel and need to do it and they simply do... CARE!

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Charisma
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      Cross-Posted in a Monthly Thread

      The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick
      http://www.shelfari.com/books/428980/The-Invention-of-Hugo-Cabret

      4 ★s

      I saw somebody’s comments on the movie and given we only had one movie theatre with 3D option I thought I have to give it a chance and try to read the book before seeing the movie next day. Well, I was pretty close, and almost made it.

      The book is very easy to read, especially for me, who is not used to looking too long at the pictures.

      I did like it, liked it a lot, and I liked the book much more than a movie for that matter. I think the movie was great, but I don’t think I needed 3D to appreciate it.

      What I liked most about this book was the fact that it was based on a real person and real person’s discoveries and achievements, which lead me to more research and more interesting facts... But I also liked the story of a boy, who could fix things...

      posted 5 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Raspberrymocha55
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    I've have books languishing on my shelves at home for years and years. I shelve them when I get them and then I forget...Oops! guess I'll go home and take a look at what has been moldering on the shelves for a few years.

    Trim That TBR
    1. Lucky You c. 1998 by Carl Hiaasen
    2.
    3.
    4.
    5.
    6.
    7.
    8.
    9.
    10.
    11.
    12.

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
  • Kate

    Kate (edited)

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    1. Black Sun Rising by C.S. Friedman Finished Jan 6, 2012
    2. A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift Finished Jan 28, 2012
    3. Wise Children by Angela Carter
    5. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
    6. Pereira Declares: A Testimony by Antonio Tabucchi
    7. Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
    8. Castle Rackrent by Maria Edgeworth
    9. Stone Junction by Jim Dodge
    10. The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway Finished Feb 8, 2012
    11. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
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    • Kate
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      Black Sun Rising by C.S. Friedman
      Genre: Dark Fantasy/Hard Science Fiction
      Book 1 in the Coldfire Trilogy
      Finished Jan 6, 2012
      Page count 586 pages
      5 stars

      Summery:The Coldfire trilogy tells a story of discovery and battle against evil on a planet where a force of nature exists that is capable of reshaping the world in response to psychic stimulus. This terrifying force, much like magic, has the power to prey upon the human mind, drawing forth a person's worst nightmare images or most treasured dreams and indiscriminately giving them life. This is the story of two men: one, a warrior priest ready to sacrifice anything and everything for the cause of humanity's progress; the other, a sorcerer who has survived for countless centuries by a total submission to evil. They are absolute enemies who must unite to conquer an evil greater than anything their world has ever known.

      Review: I finally finished one of my big fantasy/science fiction books this year! If it were not for the Fantasy and Science Fiction BOTM, I would have never known about this author. From the very begging, C.S. Friedman pulls the audience in with her prologue and continues to suck the audience in until the very end. I spent many nights not getting as much sleep as I should have because the book was superb! After reading fifty pages in, I ordered the next two in the series and look forward to more sleepless nights reading the next book.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Thanks, Kate! :-)

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 14/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Kate
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      A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift
      4 stars

      I fully endorse Jonathan Swift's Proposal! I should have read this ages ago. If you haven't read this novella, take thirty minutes out of your day and read it. I find it amusing when some people who have read this don't understand that it is satire.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Kate
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      The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
      4 stars

      For years I had it in my head that I hated Hemingway. Donald Sutherland changed all that with the audiobook. I was transfixed with his voice and the story of the old man. Donald Sutherland changed my view on Hemingway. I'll be reading more of him now.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Cora R
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    Books to Trim:

    1. Mistborn - Brandon Sanderson
    2. Daughter of the Forest - Juliet Marillier (Tagged Ireland)
    3. A Fine and Private Place - Peter S. Beagle
    4. Graceling - Kristin Cashore
    5. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd - Agatha Christie
    6. Company of Liars - Karen Maitland
    7. The Half-Made World - Felix Gilman
    8. Hope for Animals and Their World - Jane Goodall
    9. Lud in the Mist - Hope Mirless
    10. Under Heaven - Guy Gavriel Kay
    11. The Tiger - John Vaillant
    12. The Blade Itself - Joe Abercrombie

    posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
  • Not Rory Gilmore
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    Books I Plan to Trim:

    1. Bittersweet by Sarah Ockler
    2. One Lonely Degree by C.K. Kelly Martin
    3. On the Fringe by Courtney King Walker
    4. After Ever After by Jordan Sonnenblick
    5. Dead Beautiful by Yvonne Woon
    6. Is Everyone Hanging out without Me? by Mindy Kaling
    7. Live Wire by Harlan Coben
    8. Forever by Maggie Stiefvater
    9. Not My Daughter by Barbara Delinsky
    10. Cell by Stephen King
    11. Chosen by P.C. and Kristin Cast
    12. Now You See Her by James Patterson

