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Episode Chatter > Episode 238: Inanimate Objects with Courtney

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Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 992 comments Mod
Courtney is back and before we jump into discussion of books we've read and liked recently, we discuss how our reading has changed over time.

Episode link:
http://readingenvy.blogspot.com/2022/...

How has your reading changed over time?


message 2: by Elizabeth☮ (new)

Elizabeth☮  | 268 comments I loved the chat with Courtney. I definitely feel as if my reading has changed in the last few years. I have no problem giving up on a book at any point - I can read two pages and quit or two hundred and stop. No guilt.

I also find that some books just don't speak to me and reading is my joyful place, so I don't want it to feel like work.

As a teacher, I am intrigued by Apple Island. I'm one of the good ones ;)


Nadine in California (nadinekc) | 150 comments Me too. At the end I wished it was a call-in show, I felt like I was in such conversation with you guys!

re: reading classics - when I was in my teens and 20's I loved being buried in a classic (and I'd never DNF a book), but now, in comparison, I'm such an impatient reader! I should test myself by re-reading a classic I loved then, like Middlemarch.....but ugh, it's so long and I'm so shallow!

For mid-century women writers, I have to make a pitch for A Fairly Good Time: with Green Water, Green Sky (specifically, 'A Fairly Good Time') by Mavis Gallant. It was published in 1970, so maybe I'm pushing the timeline, but I loved it. I haven't read any more of her books yet, I think she's known more for being a short story writer. But I loved her loveable unreliable narrator in Fairly Good Time.


Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 992 comments Mod
Nadine in California wrote: "For mid-century women writers, I have to make a pitch for A Fairly Good Time: with Green Water, Green Sky (specifically, 'A Fairly Good Time') by Mavis Gallant. It was published in 1970, so maybe I'm pushing the timeline, but I loved it. I haven't read any more of her books yet, I think she's known more for being a short story writer. But I loved her loveable unreliable narrator in Fairly Good Time. "
Oh thanks, never read this author. I notice that you and Lark read this within two weeks of one another. Coincidence?


message 5: by Dree (new)

Dree | 24 comments I enjoyed this episode, I have been meaning to read The Orchid Thief for some time and just never get to it (yes it is The Library Book author, I am sure I'm not the only one that thought that).

Courtney might like The Plant Messiah: Adventures in Search of the World’s Rarest Species by Carlos Magdalena.


Nadine in California (nadinekc) | 150 comments Jenny (Reading Envy) wrote: "Oh thanks, never read this author. I notice that you and Lark read this within two weeks of one another. Coincidence?"

Looks like I read it 2 weeks earlier, so I hope I was an influence on Lark, since she gave it 5 stars too! Although there's always the possibility that I stole it off her TBR list - I'm always rifling through GR friends' to-read shelves :)


Jenny (Reading Envy) (readingenvy) | 992 comments Mod
Nadine in California wrote: "I'm always rifling through GR friends' to-read shelves :) ..."

So tangent - rifle vs riffle! Saw this today in Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CZSGWBJJMfN/


message 8: by Nadine in California (last edited Jan 29, 2022 11:03AM) (new)

Nadine in California (nadinekc) | 150 comments Jenny (Reading Envy) wrote: "Nadine in California wrote: "I'm always rifling through GR friends' to-read shelves :) ..."

So tangent - rifle vs riffle! Saw this today in Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CZSGWBJJMfN/"


I've always said 'rifle', but now I'm wondering, have I meant 'riffle' all these years? My brain has now cracked a little ;)


Nadine in California (nadinekc) | 150 comments Merriam Webster comes to the rescue of my mental problem!

Rifle, verb:
"to ransack especially with the intent to steal"

riffle:
"to flip cursorily : THUMB"

Turns out my choice of 'rifle' was right - my attitude toward my GR friends' shelves is more theft than thumb :)


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