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What are you reading? May edition!
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I'm reading Dodger by Terry Pratchett at the moment, which I'm really liking.
This one has Charles Dickens, and the Dodger (it's sort of implied that this character might be who he based the Artful Dodger on). It's fun, and filled with the kind of wry observation about people and how we work that Terry Pratchett is good at :-)

Breakfast at Tiffany's and In cold blood. Two more different books you couldn't find - both are insightful and on small town lives (and the affect of) in one way or another maybe...?
I'm reading 'Be good : How to navigate the ethics of everything' by Randy Cohen. Cohen wrote an ethics column for the New York Times for many years and these one page samples are distilled,logical, funny responses to all those big and little conundrums we have during our everyday lives. Should we share all our secrets with our spouses; what if my neighbor cuts down their trees without consulting me; should I tell my partner I have cancer?
Cohen's answers may surprise and you may not always agree but an excellent place to start the brain ticking over about life's big and little posers!
And Kim Hill interviewed him here:
http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/pro...

I only saw it a couple of years ago and fell in love with it straight away. It turned me into a huge Audrey Hepburn fan! I definitely recommend it, although am a total sucker for 60s flicks so am entirely biased :-)

Breakfast at Tiffany's and In cold blood. Two more different books you couldn't find - both are insightful and on small town lives (and the af..."
Funny you should say that, I also have In Cold Blood on my to-read list.
Your Cohen book sounds so intriguing! Might have to mark that one up to my to-read, as well.

You have to see Breakfast at Tiffany's, the movie. You will be forever in love with Audrey and the clothes.

That sounds like a great read, I think I will have to try it so that all those pesky questions find answers!


The best thing about today's manky, wet weather is that it is perfect reading on the couch weather!
I've just started Truman Capote's Breakf..."
One of my all time favourite films. Book always on my must read list....

Breakfast at Tiffany's and In cold blood. Two more different books you couldn't find - both are insightful and on small town lives (and the af..."
Monty wrote: "Pretty interesting that Capote is (mostly)renowned for
Breakfast at Tiffany's and In cold blood. Two more different books you couldn't find - both are insightful and on small town lives (and the af..."
Love the sound of this one...but sometimes the questions are more interesting than the answers??

Not sure which to start first...

Ooh! I loved "How to be a woman" -- I laughed a LOT :-) It's hilarious, but rings really true, and there's a lot of serious subject matter in there couched in hilarity. I love her column in The Times as well -- I often grab back issues to read while I eat lunch, and then end up laughing away and probably disturbing other people... :-)
This reminds me that I really want to read Moranthology!

I loved her weekly column in The Times (read it avidly while living in the UK)....press display time now I think!

Tonight I'm going to start The Sound of Butterflies by Rachel King. Am excited!


I loved Breakfast at Tiffany's too. The movie and the book - although they are quite different. Audrey Hepburn is just gorgeous. That iconic scene in the black dress with the bagel, outside Tiffany & Co, swoon. I based my wedding dress on that dress. And yes, I agree, In Cold Blood is a widely different style of book. Good too, but not as fast-paced as a more modern crime thriller, even a true crime one, so I found it a little slow going in parts.
I've just started Ken Follett's Winter of the World. I think that's what it's called. It's the second in his new trilogy, following on from the WWI book Fall of Giants. I do love a good saga.

I loved Breakfast at Tiffany's too. The movie and the book - although they are quite different. Audrey Hepburn is just gorgeous. That iconic scene in..."
Oh I know! Swoon big time; that scene is amazing. In fact, it was my desktop wallpaper for quite some time! I would have loved to have seen your wedding dress. I saw or read somewhere that Audrey Hepburn refused to play her exactly as she was in the book - she wanted her profession to be hinted at but not obvious, and she didn't want any cursing. So sweet!
Am very much enjoying The Sound of Butterflies so far :o)



I keep thinking I should maybe try some classics -- what puts me off is that often the copies you find in print are not the greatest quality (tiny, dense print etc.) I like the idea of trying them on my ereader. And I could make the print as big as I wanted... And I just checked, and I could change the font on my reader, depending on the format of the book. Hmm... :-) Thank you!

