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What Did You Just Finish?

Soon after reading my first Strout, a review described her style as "lambent" - a word I had to look up. I think the definition "having a light, appealing quality" does her an injustice because the connotation is that there is not much substance. But certainly Strout is an easy read stylistically, while she says much.




Other books by women I've finished recently... (I had a bit of a string of male authored books) Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel. I really liked it actually. Not going on my lists of favourites, but a very very good book. A post-apocalyptic novel set after (and before) a plague wipes out 99% of all humanity and explores the lives of several characters, all linked together by an actor who died on stage on the day of the outbreak. More character study than hard sci-fi.



Nothing like Christie (my only other real contact with British women mystery writers), but enjoyable. I wonder if I would have enjoyed it so much without Carmichael's reading.
One thing I found interesting / frustrating was that often you were presented with only one side of a conversation, with responses to queries or statements, which would seem quite obvious from the replies, but I do wonder if it was like this in the written text, and if so, why it would be presented this way.

I have that book - it's one of my favourites of hers. Flicking through it, I can see a couple of places where there's one person speaking with a lot of gaps in the conversation marked by 3 dots. I would guess she does it to make it immediate (dialogue instead of descriptive summary) without dragging the reader through pages and pages of a minor scene.
If you liked it, Murder Must Advertise is fun, or you could try Strong Poison where Wimsey meets Harriet Vane.

Murder is on my list for the season as an additional book, so I may get to it depending on how I go with my core reads, and how i can fit it in with all my other additional books and library borrowing. If I could get an audiobook I would definitely be getting it, but I am struggling to find audiobooks through my library system this season, and am just glad my husband had previously acquired 3 Raymond Chandler's which I am going to borrow from him.

oh dear :(
I am trying to remember what I liked about it, but I read it early in my GR career, and can't remember.


I enjoyed your review, Elizabeth. I've had this book for years and will definitely be reading it sometime soon!

Thank you. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Eliza's daughter is a fantastic book. It looks at the sorts of characters that are invisibilised by class in Austen's world-view but also shows us a different (and sad) side to the Dashwood sisters. It's a strongly feminist novel. Really horrifying things happen but mostly offstage. It extremely carefully written and seems meticulously researched to me.
I highly recommend it. People who have a true appreciation of Austen as well as people who don't like her should like this. People who read Austen as fluffy romance will probably not like this!
Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I'm running behind on my goal of 30 women authors this year - only 13. But my goal was to read 25 different authors, and there are not repeats in those 13, so on pace for that goal.

I have noticed that Swedish crime capers are immensely detailed and they weave a beautiful story that can span centuries. I'm not sure why Nordic storytellers are so adept at this but I am most impressed. I've been told by several people that they do not read crime fiction by women because it "lacks the gritty adult themes" that male authors must, by default, include in their writing. For awhile in my youth I continued to believe this narrative but that fell away when I read Lackberg. Her beautiful writing style and attention to detail made her novels seem to be on par with any other best selling crime author but she also knew how to weave in the under-current of female emotion and how women relate to crime as the largest group targeted by crime. She is quietly and assuredly feminist and gives her male characters a depth and beauty that many authors never reserve for female characters in crime novels.
In this book I highly recommend the scene where Erica discovers Anna's body. I have always been turned off by how much detail crime authors go into when describing the lovely, but violated and fallen angel, the victim. The further intensity of the autopsy takes on a tone of further indignity to the angelic victim and the lack of reality combined with nearly phallic tropes and the violation of even the most intimate privacy always leaves me soured to the author and to crime drama in general. Camilla did something completely different and related the condition of Anna's body and the relevance of the crime scene to Erica's inner musings and her relationship with the victim. I won't give any spoilers but the conclusion will also surprise you in its cold horror and warm human relationships.
Camilla Lackberg gives you a reality that is harsh and cold that can only be survived by becoming multi-dimensional and faulty human characters in the story of life. She is an amazing authoress as she embraces both her own femininity and the flaws and joys of all humans regardless of gender, race or creed. I highly recommend this book on a wintry night piled in heavy covers!

The GR members who have shelved this as "coming of age" knew more about this novel than did I and it is a perfect description. I don't usually like such stories - are they usually about boys? This is the story of a girl, about 10 or so when the story opens. In high school, she is nerdy and awkward. She longs to know about boys, to know what it is to be admired, to know about sex.
Del's mother, for the times especially (by now post-war), is an enlightened woman.
"There is a change coming I think in the lives of girls and women. Yes. But it is up to us to make it come. All women have had up till now has been their connection with men. All we have had. No more lives of our own, really, than domestic animals. He shall hold thee, when his passion shall have spent its novel force, a little closer than his dog, a little dearer than his horse. Tennyson wrote that. It's true. Was true. You will want to have children, though."Alice Munro has such powers of observation. In this, she gives Del those powers, and we see the world around her. She tells us of her maiden great aunts, of her mother, of a teacher, of her best friend. Stories in the first person can certainly have unreliable narrators, and I had occasional misgivings. The novel is primarily a characterization of Del, and sometimes we don't know - and can't tell - the truth about ourselves. Perhaps not all of Del's observations are accurate, but for the most part they felt true.
This is said to be "autobiographical in form but not in fact." This, her only novel, helps us see the well from which she finds her stories. It's hard not to like Alice Munro - another 5-stars.

