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August 2025 Reading Discussion
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Robin P, Orbicular Mod
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Aug 01, 2025 07:36AM

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Give the Boys a Great Big Hand – Ed McBain – 3***
First published in 1960, this is book number eleven in the 87th Precinct mystery series, and starts with the discovery of a severed hand in a tote bag. It’s a classic police procedural mystery that held my interest throughout. There are several red herrings (both for the cops and for the reader), but the boys of the 87th precinct are nothing if not tenacious. They WILL get the guy or gal responsible.
LINK to my full review


Leftover from last month:
The Book of Gutsy Women: Favorite Stories of Courage and Resilience - great short essays. Better read in short bursts.
The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender -
Right now I’m juggling some really good books:
Middlesex is incredible. It’s very long, and the audio narration is very energetic, so I’m spreading it out.
My Real Children by Jo Walton is an alternate lives book - like the firm Sliding Doors. This would be perfect for a prompt about a fork on the road (with both paths), or the road not taken.
Leaving the Witness: Exiting a Religion and Finding a Life -memoir set in China
The River Has Roots - gorgeous prose
Planned:
Mrs. Pollifax and the Hong Kong Buddha
Real Americans
Sounds Like Love
Prophet Song


The Soul Of an Octopus – Sy Montgomery – 4.5**** (rounded up)
Subtitle: A Surprising Exploration Into the Wonder of Consciousness. Montgomery spent a year volunteering at the New England Aquarium to study and learn about octopuses. This is her memoir of that time, and it’s marvelous!
LINK to my full review

I am currently reading the second Stormlight Archive book by Brandon Sanderson. Each of these darn books is over 1000 pages. What have I gotten myself into?! LOL. My husband and oldest kiddo are also both reading the series, so that's fun. My husband is ahead of us, and he told me, "Thanks for letting me get so far ahead, so you won't catch up as quickly!" LOL. I'm also reading a book I got in Yellowstone about women of the early 20th century in Yellowstone.

Finished:
* The Colony by Annika Norlin - LOVED it
* Neighbours: The Story of a Murder by Lília Momplé
* The Invention of Morel by Adolfo Bioy Casares
Currently reading:
* Great Big Beautiful Life- great storyline ruined by the romance part of it (doesn't help that I'm listening to it in the car and I swear it gets steamy every time I'm stopped at a red light!! I realize I'm not the intended audience...)
* Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck
Rest of schedule:
* Hai kur mamashu chis: I want to tell you a story by Cristina Zarraga
* Sucker Punch: Essays by Scaachi Koul
* bell hooks: The Last Interview: and Other Conversations by bell hooks
* Glorious Boy by Aimee Liu


The Secret Book and Scone Society – Ellery Adams – 2.5**
One of my book club buddies suggested this for our group so I re-read it. My opinion didn’t change much, though I did enjoy the discussion. The relationships between the four friends stood out more. But I also see that there is another secret that hasn’t been revealed. A ploy that I view as “forcing” readers to continue the series, and one that I hate.
LINK to my full review

Lol, the most racist or antisemitic parts of books always pop up at red lights, too! I've had to roll up windows before!

1, Shōgun, Part 1 - The story is very engaging and gives you both perspectives - European and Japanese.
2. It Rhymes With Takei - Graphic novel memoir which includes LGBTQ+ rights history, which has been a very important focus of Takei's life.
3. Same Bed Different Dreams by Ed Park - I really enjoyed it, while learning a lot about Korean historical figures. Although, there is an underlying question throughout the book of "what is history?" and it's not always clear what is historical and what is revisionist history as part of the novel. Structure-wise, it is a challenging book and has been compared to Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon. It took me ~160 pages to really feel invested in the book and understand what it was doing. After that, I flew through it and, after finishing it, I wanted to read it again!
Currently reading:
1.A Confederacy of Dunces - The audio with the New Orleans accents is very good! I'm doing a combo of audio and print since I have a hard time following audiobooks.
2. The Bullet That Missed
3. The Crying of Lot 49


Sun Dog Memory – Doug Armstrong – 3.5***
A Depression-era family saga full of lies, treachery and vengeance. Armstrong goes back and forth in time from 1930 to 1911. We learn how the Albrights came to the Kansas homestead and their efforts to make a go of it, and how their fate becomes intricately linked to that of the town’s wealthy railroad executives. There’s a lot of intrigue here and the reader is just as clueless as the main character, Jed. I’m not sure that I ever figured out who was really behind all the treachery, and while I thought the family saga had a satisfactory resolution, the epilogue threw me for a loop.
LINK to my full review

1. Finish Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All. This is an 875 page small print mass market book. I have 60 pages to go.
2. Finish Shaman, the second book of the same title for PopSugar. This one is 519 pages.
Both are books I own and so frequently take a back seat to library books with due dates.
Pam wrote: "My August plans are to finish Shōgun: Volume 1 and Same Bed Different Dreams and try to listen to the audiobook Isola by [author:Allegra Goodman|1..."
I notice you didn't update Isola... I started it the other day because she's the headliner for my city's lit fest next week and I'm not feeling it..
I notice you didn't update Isola... I started it the other day because she's the headliner for my city's lit fest next week and I'm not feeling it..
Jennifer W wrote: "GailW wrote: "(doesn't help that I'm listening to it in the car and I swear it gets steamy every time I'm stopped at a red light!!..."
Lol, the most racist or antisemitic parts of books always pop..."
I just finished Moby-Dick or, The Whale and was stopped at the McD's drive through on the chapter that introduces Pip and the narrator kept saying/yelling the N-word. Oh, that was interesting.
Lol, the most racist or antisemitic parts of books always pop..."
I just finished Moby-Dick or, The Whale and was stopped at the McD's drive through on the chapter that introduces Pip and the narrator kept saying/yelling the N-word. Oh, that was interesting.

Pam wrote: "Pamela - I didn’t have time to get to Isola. I have the print edition checked out but am reading something else. I’m trying to not read too many books at one time! It still looks interesting to me."
I might give it a couple more evenings
I might give it a couple more evenings


A Certain Age – Beatriz Williams – 3***
Williams gives us a novel of romance, family secrets, and scandal in New York Society, set during the Roaring Twenties. The title refers to two things: the age of the era in American society, and a woman of “a certain age.” Williams definitely gives the reader a sense of the era … speakeasies, flappers, bathtub gin, horse races, etc. I saw through the murder mystery pretty quickly, but it held my attention throughout.
LINK to my full review

Books mentioned in this topic
Barnaby Rudge (other topics)Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All (other topics)
A Certain Age (other topics)
Moby-Dick or, The Whale (other topics)
Shōgun: Volume 1 (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ed Park (other topics)Thomas Pynchon (other topics)
Cristina Zarraga (other topics)
Annika Norlin (other topics)
Adolfo Bioy Casares (other topics)
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