Read Women discussion
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What are you reading?






I am also reading others, but these are the ones I am working on at the moment. I have about 11 books on my currently reading shelf at home and here and am always starting more. lol

I'm also reading The Face in the Glass and Other Gothic Tales (reading one short story between each novel), The Ocean of Life. by Callum Roberts, and The Arabian Nights: Tales of 1001 Nights, Volume 3 (slowly, very slowly)
What do you make of Cuckoo's Calling? That's the only one I've read fof yours, but The Blind Assassin is definitely on my to-read list.

Rashomon is my short story collection to read at the moment. Arabian Nights is also on my to-read list. :)

I've just finished The Year of the Flood by Margaret Atwood (absolutely wonderful) and am about to start Mauprat for this month's group read.

I'm an avid fantasy reader, and I love it so far. She's done a great job at world-building and her main characters are wonderful. The book has a fairy-tale quality, with darker undertones.

As mentioned in the Introductions thread, I am currently trying to complete a challenge by only reading women writers, so they are in high rotation on my reading pile at the moment!

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl for another group ... I'm liking it so far.
Hour Game by David Baldacci ... library book that needs to go back tomorrow so I need to finish soon. I love mysteries.
Cotillion by Georgette Heyer I'm not a huge romance fan, but I love Heyer's writing. Great humor & dialogue.
The Halfling's Gem by R.A. Salvatore I'm not a huge fantasy fan either, but love Salvatore's writing. Great characters & stories.
I'll read anything ... a good story is a good story, no matter what the genre is.





One that has been on my shelf for a couple of years at least is The Forest Lover by Susan Vreeland. So far, so probably just OK, but an interesting diversion.




I read that years (40+?) ago, and can still remember parts of it very fondly.


Oooh, and an excellent walk too!

Oooh, and an excellent walk too!"
I am using returning library books as an excuse to go for long walks ;)
I walk, listen to an audiobook and return library books, without the temptation of borrowing any more ( I go before it opens, and before my family wake up ). So, getting fit and meeting my reading goals all in one!

Haha, that is an excellent idea. I also walk to the library but it's only a mile each way for me. I sometimes go right before it closes, or when I only have 2 minutes to dash in before I need to be somewhere else :)

Well, there is no Edmund Bertram or Captain What's-his-name to excite my day anyhow, just as well!

I recently read (as in started and finished around TKaM) Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg; and The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There. Both of which were fantastic although distinctly different genres.


Smiling to myself about the diversity of my current reading plan - all over the shop with genre, style, etc. Is keeping me very engaged.

Congratulations to your husband!

Thanks Elizabeth :)
It's been a long process - I don't think our daughter has ever known him not to be student!
He has graduation next month, and is also presenting a talk in our national capital and the film institute (as well as having dinner at the Italian Consulate!), so things are moving along for him.
Now, if he just applies for the job he was told about, he will be much happier in his work - and we will have to back a big move across states!

Congrats to your husband, Amanda!

Congrats to your husband, Amanda!"
Thanks Iethe!
And I really enjoyed Jean Brodie, so am looking forward to getting Driver's Seat back ;)




Sigrid Undset--Kristin Lavransdatter
Alice Walker--The Color Purple
Virginia Woolf--To the Lighthouse
Margaret Atwood--Negotiating with the Dead
Enjoying all of these!
I'm curious about Music & Silence, Elizabeth. Kristin L is in Norway during an even earlier period, but has made me curious about Scandinavian history. I think I'll have to check this out.

I liked the one Rose Tremain I have read - Restoration - and have some others marked as "wish list". I am enjoying it, but I think it is not as good as Restoration, which takes place about 30 years later.

Has someone read this book?
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I'm working my way slowly through The Wake by Paul Kingsnorth. Historical fiction set in England during and after the Norman invasion of 1066 and writen entirely in a 'shadow version' of old English. So no capital letters, punctuation (except full stops) and everything is spelt very oddly. But it's surprisingly easy to read after the initial few pages. Not very far in yet though, so don't yet know if I can recommend the story.