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What are you reading? (November 2012)
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Jeane, Book-tator
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Nov 02, 2012 01:39AM

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So right now I'm reading Vanity Fair. It's quite long so I'm trying to finish it fast so I can start a new one.

Hello Kaitlyn
I wasn't able to finish the game of thrones series, I gave up at book three, it was way to slow for me without any real reason for being that slow, but I'm actually curious about your opinion regarding to the series, because I feel the series actually really good. I even like the changes I think most of the cases they are improving the story. So for now I think I never going to finish the books but I'm waiting for the series

Besides A Storm of Swords, right now I am also reading Cloud Atlas and listening to The Alchemist read by Jeremy Irons. I am really liking The Alchemist a lot, and am beginning to see the appeal in Cloud Atlas.

Yay for slow readers! I am such a slow reader, and it's really sad sometimes cause I would love to read more books. Oh well, it doesn't make me any less of a well rounded reader.
The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson. According to my Kindle, I am 18% completed with the book. I'm hoping to finish it by the end of the week.



You have a great group here. I am currently reading the 3rd book of Game of Thrones... I am amazed!!! Funny how I writer can provide so many different characters and makes us either love or hate them.

Careful Geri. I've been known to get lost in Goodreads for hours! lol It's so addicting. I know I haven't rated even half the books I've read.



Yay Swann`s way is on my next to read shelf too but i`m a bit scared of it. Do you know that there is a bookclub on goodreads that called: 2013 a year of reading Proust or something like that?

You guys have a lot of interesting books you are reading. I can see my to-read list is going to continue to grow from this group :), but that's a good thing!




Yesterday I finished Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy. I can see why people were upset by it and a bishop in the Church of England actually burned it. He raises some good questions about marriage and rights of women in turn of the century (19th to 20th) England.

I feel like the Count doesn't flow as well as the Three Musketeers. I'm only halfway through, so it definitely still has time to grow on me, but Musketeers was just so much fun :).
Is A Dangerous Method the same story line as the movie that recently released about Freud and Jung? I was a psych major in college, so that might be one I have to look into!




The beginning is a bit slow so I hope there will be an upcoming plot acceleration.

I loved the first few A Song of Ice and Fire (ASOIF/Game of Thrones) books but was less impressed with the last two.

I am a Multi-Tasker reader also. It's horrible. LOL. I just recently finished
The Dress Lodger. It was interesting.
I'm trying to read A Local Habitation along with reading Cloud Atlas and finishing NaNoWriMo. I hit 30k today so it's all downhill from here! =)

Yuri wrote: "I am reading Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card, World War Z by Max Brooks, And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, and Essays in Love by Alain de Botton"
World War Z... that is my "comfort" book. I've read/listened to that book more than any other.
World War Z... that is my "comfort" book. I've read/listened to that book more than any other.

I'm glad to hear such a positive remark on the book. I'm definitely enjoying it so far myself.
Yuri wrote: "(I admit that the movie trailer was what motivated me to read it now before my opinion is influenced by the film)"
This is a good call. After you finish the book, if you rewatch the trailer, you might wonder why they called the movie 'World War Z'.
Besides being post-apocalyptic and about zombies, I think the greatest aspect of the book is the amount of emotion that is contained in each individual story. Max Brooks did a phenomenal job!
This is a good call. After you finish the book, if you rewatch the trailer, you might wonder why they called the movie 'World War Z'.
Besides being post-apocalyptic and about zombies, I think the greatest aspect of the book is the amount of emotion that is contained in each individual story. Max Brooks did a phenomenal job!



Luke. Oh, I just read A Moveable Feast recently. I loved it! I'm a big fan of Hemingway's and Fitzgerald's so it was really great to have this small insight into the men behind my favorite novels. I'm not usually too fond of memoirs but this one definitely has a permanent place on my shelf.

The best way to improve your language skills is to read, so you're on the right track for sure! Congratulations to you to discovering the joys of reading!

World War Z... that is my..."
I recently reread Ender's Game after having read it 20 years ago in college. Still awesome after all these years! I liked World World Z quite a bit too.
I may be spread too thin on the reading right now: my current reads include Cloud Atlas, Robopocalypse, and In The Woods.
>Yuri and Tanya, I loved Ender's Game as well. I found the ending very touching. Very few books I've read recently have measured up. Are the other books about Ender as good or should I quit while I'm ahead?




"The Kid" by Sapphire (did not like)
"Mildred Pierce" by James M. Cain (loved!)
"This Is How You Lose Her" by Junot Diaz (loved!!)


I might as well give " Tess of the d'ubervilles" a shot.
Anthony wrote: "Angie, you definitely aren't the only one. The writing is awesome, the pace and tension building, the multiple view points and distinct characters... as I'm reading it taking this all in I'm thinki..."
Interesting observation regarding the precision of Stoker's language. A lot of recent popular YA fiction (especially fantasy/paranormal) I've been reading are sloppily written. So I've been going back to reading favorites from my youth. I'm working my way through The Complete Sherlock Holmes among other things. A good writer who knows how to use language is such a delight.
Interesting observation regarding the precision of Stoker's language. A lot of recent popular YA fiction (especially fantasy/paranormal) I've been reading are sloppily written. So I've been going back to reading favorites from my youth. I'm working my way through The Complete Sherlock Holmes among other things. A good writer who knows how to use language is such a delight.

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