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archives > August 2011 - What are you reading?

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message 1: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments Tell us what you are reading this month.


message 2: by Bill, Moderator (last edited Aug 02, 2011 08:53AM) (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
As I said in another topic, I'm finishing up The Picture of Dorian Gray: An Annotated and Uncensored Edition.

Next Up The Handmaid's Tale


message 3: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I am still reading Until Thy Wrath Be Past and planning on starting Sister next!


message 4: by Allen (new)

Allen Kelley (apolloallyn) | 3 comments I'm finishing up on a re-read of the Harry Potter series then onto Rules of Civility


message 5: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments Right now I'm reading I Am Not Myself These Days A Memoir (P.S.) by Josh Kilmer-Purcell

Next up is The Cutting Room by Louise Welsh The Gates by John Connolly


message 6: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments I forgot to mention I'm listening to Beauty Queens by Libba Bray


message 7: by Wyndslash (last edited Aug 02, 2011 08:37PM) (new)

Wyndslash | 75 comments Currently reading Traitor's Moon (Nightrunner, #3) by Lynn Flewelling . I'm almost ashamed to put it on my m/m shelf, as most of the books there are of the amateur sort.


message 8: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I really liked the Gates, Nancy!!!!


message 9: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I am listening to A Death in Summer I love the Benjamin Black Quirk mystery series. This is the newest. I always pick them up when they come out. The audio is quite nice with the light Irish lilt.


message 10: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments Wyndslash wrote: "Currently reading Traitor's Moon (Nightrunner, #3) by Lynn Flewelling. I'm almost ashamed to put it on my m/m shelf, as most of the books there are of the amateur sort."

I loved this series! Stalking Darkness is my favorite so far.


message 11: by Wyndslash (new)

Wyndslash | 75 comments Nancy wrote: "Wyndslash wrote: "Currently reading Traitor's Moon (Nightrunner, #3) by Lynn Flewelling. I'm almost ashamed to put it on my m/m shelf, as most of the books there are of the amateur sort."

I loved this series! [book..."


Yeah, I really enjoyed that too :) especially how Seregil and Alec's relationship developed :)


message 12: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I just started The Handmaid's Tale last night.


message 13: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments Doug wrote: "I really liked the Gates, Nancy!!!!"

I'm looking forward to reading it, Doug. It seems to have some mixed reviews among my friends here.

I'm really loving I Am Not Myself These Days A Memoir (P.S.) by Josh Kilmer-Purcell . It's funny, sad, and makes me alternate between wanting to spank and hug the wild and crazy Josh and Jack. Josh's story is so intimate, and despite the fact that his life is nothing like my own, even if we may have shared a few similar experiences, I care deeply about what happens to him and Jack.

I've never seen The Fabulous Beekman Boys, but this story is now making me curious about the show.


message 14: by Wyndslash (new)

Wyndslash | 75 comments Nancy wrote: "Doug wrote: "I really liked the Gates, Nancy!!!!"

I'm looking forward to reading it, Doug. It seems to have some mixed reviews among my friends here.

I'm really loving [bookcover:I Am Not Myself..."


i just got that from the sale too :D


message 15: by Erika (new)

Erika Nerdypants (serenity1066) | 4 comments Right now, the trashy, "Just Desserts: The Unauthorized Biography of Martha Stewart". Next up: "Twelve Weeks in Summer" by June Callwood and "The Bluest Eye" by Toni Morrison.


message 16: by Wyndslash (new)

Wyndslash | 75 comments right now reading Shadows Return (Nightrunner, #4) by Lynn Flewelling

Can't read the whole day as I would have liked though, because of the intrusion of real life (bah!)


message 17: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I started Sister and it is pretty good so far, I am on page 100. Pretty solid mystery, something has happened that we know about but are fuzzy on the details, and as the one sister narrates, we are slowly getting the story. I like books that slowly unfold in this fashion so I am liking it. I think it will make a great summer read. It is becoming more popular at my library. I had to wait for my copy to arrive.


message 18: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I finished The Handmaid's Tale at about 1 AM last nite. A tale on many levels, I found it a scary story, seemingly so topical.