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    • Not Rory Gilmore
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      Lola and the Boy Next Door by Stephanie Perkins
      4 stars

      Lola cares about a few things. One of them is her boyfriend, Max. Another is her future career as a clothing designer. The third thing she cares about is going to the winter formal dressed as Marie Antoinette. It sounds like a pretty simple life for Lola until her old next door neighbor and crush, Cricket, moves back in. Cricket's family does a lot of traveling since his sister is a professional ice skater who dreams to be in the Olympics. Lola is pretty sure she's gotten over Cricket since he broke her heart on his birthday a few years ago. Before long Lola begins to see that maybe Max likes her for her eccentric clothes and the way she helps his rocker boy image. Cricket seems to actually care about Lola as a person and how she is feeling. Can Lola trust the boy who broke her heart or is Max truly the one for her, as she's thought since she met him?

      For a teen romance, this book is written very well and is a really cute story. Sure, it's predictable, but I think all readers know when they pick up a book with a title such as Lola and the Boy Next Door and it features light pastel colors on the cover, they know what to expect. So while I could guess the ending, I couldn't guess the events that would take the story to the conclusion and I felt like the story was still fresh and original, not the same old been there done that routine. I liked the book enough to immediately put Perkin's debut book, Anna and the French Kiss, on hold at the library. Anna is mentioned a few times in Lola and the Boy Next Door since this is a companion book (I didn't know that until after I started reading) and I now want to visit Anna's story of how she and her dream guy get together. I also enjoyed this book enough to be eagerly awaiting the third and final companion book to be released in late fall/early winter 201

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Not Rory Gilmore
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      The Survivor's Club by Lisa Gardner
      4 stars

      On the first day of Eddie Como's trial he is shot in the head upon his arrival to the court house by a sniper. A few blocks away a car bomb goes off in the RISD parking lot. It's no coincidence that the car belonged to the hired hitman of Eddie Como. A shooting on federal premises makes the crime a top priority and the first suspects in the case are Jillian Hayes, Carol Rosen, and Meg Pesaturo, the three women Eddie assaulted. The women do not like to think of themselves as victims, but survivors. While Jillian herself was not raped, she was attacked when she walked into her sister's apartment and found her sister's rapist trying to flee the scene. Jillian's sister, Trisha, died during the rape and Jillian will not let the world forget her. With Carol and Meg she has formed The Survivor's Club and put a lot of heat on the police to find the rapist at large. Now that their rapist has been shot the public is wondering if The Survivor's Club put too much emphasis on putting someone behind bars that maybe the police arrested the wrong man. With a case to find who killed Eddie Como and why, the police will discover evidence in the rape cases of Meg, Carol, and Trisha.

      There was so much plot involved in this story that I can not even begin to summarize all of it. Mixed into the plot is Detective Griffin who returns to work from a leave of absence on the exact day that Eddie Como is killed. All the characters in this book are very strong. Each time I turned the page I was kept guessing. Did one of the women hire someone to kill Eddie? Were the police wrong? I kept wanting to find out who raped the women, was it Eddie or wasn't it? If it was, why did someone kill him? Better yet, if it wasn't him, why did they kill their scapegoat when it was clear he was going to be sentenced to jail for a long time? A very good suspense story and I can't wait to read more books by Gardiner.

      posted 2 months ago. ( permalink )
    • Not Rory Gilmore
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      Sweethearts by Sara Zarr
      3 stars

      As a child Jennifer Harris was always the chubby kid who got picked on for being overweight and a little bit weird. When she decided to talk to Cameron Quick and make him her friend, life turned around pretty well. It didn't matter so much that Jennifer was an outcast if Cameron was by her side. Then one day Cameron disappears without anyone knowing where he went. Jennifer is back to living her life of torment alone.

      Now, a few years later on Jennifer's birthday, a mysterious note appears in her mailbox that can only be from Cameron. What is Cameron Quick doing back in town? How did he find her at her new house? Does he know that she's reinvented herself as Jenna Vaughn and is no longer the chubby girl, but the popular girl? Cameron enrolls at Jenna's private school and starts to reconnect with Jenna. In order for them to have a present together, they have to relive their past and decide how they want to live their future.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Not Rory Gilmore
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      Divergent by Veronica Roth
      5 stars

      Beatrice Prior lives in the the Abnegation faction of futuristic Chicago. Those who live in Abnegation are selfless people who dress entirely in gray, and eat very plain meals. Even though Beatrice was born into the Abnegation faction she's never felt like she truly belongs there. She's just not as selfless as her brother or parents. When Beatrice goes to take a test to tell her which faction she belongs in, she's very curious and worried. Each year on Choosing Day all the 16 year olds get to decide what faction they will live in for the rest of their lives. You can stay in your faction with your family or you can leave your family behind and join a new faction which becomes your new family. Beatrice finds out in her test that her scores were inconclusive. She doesn't belong in Candor since she lied multiple times to a man. She's not entirely suited for Abnegation since she still wouldn't tell the truth to this test man, even if it meant saving his life, but yet she refused to kill a dog in the test, so she's not completely ruled out from Abnegation. It's possible she's Dauntless and belongs with the brave, or even Erudite where those who seek information belong. Beatrice is warned by Tori, her test administrator, that Beatrice is Divergent. Those who are Divergent have traits of more than one faction, but many leaders fear the power of those who are Divergent. Tori tells Beatrice not to tell anyone that she tested as Divergent since it's highly dangerous. Tori alters the test scores to show that Beatrice tested into Abnegation and will leave Beatrice's faction choice up to her on Choosing Day.