I've also been reading Nickle and Dimed: On Not Getting By in America by Barbara Ehrenreich which probably made me less tolerant of Rubin's book than I would have been otherwise. For this expose of the poverty trap in America, the super educated, super clever, and super funny Ehrenreich leaves her life behind, moves state, takes on miniumum wages employment and learns what it really means to live on (or below)America's breadline. Full of hilarious and terrifyingly sad anecdotes of what people have to put up with when they earn so little and therefore have no power to change their situation. I reckon this book will change your life and make you more grateful than any self help book ever could :)


Haha, this sounds perfect for me. I am such a Nana anyway. Much as I love the challenge of sticking to a fugal budget it's much more fun when you can read beautiful books about other people's efforts. You feel you are in good company. I'll dig out this book for sure. Especially as it is by a New Zealander. Thanks for the tip :)
P.S. Bicarb and vinegar really does work a treat on your hair ;)

I loved this book too! She has a sequel to it I think, which I haven't read yet. I liked her approach to the whole topic -- sort of methodical and very research-based.
I've also read Nickle and Dimed and really liked it too, but wow, some of the situations she found herself in... It was written so long ago you wonder what the situation is now, after (yet another) recession. A while ago I read a book from the early 1990s (just found it, I think it was Promises Betrayed: Waking Up from the American Dream) that was all about the state of the US coming out of the early '90s recession, and the author, Bob Herbert, talked to people around the country trying to get by in the context of different problematic aspects of life in the States. This kind of made me think of that, although what she did was much more immediate -- this was just him talking to people, but many of the stories were similar. It also had chapters on healthcare and insurance and cities in California going bankrupt, that were eerily familiar :/
Another book of Barbara Ehrenreich's that I really enjoyed, was Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America, which is all about the industry/cult of positive thinking in the States. The book had its genesis in her experience of breast cancer, and not feeling supported if her outlook to cancer wasn't relentlessly positive (!), which is a small part of the book, but a huge part of Pink Ribbons (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2035599/) a doco that came out a few years ago in the film festival, that she appeared in.
Anyway, I should stop talking now... :-)

I heard Louise speak a couple of years ago at a NZ Readers and Writers event after only having read a couple of her books and was inspired to read more.



No home help unfortunately but I set the alarm 45 mins early in the morning to read then and don't generally go to sleep until 11.30 so I have a lot of evening reading time also. Reading is my passion.

Now this has got me thinking...just an interesting side line...where and when do we read? I love that you set the alarm early to get in some precious reading time!

I was feeling frustrated by how little I seem to read lately. I decided I needed to come up with a plan. I questioned a friend of mine of whom I'm in complete awe because she regularly gets through several books a week and is always updating her 'read' shelf! Claiming not to be a terribly fast reader she told me her secret is reading on the train everyday. So, I decided I needed a similar window of opportunity and have declared work lunch breaks a chore free zone and now that when I get most of my reading done. It's working a treat so far ;)

Personally,I think the only solution is to take regular reading holidays - visits to some lovely retreat where all you have to do is eat, walk swim and read.(Well, this is in my dream world).

I started Moby Dick a while back on the recommendation of a friend. It is wonderful but I didn't get far with it then for some reason. Must pick it up again.

Maybe I shouldn't admit this... Oh well :-)

I was feeling frustrated by how little I seem to read lately. I decided I needed to come up wi..."
I love reading in bed in the morning...I keep saying to myself...ok I'll just finish this chapter...then just 1 more page etc!!
Working in a Library, does anyone think it would be acceptable to say to one's boss "Sorry I'm so late...but I was reading"??


This shows the value of a good group when we follow up on a fellow reader's recommendation!

Ask a librarian- they're nice people , they tell you things if you ask them

Ask a librarian- they're nice people , they tell you things if you ask ..."
We sometimes tell things even when we aren't ask!!

Maybe I shouldn't admit this... Oh well :-)"
I have just been away every weekend for three months and have found that very little of the housework I was doing is actually required! Brilliant, if your not there it just doesn't need cleaning..... I also read ever night in the spa pool, but I only read withdrawn books as to not do any damage. So I have one going for spa time and one going for when in bed! Sometimes the plots get confused but not often.

Ask a librarian- they're nice people , they tell you things if you ask ..."
:-) I've always thought for some reason that librarians would make good private detectives :-)
Books mentioned in this topic
Promises Betrayed: Waking Up from the American Dream (other topics)Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America (other topics)
Moby-Dick or, The Whale (other topics)
The Sound of Butterflies (other topics)
Dodger (other topics)
The best thing about today's manky, wet weather is that it is perfect reading on the couch weather!
I've just started Truman Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's. I LOVE the movie and had read that the book is great as well, albeit slightly different from the film. Am really enjoying the book so far.
What is everyone else reading?