As is my wont no matter the time, I started Normal Miguel just after, just 10 pages or so. The lyrical prose is a pleasure to hear.


message 19: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I finished A Death in Summer and I liked the story, and I liked the person reading it. I think Benjamin Black does well with characters. And his mysteries are not terribly long, or drawn out. You get a solid mystery that doesn't take that long to read.


message 20: by Sergey (new)

Sergey (zvukvnochi) i am discovering the wonderful poetry of lermontov lately. such lyricism, alas that he died so young!


message 21: by B.L. (new)

B.L. Newport (blnewport) | 20 comments I'm reading "Perdido Street Station" by China Mieville... I've been reading it since the end of June. It's a bit heavy in detail for me despite the flow of the work. At some points I feel like I'm being overwhelmed by the detail and then I get a little bit of action that keeps my attention. I'll probably finish reading it by October...LOL!


message 22: by Steven (last edited Aug 10, 2011 12:05AM) (new)

Steven (goodreadscomstevenkerry) I'm reading both Maupin's "Further Tales of the City,"(which is like eating Yoplait) and Dickens' "David Copperfield," (which, given its heft, I may be reading for the next nine months!)


message 23: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I finished Normal Miguel and still processing it, a good sign. One one level it introduces me to an unknown are—rural Mexico. The protagonist grows in the book in a realistic way, often a jerk, he learns how to live and actualize.

For pure escapism (life's been tough), I started The Da Vinci Code last nite.


message 24: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Steven wrote: "I'm reading both Maupin's "Further Tales of the City,"(which is like eating Yoplait) and Dickens' "David Copperfield," (which, given its heft, I may be reading for the next nine months!)"

I have Tales of the City, but have not gotten around to reading Maupin. How does the marvelous TV Miniseries compare to the books. Generally, I think books always better.


message 25: by Steven (new)

Steven (goodreadscomstevenkerry) As television miniseries go, my recollection is that it compared favorably to the books in this case. I usually am disappointed by the movies they make out of good books. The Tales series is the reading equivalent of comfort food. It had a few twists that were intriguing and maybe even "shocking" when the miniseries came out, but are mild by today's standards. The joy is in the dialogue,characters, and going back to a simpler era; it's fun stuff.


message 26: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I am about to start Chew: Taster's Choice a graphic novel about an FBI agent who apparently can eat things (even people) and get psychic impressions that help him solve cases.

I just finished Daytripper another graphic novel written by Brazillian twins that is pretty good, about different stages in a man's life.


message 27: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I'm currently reading The Da Vinci Code and am finding it very entertaining. I did not pay much attention when it was a bestseller, but suspect it provoked a lot of controversy, both religious and feminist. It seems to have been canned by a low of reviewers, I suspect because their beliefs are challenged. But it is fun! Chill people.

History or fantasy. That is the question. Thing is for stuff I do know about, there's a lot of evidence for...


message 28: by Tierney (new)

Tierney Green | 6 comments I'm reading a lot...I'm currently reading It's Only a Movie: Reel Life Adventures of a Film Obsessive; The Penguin History of Europe: Volume 1: Classical Europe; The City & The City and Interview with the Vampire.
Will be done with those in a few days and on to the next lot!


message 29: by K (new)

K I'm on the HP series roll right now. Just finished Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince.Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.

Yesterday I downloaded and started It Could Be Worse, You Could Be Me.


message 30: by Geoff (new)

Geoff (geoffwhaley) I'm reading Aldous Huxley's Brave New World. Give me a utopian/dystopian fantasy any day and I'll be happy :)


message 31: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments I just finished The Gates by John Connolly which was a lot of fun!

Now listening to We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson and reading The Cutting Room by Louise Welsh .


message 32: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I am reading To Timbuktu: Nine Countries, Two People, One True Story because I have to read it for work to facilitate a reading group. It is over 500 pages long and I am finding it incredibly boring. I am agonizing picking it up again.

So, I am spending my time actually reading Ex Machina (Volume 1): The First Hundred Days and Y: The Last Man Vol. 1: Unmanned to round things out!


message 33: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Last nite I started The Phoenix by Ruth Sims. She is a master of readability and characterization.


message 34: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I just added Improv Handbook: The Ultimate Guide to Improvising in Theatre, Comedy, and Beyond to my to-read pile. Sometimes I forget that we can read non-fiction, too! And I so want to be funny. Well, funnier.


message 35: by Tom (new)

Tom | 95 comments I just finished reading A Prayer for Owen Meany, which I found very moving and beautifully written. (I just bought his latest Last Night in Twisted River on a trip to the states.)