      When the big day arrives Beatrice isn't sure what she should choose. Most Abnegation children choose to stay in Abnegation. When her brother, Caleb, chooses to join the Erudite faction Beatrice knows her fate. Since her brother abandoned her parents she needs to put them before herself and stay in Abnegation. However, when it's her turn to decide Beatrice realizes that Caleb always lived so selflessly and seemed like the epitome of Abnegation. If someone with such strong Abnegation qualities chose a different faction, she surely does not belong with the Abnegation. In a moment of braveness, Beatrice decides a different faction is what's best for her.

      Once Beatrice arrives in her new faction she changes her name to Tris, makes new friends, tries foods such as hamburgers than people in Abnegation considered to indulgent to consume, and begins dressing in form fitting clothes. While enjoying her new life Tris stumbles into some information that reveals her new faction isn't quite living by the manifesto that they declared when Chicago broke into the five factions (Abnegation, Erudite, Dauntless, Amity, and Candor). While trying to finish her initiation into the new faction she realizes that a revolt is most likely in the future with Abnegation as the main target since the government is run by Abnegation based on the thought they are selfless. Tris must find a way to successfully complete her initiation, keep others from finding out she is Divergent, and try to keep her old faction safe.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 28/12

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • clutteredcloset
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    Trim That TBR:

    Astrid and Veronika - Linda Ollson
    The Red Tent - Anita Diamant
    The Time Traveller's Wife - Audrey Niffenegger
    Interview with the Vampire - Anne Rice
    The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown
    I Capture the Castle - Dodie Smith
    One Thousand White Women - Jim Fergus
    Matilda Savitch - Victor Lodato
    Animal Dreams - Barbara Kingsolver
    The Mermaid Chair- Sue Monk Kidd
    Wizard's First Rule - Terry Goodkind
    The Lace Reader - Brunonia Barry

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • Jeremiah C
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      Really enjoyed The Red Tent when I read it many years ago. Hope you get to it and enjoy it as well.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Regina L
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    This is a stupid question but how does the permalink work?

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      if you hit it, it just shows you that thread and then you can bookmark it and go right back to it

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • againstthetide
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      It actually takes you to the specific message in a thread - - which seriously helps when a thread is 200+ posts long!

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      sorry, that's what I meant. :-)

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      I know this isn't the context you are asking about, but it works for reviews, too. If you want to point someone directly to your review of a book, so they don't have to scroll through them (or just bookmark your own for some reason), there is a permalink for each review as well.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Regina L
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      Thanks

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • JudithG

    JudithG (edited)

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    PRIORITY LIST 2012
    1. The Picture of Dorian Gray - Wilde
    2. A Passage to India – Forster
    3. The Bronze Horseman – Simons
    4. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close - Safran Foer
    5. Into the Wilderness - Donati
    6. The War With Don Emmanuel’s Nether Parts - De Bernieres
    7. Madame Tussaud – Moran
    8. Alias Grace - Atwood
    9.
    10.
    11.
    12.

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • JudithG

      JudithG (edited)

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      Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close – Foer

      5 stars

      Nine-year-old Oskar Schell is an unusual, precocious child. In my mind he is also a special needs child with Aspergers characteristics. He is suffering the traumatic events of 9/11 and the death of his father. This book is presented in three voices. Oskar tells his story as he embarks on a quest to find out why his father owned a mysterious key. His narrative perfectly captures the manic, imaginative ramblings of a gifted and unusual child. This story is interspersed with the strange, disjointed letters written by his mysteriously absent grandfather. Occasionally the family history (specifically the WW2 bombing of Dresden) is filled out by passages written by Oskar’s closest friend, his grandmother. This is not an easy book to read. The writing style is unusual and complex. And, to use Oskar’s jargon, the emotional content gave me “heavy boots”. It is a brilliantly constructed book. In Oscar’s voice, it takes an oblique look at the after effects of our national tragedy. Connecting 9/11 to the allied bombings of Dresden and Hiroshima pulls the whole story into an examination of war, violence and power. It’s not surprising that I was frequently reminded of Vonnegut and Slaughterhouse Five