The GR members who have shelved this as "coming of age" knew more about this novel than did I and it is a perfect description. I ..."
Sigh, thanks. My lunch break library book stack is going to be larger now that I want to pick this one up as well.. ;)

I've just finished reading Tara Road by Maeve Binchy. It's the second book I've read by this writer as I had read Circle of Friends before and I have to say that I really loved the book! For some reason I kept thinking it was set in Dublin in the 1960s but that's maybe just because Circle of Friends was set in the 50s....... I loved the way she portrays her protagonist and the way she describes life in Dublin, though I'm aware that Irish friendliness may be a little idealized. Has anyone read it? Have you seen the film? I was wondering whether it would be worth watching or if it would spoil my idea of the characters and settings......
By for now!!!!!




I couldn't believe how much she managed to articulate in such a tiny piece! I've gone back to this book many, many times and continually search out Adichie's work.

I've just finished reading Tara Road by Maeve Binchy. It's the second book I've read by this writer as I had read Circle of Friends before and I have to say that I really loved the bo..."
I also enjoy Maeve Binchy. She may never win literary prizes but she has insights into human nature and often a sense of humor, which I always appreciate.

I couldn't belie..."
I'm new to her. I first heard her TED talk on the danger of the single narrative earlier this year. I loved it. I am looking forward to reading more. I've also been passing that book around, its just so good.

Maeve Binchy died a few years ago.


I liked it although I wished the end was "more". It's a historical fiction book.I think it's a book about women, their choices or lack thereof. Slavery, family, tradition, sacrifice, love, forgiveness, and hope. It makes one think about how our choices and behaviour bring consequences that would affect more than just oneself.

I liked it although I wished the end was "more". It's a historical fiction book.I think it's a book about women, their choices or lack thereof..."
I read it a couple of months ago. I gave it three stars because I wasn't entirely happy with it. I posted my review on goodreads
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I couldn't belie..."
I love love LOVE Adichie. After picking up her novel, Americanah, and finishing it in 2 weeks (pretty good achievement considering a full-time job with overtime) I've been planning on going through the rest of her published works.


E. Nesbit was the forerunner of J.K. Rowling. I grew up with her books which may be a little dated now (in the roles of boys vs girls, for instance) but generally hold up well 100 years after publication.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... and on my website at www.tamaraaghajaffar.com




I enjoyed the book and would definitely recommend to anyone looking for a Black female author to read about.



I liked all of them on audio. The narrator Robert Glennister is excellent. I don't usually read modern mysteries like this with violence and gore (I prefer when someone keels over prettily in an English vicarage) but Strike & Robin are such great characters. You get to know more about each of them as the series goes on. The whodunnit part of mysteries is always the least interesting part to me, and I often can't remember who turns out to be the villain or why. But I'll remember the characters and relationships. I like complex characters who develop during the series and an interesting setting. In The Silkworm Rowling gets to portray the world of literary celebrities, editors, etc, which she obviously knows herself.


Recently, I came across an author I didn't know, Lisa Tucker. I just finished listening (reading) Promised World. The main characters are a set of fraternal twins, one male and one female. The bond is intact as the two faced a troubled childhood that is left behind after an event that will alter their lifetimes.
Lila and Billy continue to have an bond over the years that somewhat alienate their spouses and offspring. The secrets they share are not privy to their loved ones. It's even more complicated as Lila has a hazy memory of their childhood and Billy is her champion and historian as the years go by.
But, the odd balance the twins share is tragically altered when Billy perishes by an event orchestrated by him to be killed. "Suicide by cops" is more accurate.
Lila begins to unravel and their hazy past must be clarified so Lila and her niece, Pearl and William, her nephew can lived in a promised world.
Books mentioned in this topic
Send Flowers (other topics)Needle and Bone (other topics)
Men Who Hate Women (other topics)
The Inheritance (other topics)
The Inheritance (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Emily Buchanan (other topics)Tonya Mitchell (other topics)
Laura Bates (other topics)
Ilona Andrews (other topics)
Ilona Andrews (other topics)
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Because it's always a bit hard to judge the quality of a book before you finish it (unless it's truly awful!), this thread is for telling us your thoughts once you're done. Feel free use this thread for making recommendations (or warnings!), leaving mini-reviews/links to your main reviews, and generally just discussing what you've been reading and how you enjoyed it.
And if you want to get a bit more in detail about a specific book/author/series, feel free to create a specially dedicated thread for it in this 'book discussion' subforum too.