The Nervous Breakdown discussion

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What are you reading now?

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message 1: by Brad (new)

Brad Listi | 7 comments Mod
Books, magazines, literary publications, etc.


message 2: by Rachel (new)

Rachel | 9 comments Wake Up, Sir by Jonathan Ames.


message 3: by David (new)

David (beatdom) | 2 comments 50 Great Short Stories.


message 4: by Kathryn (new)

Kathryn Magendie (goodreadscomkathrynmagendie) | 3 comments Alice Munro's short story collection "Friends of my Youth."


message 5: by David (new)

David Breithaupt (davidbr1) | 8 comments Gonville by Peter Birkenhead.


message 6: by Lori (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 8 comments Been chewing my way through Agaat.
I created a twitter hashtag to mark my progress and share my thoughts as I go (#agaat), to keep my thoughts straight as I go....


message 7: by Tom (new)

Tom Hansen | 5 comments Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by PK Dick and Lolita


message 8: by David (new)

David Breithaupt (davidbr1) | 8 comments Rameau's Nephew by Diderot. Heady stuff, Dennis had brain muscle.


message 9: by Lori (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 8 comments Going to start Case of the Missing Servant - the author will be joining my group next week to discuss his novels. Gotta get a leg up, so to speak!


message 10: by Marisa (new)

Marisa Atkinson (totesmarisa) One Day by David Nicholls, and I'm completely infatuated with it. I can't wait to read his earlier novel Starter for Ten / A Question of Attraction , but it seems to be out of print. Boo.


message 11: by David (new)

David Breithaupt (davidbr1) | 8 comments I Hotel by Karen Tei Yamashita. A great novel, a chunk of history and several tablespoons of philosophy between two covers. Late 60s history of San Francisco, amazing stuff.


message 12: by Lori (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 8 comments I started Almost Dead: A Novel and love the writing style. it sort of just sucks you in.


message 13: by Susan (new)

Susan Henderson | 1 comments Binnie Klein's Blows to the Head: How Boxing Changed My Mind. I'm loving it!


message 14: by David (new)

David Breithaupt (davidbr1) | 8 comments Just bought a copy of Life & Fate by Vasily Grossman, it's the War & Peace of WWII. My copy is published by the NY Review of Books which has an amazing list of reprints of forgotten books that deserve a new readership. Check them all out.


message 15: by Kerry (new)

Kerry Dunn (kerryanndunn) Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides (finally!)


message 16: by Lori (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 8 comments Just finished Your Presence Is Requested at Suvanto: A Novel, which kind of underwhelmed me.

And just started Fangland: A Novel - which I hope knocks my socks off. I've been dying for some NYC vamp lit.


message 17: by David (new)

David Breithaupt (davidbr1) | 8 comments Tom wrote: "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by PK Dick and Lolita"

I can't get over this combo!


message 18: by Sara (new)

Sara Habein (sara_habein) | 5 comments Recently started Readings by Sven Birkerts (I may not be spelling his last name right). I'm not so sure how I feel about it yet, but I've just begun.

Next up is One Day by David Nicholls.


message 19: by Jorge (new)


message 20: by Mitch (last edited Aug 12, 2010 08:45AM) (new)

Mitch Duckworth (mradiguet) | 2 comments I just started Specimen Days by Michael Cunningham (too soon to tell), and will soon finish Storm Front, first of the Dresden Files novels by Jim Butcher (which I'm enjoying) and just received Glimmer Train 76 in the mail. Does anyone publish a better short story anthology. I have submitted there but have yet to have a story accepted; it remains a goal.


message 21: by Sara (new)

Sara Habein (sara_habein) | 5 comments Specimen Days is actually pretty good, but yes, it does take about the first third of the book to really get into it.


message 22: by Art (new)

Art Edwards | 1 comments Currency by Zoe Zolbrod. Delish!


message 23: by Sara (new)

Sara Habein (sara_habein) | 5 comments I just started Your Presence is Requested at Suvanto by Maile Chapman. Good so far.


message 24: by Irene (new)

Irene Zion (goodreadscomirenezion) | 5 comments I just finished Jennifer Egan's short story collection: Emerald City. It's luscious. Trying to read Kraken, by China Mielville, but having trouble getting into it.
Her Fearful Symmetry creeped me out, but I think I just have something against evil or psycho twin books, because it was well-written. Had the same trouble with I Await Your Reply by Dan Chaon. I didn't know these were evil/psycho twin books before I read them, or I would have avoided them.


message 25: by Lori (new)

Lori (tnbbc) | 8 comments Happy to say that I am ringing in the New Year with my copy of Subversia - by the strangely alluring D.R. Haney! (wink wink, nod nod)


message 26: by Meghan (new)

Meghan | 2 comments Mid-century pulp by Miriam Allen deFord - Xenogenesis. And some of the best cultural criticism ever: The Invisible Dragon: Four Essays on Beauty by Dave Hickey, who I would follow around like a submissive puppy if given the chance.


message 27: by Mitch (last edited Feb 27, 2011 01:53PM) (new)

Mitch Duckworth (mradiguet) | 2 comments Do you love Alice Munro the way I love Alice Munro? I mean, I cannot get enough of her. I just read Too Much Happiness and even though I had read one, maybe two things before (most notably the story, Child's Play a year or two ago in Harper's) she bowled me over again. There beats a wonderfully human heart with more than a little of the divine spark. She is astonishing; she alone is an entire chapter, the one entitled, Why I Love Canada, in the chapbook of my life.

I don't want disappointment in any book, but finishing an Alice Munro s always somewhat disappointing; I never want it to end.

Hoping to avoid letdown, I started Laura Lippman's I'd Know You Anywhere. I've never read her but I had to give this fellow Marylander a shot. The book was number three on Stephen King's favorites of 2010, and like him or not as a writer (I do), the man has great taste. If you doubt that, check out The Best American Short Stories 2007, which he edited. You'll never question him again.

As for Laura L, well: I'm digging it so far! (There is a bad pun there relating to a bad man with a shovel, but it's not worth the stretch).

Next up for me: Tobias Wolff, Our Story Begins. God, I love him. After that, Freedom, by Jonathan Franzen, I believe.

What's next for you?

Happy page turning!


message 28: by Travis (new)

Travis Fortney I am in the middle of a couple of books by Nervous Breakdown authors, actually. All About Lulu by Jonathan Evison, and Slut Lullabies by Gina Frangello. I'm pretty high on the Evison, read West of Here last year and loved it--Lulu is different, to be sure, but still readable and engaging.


message 29: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Umbaugh | 1 comments The Last Chairlift, John Irving. Classic JI! Love it!


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