      Mostly this story is told in Oskar’s voice. The intervals of his grandfather’s letters and his grandmother’s pseudo biography give the background of a traumatized, dysfunctional family history. None of these characters are completely reliable narrators. The one member of Oskar’s family that we don’t hear from directly is his mother. This lets his mother in for a great deal of criticism in other reviews that I’ve read. That’s unfair. I can identify with this woman. I don’t have to imagine what it is like to be left as the surviving parent. The general consensus of reviewers seems to be, “I know she had her own grief to deal with but……” Yes she did. She was traumatized and grieving. She also had an unusual child who had special needs before he lost his father. She had a demanding job that Oskar clearly resented. She had the financial responsibility for her son (an apartment with a doorman in the city, probably a private school, an expensive psychoanalyst……). I could go on with a long list of the purely financial and business, adult issues following such a death that Oskar, as intelligent as he was, didn’t know about.

      The mother’s burdens don’t appear much in Oskar’s narrative because he doesn’t know about them. This alone indicates a mother who was protecting her child. There are other indications, especially at the end of the book, and by that time Oskar has figured it out. His mother called the people on his list to tell them he was coming. He wasn’t as unobserved or unsupervised as it seemed. She did the right thing. She took him to a therapist, but she refused to have him hospitalized and allowed him to take his own, quirky path to resolve his grief. Most children grieving the loss, especially the sudden loss, of a parent will at some point blame the surviving parent. Even if the intelligent child knows this is unfair, the emotional reaction is there. Oskar’s narrative is colored with this emotion. Undoubtedly, the mother made some mistakes in her treatment of Oskar. What parent doesn’t? Raising an Oskar must be unimaginably difficult at the best of times, and this book was clearly not about the best of times.

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Barbara M

    Barbara M (edited)

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    In no particular order:
    Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood
    Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
    The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
    People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks
    Love Walked in Marisa de los Santos
    Girl with the Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
    Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier
    Red Tent by Anita Diamant
    Girl Who Played With Fire by Stieg Larsson
    Honolulu by Alan Brennert
    Bel Canto Ann Patchett
    Margin of Error by Edna Buchanan (One of the mystery series that's been languishing on my shelf)</b>

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • Nicole D (aka Coyotemusic)
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      some really great ones. I loved Flood, Assassin, K and C, Bel Canto, Red Tent AND Fire!

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Barbara M

      Barbara M (edited)

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      Margin of Error by Edna Buchanan
      3 stars

      Britt is being saddled with a job-shadower. He just happens to be a very well-known actor who is making a new movie with a part as a newspaper reporter. The boss assigned him to Britt in the hopes of helping her through a tough time since she is still dealing with the aftermath of shooting her way out of a bad situation (the last book). She denies there are problems but she knows she is experiencing PTS. The actor, Lance Westfell, turns out to be a nice guy but the movie is being plagued by events that extend the movie making timeline, one of Lance's stalkers, and death among the movie staffers. There's also Britt's job which lead her to investigating another side story in the book.

      As usual Buchanan writes a very interesting story with some insight into movie making and (of course) newsrooms and reporting. I haven't read a Buchanan in quite a while but she is really a very good storyteller. This one moves right along but a bit slower than her usual, at least in the beginning, but it picks up.

      posted 2 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Lisa L
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    I read Damn You Autocorrect by Jillian Madison. This book though not great literature was funny and uplifting. Anyone who has a smartphone knows that the Autocorrect feature can change words and send a completely different message then what was intended to an unsuspecting receiver. This book was a compilation of from of the funnier ones sent in from the site. It was a really quick read and brain candy that we sometimes need

    4 stars.

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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  • kolibri

    kolibri (edited)

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    1. The Rain Before it Falls by Jonathan Coe (✔ 1/19/12)
    2. The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood
    3. Freedom by Jonathan Franzen
    4. Blindness by José Saramago
    5. The Gathering by Anne Enright (✔ 1/11/12)
    6. The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai
    7. I know why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
    9. The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood
    10. Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
    11. The Birth of Venus by Sarah Dunant
    12. Lizard by Banana Yoshimoto

    My alternates:
    13. Two Caravans by Marina Lewycka
    14. Wildthorn by Jane Eagland
    15. The Outcast by Sadie Jones
    16. The Secret History by Donna Tartt
    17. The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
    18. The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • kolibri

      kolibri (edited)

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      The Gathering by Anne Enright
      *cross-posted to January reviews tagged Ireland
      3 stars

      The plot of this book is a simple thing. Veronica Hegarty is under shock because her alcoholic brother Liam died. He went into the sea with stones in his pockets. His funeral gathers the remaining Hegarty children and embraces Veronica in the arms of her rambling sisters and brothers. Meanwhile a lot of dark and melancholic observations of past times and past places are intertwined in the story, which go back to the get-to-know of Veronica's grandparents Ada and Charly. Veronica does not know much about this get-to-know but her thoughts strive back to it again and again, each time making up a new detail about it. Her apparently normal life, which includes a husband and children, seems to get more distant with each thought. Veronica is haunted by her brothers ghost and the reasons for his miserable life, seeking refuge in alcohol. Soon it dawns her that she might know what the reasons for it were, what happened to her brother. But does it change anything now?