Currently reading an historical fiction about Henry II and Eleanor of Acquitaine, who I find to be such an interesting figure: Devil's Brood. Not the best writing, but interesting history and a good escape.

Might reread Of Human Bondage next or the aforementioned new John Irving next.


message 36: by Sergey (new)

Sergey (zvukvnochi) That's a great read, Matt.


message 37: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments There is a new film of that Matt, that is from the BBC that looks quite good.


message 38: by S.J.D. (new)

S.J.D. Peterson (sjdpeterson) | 3 comments I tried reading The 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade I just couldn't finish it...maybe one day now I'm reading The Viking World by Edited by Stefan Brink


message 39: by Sergey (new)

Sergey (zvukvnochi) finished О суббота! (Проза еврейской жизни) by Dina Kalinovskaya О суббота! this evening. such a tragic read; i read it slowly, partly because the melancholy of the prose was too rich, too depressing.

started Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk Fight Club.


message 40: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I've been reading novels recommended on the Literary Horror group. I just finished Verland: The Transformation.

Verland is the 1st vampire book I really liked and is provoking unexpected thought.

I just started an Ecofiction: Blue Wolf: An Alix Thorssen Mystery


message 41: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments I am on to the graphic novel The Walking Dead! And Batwoman! (who incidentally is a lesbian, and Rachel Maddow wrote the intro to the graphic novel. How cool is that?)


message 42: by Collin (new)

Collin Kelley | 29 comments Just finished Untold Story: A Novel by Monica Ali. It's about Princess Diana faking her death and moving to America with the help of her private secretary, Lawrence. A fascinating bit of "what if" and alternate history. Great details, actually moving in parts and winds up being a little bit of thriller at the end as a paparazzi photographer discovers she's still alive and pursues her.


message 43: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Kernos wrote: "...I just started an Ecofiction: Blue Wolf: An Alix Thorssen Mystery "

I decided to put this aside, as I was feeling the need to get lost in a space opera, so started Leviathan Wakes by James S. A. Corey. It' just what I need! Alas, it's the 1st book of a series. I hate waiting.


message 44: by Dan (new)

Dan (homedoggieo) Trying to squeeze Fahrenheit 451 in before the month ends.


message 45: by Collin (new)

Collin Kelley | 29 comments Fahrenheit 451, Dandelion Wine, Martian Chronicles and The October Country are my favorites by Bradbury.


message 46: by Doug (new)

Doug Beatty | 432 comments YOu have a few days yet! I am in the process of rereading Watchmen and I can see why it is still a graphic novel classic, and I really want to read Fables: Legends in Exile cuz a coworker just let me know about it and it looks like a good series.


message 47: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Doug wrote: "YOu have a few days yet! I am in the process of rereading Watchmen and I can see why it is still a graphic novel classic..."

I've been wanting to do The Absolute Sandman in toto, all at once, but there is so much and so much waiting to be read.

I just finished Leviathan Wakes. It's fun though a bit too obviously derivative. How long will I have to wait for the complete series? Do I have enough time left?

I started The Magician King last nite.


message 48: by Sabrina (new)

Sabrina (tonyashall) Hello,

My name is Sabrina and I am new to the group. I am currently reading The Way We Live Now. I was really hoping to have some time to really tackle this while Irene was doing her thing. However, I got called into work and will probably be here until Tuesday.

Oh well. That's the great thing about books. They tend to age well.

Happy Reading!


message 49: by Jeffrey (new)

Jeffrey Luscombe (jeffreyluscombe) | 7 comments Just finished Alan Hollinghurst's new novel, The Stranger's Child (Brilliant!) and now moved on to Margaret Atwood's The Year of the Flood.


message 50: by Rhonda (new)

Rhonda | 1 comments Wendy and the Lost Boys by Julie Salamon

Wendy Wasserstein, throughout her life was a friend to the gay community. This biography is so touching and sad because it describes her private world that she kept hidden from the public.
From a review:“Through drama she told many truths. In personal essays, drawn from her life, she freely reconfigured events, as though she were writing fiction. She was as covert as a spy, parceling out information to a host of confidants, allowing each of them to believe that he or she alone had access to the inner sanctum
I just saw a giveaway at new york journal of books. If you can't buy it, try to win it, it's worth it. here's the giveaway link:
http://www.nyjournalofbooks.com/givea...


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