      The Gathering is not about a preceding plot, it is rather about the complicated emotional life of the protagonist Veronica. While reading I came to understand that sometimes the action is interior, that means the change or movement inside a person, when someone beloved passes away or leaves. Though I understand that this kind of writing makes some of us uncomfortable, too much feelings and not enough storyline.

      Anne Enright has a most singular voice. I thought it was remarkable how everything came to live once Enright wrote about it. And this is why the book is not a simple thing at all. It attempts to analyze the essentials of love and death and their particular fears, pains and pleasures.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • kolibri
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      The Rain before it Falls by Jonathan Coe
      5 stars
      *cross-posted to Subdue the Shelf and January reviews not tagged Ireland

      I've had this book sitting on my shelf for ages, a beautiful hardcover still wrapped in cellophane. I'm glad I finally cracked its spine

      A family secret finally revealed in some beautiful prose is sometimes all a good books needs. Rosamond records a story for Imogen, her missing grand-niece, because she is the only one who can still tell Imogen's story, which reaches back till second world war, when Beatrix, Imogen's grandmother and Rosamond were still children. Beatrix didn't experience motherly love, which soon led her in the arms of the first available men she met and made her emotionally cold towards her own daughter, too. This paved the way for an awful incident which took Imogen's eyesight. Rosamond lifts the family secret with great empathy, also describing wonderful moments of Imogen's life, trying to rouse apprehension for an incomprehensible deed.

      I very much enjoyed reading this book. I picked it up whenever I had a spare minute. I liked the way the story is told. Rosamond describes photographs of long-forgotten events and people to blind Imogen and reminisces in memories that come up looking at the pictures. The story develops along the succession of the photographs, adding details with every picture. The mood is melancholic and calm and very personal. The family secret is not that shocking rather than sad, but this did not lessen the reading experience for me. It was more the motivations behind it, that keeps the reader reading.

      I'd recommend the book to people who liked Atonement by Ian McEwan or The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O'Farrell.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 4/12

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • rowanthea
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    TBR LIST:
    Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh
    Totally Wired: Postpunk Interviews and Overviews by Simon Reynolds
    Clapton by Eric Clapton
    Dream Boogie: The Triumph of Sam Cooke by Peter Guralnick
    The Life and Death of Jim Morrison: Break on Through by James Riordan & Jerry Prochnicky
    Ulysses by James Joyce
    11/23/63 by Stephen King
    Hurt Machine by Reed Farrel Coleman
    Gotham: The History of New York by Mike Wallace
    A Passage to India by E.M. Forster
    Songs of Kabir by Kabir

    FINISHED:
    The Book of Deacon by Joseph Lallo.....4 out of 5 stars 01/16/12

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • rowanthea
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      The Book of Deacon by Joseph Lallo 4 out of 5 stars

      The war has been going on for 156 years. It's the only life Myranda has known. When she stumbles across a fallen warrior and touches his sword her life changes forever. She is drawn into a magical realm were war doesn't exist and the hope for a peaceful world seems possible. This is the first book in the trilogy. The characters are well drawn and the line drew between good and evil are blurry. The book ends abruptly and this usually annoys me but this time I just bought the next two with no complaint. If you enjoy high fantasy this series if for you.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Jan 21/12

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
  • Lisa L
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    Sometimes Love Just Isn't Enough
    By Lurlene McDaniel
    3 stars (that's being generous)

    Sometimes authors shouldn't stray from what they usually right and this was one of those times. McDaniel is more commonly known through the young adult world as a writer of children with horrible diseases. In this book it was about a teenager whose parents got divorced, had a brother with development delays and a bully at school. The ending was a happy one and the "maybe the bully can relate" scenario promised on the back is a mere 2 sentence mention. If you like her books avoid this one or you might not like this one!

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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  • Lisa L
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    The Middle Place by Kelly Corrigan
    2 Stars
    x-posted to Subdue the Shelf

    Some books are meant to be read by certain populations. This was one of them. Corrigan is a breast cancer "survivor" who feels the need to talk to her dad about everything and control his life and cancer treatments but who gets mad when her husband calls his parents. The chapters flit between present day and her early years. There is really no connection between the two, almost like she threw the stories in to so you would know her background. She was half whiny and half "I am woman hear me roar." She did not give you the chance to be interested in life as it was all me, me, me. I hate that in real life and even more in books!

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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  • Brad B

    Brad B (edited)

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    List 1: Books

    1. Seventh Son by Orson Scott Card
    2. Die Trying by Lee Child
    3. Death Match by Lincoln Child
    4. Raise the Titanic by Clive Cussler
    5. The Twelfth Card by Jeffrey Deaver
    6. Pandora's Curse by Jack DuBrul
    7. Vamphyri by Brian Lumley
    8. The Light Fantastic by Terry Pratchett
    9. Tyrannosaur Canyon by Douglas Preston
    10. Ice Hunt by James Rollins
    11. Suffer the Children by John Saul
    12. The Touch by F. Paul Wilson

    List 2: New Authors

    1. Ted Bell
    2. Steve Berry
    3. John Connolly
    4. Patricia Cornwell (first up: Postmortem)
    5. David Gibbins (first up: Atlantis)
    6. Thomas Greanias (first up: Raising Atlantis)
    7. Robert McCammon
    8. Andy McDermott (first up:The Hunt for Atlantis) FINISHED
    9. Brad Meltzer (first up: The Tenth Justice) FINISHED

    10. David Morrell
    11. Kathy Reichs (first up: Deja Dead)
    12. Dan Simmons (first up: Summer of Night)</b>

    posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
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    • Brad B
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      The Tenth Justice by Brad Meltzer

      I am really not big on legal thrillers, but since I aminterested in readings some of Meltzer's later books and always want feel the need to start with authors' first books and move forward, I had to start with this one. I have to say that I quite enjoyed it - and, I feel lke got kind of an education about some court procedures - though, seeing as this is a work of fiction, am not sure just how much liberty Meltzer took with some things. I felt at certain points that the story was a bit long and wanted to get to the point, but once I got to the climax of the story, I was at the edge of my seat. 4 stars

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Brad B
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      The Hunt For Atlantis by Andy McDermott (cross-posted w/ Subdue the TBR)

      This was a new author to me, with a series featuring archaeologist Nina Wilde and a man hired to protect her - Eddie Chase, as they go to find Atlantis. Along the way, they have to fight off people who don't want Atlantis to be found, and will do anythng to prevent anyone from finding it.<br/> I don't think anyone expects a book like this to be great literature or anything more than a fast-paced thrill ride. In that regard this book delivers from the very first page. I was hooked by the story; characters, which were admittedly, not really fleshed out, didn't really need to be because of the thrillride you are on the entire time. Yes, the story was kind of stupid at times and some of the scenarios were not terribly realistic - but, like I said, I wasn't after high literature - I just wanted to have fun reading a book - and this book did something that no other book has been able to do recently - keep me up reading late into the night. The only problem I had was that I don't like seeing archaeological finds being destroyed - even fictional ones at the rate they were n this book. The next in the series will hopefully be more preserving than destroying...with the same amount of action.

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • againstthetide
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      The Tenth Justice sounds good to me. I like legal thrillers, but I don't usually read them because it is hard to sort the wheat from the chaff so to speak. I saw Brad Meltzer at the National Book Fair - - and he spoke very well - - but he spoke about his children's book, so I didn't really get a sense of him as an adult author. I actually think I own one of his books somewhere . . .

      posted 1 month ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated, Jan 28/12

      Brad, do you have a star rating for The Hunt for Atlantis? Thanks!

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • LibraryCin
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      Brad, don't worry about it. I found it with your review over at Subdue the Shelf.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
  • Jaede

    Jaede (edited)

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    Reading for Pleasure


    1. The Marriage Plot ~~ Jeffrey Eugenides
    2. Mocking Jay ~~ Suzanne Collins (✓ 28 January 2012)
    3. Leviathan ~~ Scott Westerfield
    4. The Girl Who Played with Fire ~~ Stieg Larson
    5. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest Stieg Larson
    6. The Strain ~~ Chuck Hogan and Guillermo del Torro
    7. In the Woods ~~ Tara French
    8. Life of Pi ~~ Yann Martel
    9. The Invention of Hugo Cabret ~~ Brian Selznick (✓ 01 February 2012)
    10. Wonderstruck ~~ Brian Selznick
    11. Room Emma Donoghue
    12. The Book of Lost Things ~~ John Connolly (✓ 26 January 2012)


    Work Related
    1. Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word ~~ Walter J. Ong
    2. The Whale and the Reactor ~~ Langdon Winner
    3. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions ~~ Thomas S. Kuhn
    4. Language, Gender, and Professional Writing ~~ Francine Harriet Wattman Frank
    5. The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit ~~ Sherry Turkle
    6. Thank You For Arguing: What Aristotle, Lincoln, and Homer Simpson Can Teach Us About the Art of Persuasion ~~ Jay Heinrichs
    7. Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet ~~ Sherry Turkle
    8. Technology and Literacy in the 21st Century: The Importance of Paying Attention ~~ Cynthia L. Selfe

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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    • Jaede

      Jaede (edited)

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      The Book of Lost Things ~~ John Connolly

      3.5 stars; round to 4

      **Cross-Posted to monthly (January) tag thread and Subdue that Shelf Reviews Thread**

      Set during World War II, The Book of Lost Things is the story of David, a young boy, who at a fairly young age, loses his mother. This tragedy, at first brings David, who was always close with his mother and who shared a deep love of reading with her, at first, and his father closer. But then David's father marries another woman, Rose, and they soon have a child, Georgie. David, who is feeling displaced then retreats to his reading, for it is among the stories, especially the fairy tales that he and his mother so loved, that David feels most at home.

      Connolly weaves a magical and fantastic coming-of-age story as David confronts his fears through the fantasy world of books, especially some of the older folklore and fantasy books among the shelves in his room in his new home. For David, the lines between reality and fantasy begin to blur, and for readers of Connolly's The Book of Lost Things characters that we are familiar with such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarves take on a new and sometimes more ominous twist.

      What I found myself enjoying the most was the fantasy world Connolly built as David went on his journey from a self-indulgent and self-centered boy dealing with his grief and jealousy to a young man who began to see how is actions affected others. I thoroughly enjoyed the retelling and re-visioning of some of the fairy tales that we are familiar with and the darker bent that was brought to some of them.

      At times, however, I found myself feeling like the book was simply dragging; the pacing was just a bit too slow for me in a few places. And, at other times, I found myself disliking David as a character to the point where his character was not a sympathetic one for me.

      The book as a whole, however, was well worth the read, and I particularly enjoyed the supplementary materials at the end that included an interview with Connolly about the book.


      While this book is not set in Ireland in any way, Connolly is from Dublin, which is why I believe the book is tagged Ireland.

      posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated Feb 4/12

      posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )
    • Jaede
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      Mockingjay ~~ Suzanne Collins

      4 stars

      **Cross Posted to the non-monthy tag thread and the Subdue the Shelf Game Review Thread**

      I don't want to give too much way in the summary of the book since doing so would be spoiler for those who haven't read Catching Fire, book 2 in the series.

      Mockingjay is the third and final installment in Collins well conceived Hunger Games Trilogy. In Mockingjay we see, once again, Katniss, Peeta, Gale, and others from the Districts fighting for their lives against the oppression and dictatorial control of The Capital. Overall, I think that Mockingjay is an excellent end to the triology. Collins does an excellent job of keeping the storyline intriguing while also wrapping up some of the threads that were left a bit unfinished from Catching Fire.

      What I found exceptionally effective in the book was Collins development of Katniss' character as her character matures and is faced with some difficult choices when she realizes that she must truly embrace being the Mockingjay for the districts and the rebellion. Collins also does a good job of drawing out the threads of the Katniss-Peeta-Gale relationship, and eventually brings that triangle to a satisfying but complicated end.

      Collins does seem to have taken a page from George R.R. Martin or at least Martin's habit of skewering the reader's emotions when it comes to riding a text of characters. So, readers of the trilogy, be prepared for a few surprises along the way as you read Mockingjay.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Jaede
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      The Invention of Hugo Cabret ~~ Brian Selznick

      5 stars and a favorite

      Cross-posted to non-monthly thread, Subdue the Shelf Game Review thread, and Jaede's 2012 Reading Challenge's thread.**

      The Invention of Hugo Cabret is the story of Hugo, a twelve-year-old boy, who lives in the clock keeper's room in a train station. Hugo keeps the clocks repaired and makes sure they are running on time and smoothly for this was his uncle's job, but his uncle, who is prone to drinking, has mysteriously disappeared. Hugo keeps up with the clocks because he desperately wants to stay at the train station.

      When Hugo steals the toy mouse of a toy maker (and repairman), who takes Hugo's notebook because he see's a drawing that disturbs him, Hugo's life forever changes, as does the toy maker's.

      Hugo's story is told in both text and over 155 illustrations that are wonderfully done. The illustrations alone make the book an exceptional read. The illustrations, which resemble both pencil and pen and ink drawings, also have an old-film quality about them, which ties in marvelously with the overall story. The Invention of Hugo Cabret quickly captures your attention, and something about Hugo, the character, just draws you in and won't let you go. It's truly a wonderfully told tale. And now, I am looking forward to seeing the film, which I hope turns out to be a wonderful adaptation of the book.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Lisa L
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    The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
    2 stars

    (xposted)

    Just because books are classics doesn't mean they need to be read! This book "killed me" it was so boring and Holden annoyed me! No 16 year old should act that entiteld. I wanted to jump into the pages and smack him!

    I don't know maybe I missed something but I have most definitely read better classics!

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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  • Lisa L
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    The Lucky One by Nicholas Sparks

    4 stars

    x-posted to sudue and not tagged monthly shelf

    Nicholas Sparks is a great author who can evoke feeling into his reading. This book made me angry, it made me sad, it made me want to fall more in love then I already am.

    He presents emotions that are raw but still tells a story. He had me hating all the right people and I saw the end coming but not in quite the way it happened!

    posted 3 weeks ago. ( permalink )
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  • JoLene R

    JoLene R (edited)

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    Here's my list of the Trim Challenge. I am actually doing a 12-in-12 challenge where I'm trying to read 12 HF, 12 mysteries and 12 NF books mostly from my TBR pile so hopefully this will not be too hard.

    1. A Game of Thrones: George RR Martin
    2. The Passage: Justin Cronin
    3. The Tudor Secret: CW Gortner (HF)
    4. The Last Kingdom: Bernard Cromwell (HF)
    5. The Greatest Knight: Elizabeth Chadwick (HF)
    6. The Book Thief: Markus Zusak (HF) - January 25, 5 stars
    7. Guns, Germs and Steel: Jared Diamond (NF)
    8. The Omnivore's Dilema: Michael Pollan (NF)
    9. Founding Brothers: Joseph Ellis (NF)
    10. Lust, Loathing and a Little Lip Gloss: Kyra Davis (Mys)
    11. A Poisoned Season: Tasha Alexander (Mys) - February 5 stars
    12. Murder on the Eiffel Tower: Claude Izner (Mys)

    Substitutions:
    Soul of a Chef: Michael Ruhlman
    Dissolution: CJ Sansom
    Changeless: Gail Carriger
    Lies of Locke Lamora: Scott Lynch
    Tiagana: Guy Gavriel Kay
    The Devil's Brood: Sharon Kay Penman

    posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
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    • JoLene R
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      The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
      5 stars

      This is the story of a German girl during WWII. The story is told by Death who has a sense of humor (who knew). Liesel does not have an easy life. The story opens with the death of her brother. Liesel's parents are communists and her mother was taking her and her brother to live with a foster family to protect them. Life with her foster parents is not easy as they are very poor. Liesel has nightmares every night about her brothers death but her foster father is always there to comfort her. Their bond increases as he teaches her to read using a book that she stole from the grave diggers.

      This is the story of Liesel, her friends and the town as they deal with the events leading up and into World War II. I felt that it was an interesting and possibly realistic depiction of what it might have been like to be in Germany at that time. Not everyone were Nazi's, and not everyone hated Jews.

      I really enjoyed this book --- it made me laugh, and it made me cry. The story of Liesel will stick with me and I'm sure that I will re-read this again someday.

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Care B
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      I thought his writing was gorgeous, profound...so glad to see another great review for this lovely book!

      posted 13 days ago. ( permalink )
    • Play Book Tag Shelf
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      shelf updated Feb 11/12

      posted 11 days ago. ( permalink )
    • JoLene R
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      b]A Poisoned Season</b> by Tasha Alexander
      4.5 stars
      Cross-posted to JoLene's Trim the TBR thread

      It has been a while since I read And Only to Decieve which is the first book in the Lady Emily series. Both of these books are charming victorian cozies. Lady Emily is a fun heroine -- a woman who is widowed at an early age and decides that she does not necessarily want to follow societal conventions and get married again. However, as events unfold, it seems that she does need to stay in society's good graces. This book has simultaenous plot lines which keep the pace quick.

      If you like the show Downton Abbey and you like Jane Austen novels, then you should give this series a try. So far, they are fun, fast stories with large serving of mystery and a dallop of romance.

      posted 4 days ago. ( permalink )
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      shelf updated, Feb 19/12

      posted 3 days ago. ( permalink )
  • Regina L
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    The Heretic Queen by Michelle Moran
    4 stars

    Based on the title of the book I assumed the work centered on Nefertiti, labeled as a heretic who, with her husband Akhenaten, replaced polytheism with a single god. However, and pleasantly surpringly, it is the fictional account surrounding Nefertari's rise as Chief Wife for Ramses II.

    This is the first work I've read by Moran. With Houston all abuzz with the current King Tut exhibit, which we saw last weekend, I thought it was time to pull the book off the TBR shelf. I thought she did an excellent of using what little historical evidence there is to create a plausible and enjoyable story. There is enough historical evidence to indicate that Ramses was in love with this wife. The character development of Nefertari, a well-educated and courageous woman to match and temper Ramses, was very well done. There are important historical events that occured during Ramses reign, they make an appearance, and Moran weaves fictional scenes around those occurences that fit quite nicely.

    I know there are some readers that are highly critical of an author that takes great liberties with historical fiction work. For me, it depends. I tend to be more forgiving with ancient Egpyptian work since so much of the facts are unknown. That is particularly problematic with Nefertiti and her kin since there was a blatant attempt to erase their history when Egypt returned to polytheism. Moran provides copious notes delineating fact from fiction.

    I must also admit that I think this was the right book at the right time for me. I've been pretty sick and just needed an engrossing, and mindless read. This is not scholarly reading, it is plain fun historical fiction (with the emphasis on fiction).

    posted yesterday. ( permalink )
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