Another Book Thread :)

FourAM

Cathlete
OK I love that people love to talk about the books they are reading. I have a running list from the thread I just came from about the whole trip to Europe and ereader issue.
Right now I am reading The Apothecary's Daughter (YA i am pretty sure and a period piece too. My favorite)

I would love to keep my list going. What are you guys reading today?

Rachel:D:D:D:D:D
 
I just finished The Witch's Trilogy about a witch trial in Germany in the 1500s. The author wrote it after discovering that one of her ancestors was accused of witch craft not once, but twice. I also finished The Commoner, a book about the Japanese Imperial family.

I am trying to read The Faro's Daughter, but am having a hard time getting into it. In the past when I've had books that are hard to get into, I would stick with it anyway....but these days I just don't have the patience any more with books like that. If it doesn't interest me within the first 100 pages or so, I'm done. I have never been able to finish Moby Dick (sheer torture) or Don Quixote (utterly stupid characters). I loved Le Miserables.

I have two books on my table right now that are next in line: The Witch's Daughter and The Castings trilogy.

I read some sci-fi, but I love historical fiction. I don't real a lot of the most popular authors right now because many of their books start to sound alike after a while. I loved The Witching Hour by Anne Rice, but some of her most recent books have been duds. Stephen King went through a period like that too, but his more recent one like, Duma Key, and The Dome were really good.

If you get a chance, you should read The Highlander Series by Diana Gabaldon. There are 6 or 7 very thick books in that series, and they are all great.
 
I am currently reading The Risk Pool by Richard Russo. I'm lovin' it.

Recent reads:

Outcast - Sadie Jones
We Need to Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver
Just Kids - Patti Smith
 
I am also reading The Apothecary's Daughter. It isn't my usual read but it was a free ebook from Barnes and Noble and I am really enjoying it. Not sure what my next one will be. I also second the Diana Gabaldon series. Wish I had had my Ipad when I read them though. At 1000 pages plus they get heavy to hold after a while :).

Tracy
 
It is funny how everyone loves the Outlander series! Before my DH got me the kindle for Christmas, my friend and I bought all the books. I have read the first one but was letting her and her mother get through the first and second before I start again since I am enjoying my Kindle so much right now! I now am having thoughts of just getting them on the kindle too Tracy...They are pretty heavy and I am getting spoiled. lol I got The Apothecary's Daughter for free too and it turned out good for a freebee.;)

Last Tango, I have read The WItch Chronicles too by Anne Rice and loved them. Have you read the shape shifter books by Alice Borchardt. I think they start with The Silver Wolf...there are 3 in the series and I liked them too. Those are my kind of reads too. I have to agree the books from Anne Rice recently have not been anything that I have enjoyed.

These are some on my sample list...has anyone read any?

The Hangmans DAughter
The Quickening Maze
The Boxcar Kid
Fireflies in December

As you can see I am all over the place when it comes to subject.
 
Too many good suggestions here that I'll have to check out.

I forgot that the series by Diana Gabaldon is the Outlander series, not the Highlander series...but anyone who has read it knows what I mean!!!

I will have to see if I can find the shape shifter series. I will see about The Apothecary's daughter. The book I'm trying to read right now is my holding my attention.
 
I've been so into reading lately with my Kindle too! I love the freebies!

Latest reads:

One Day by David Nicholls. It's a great chick lit book about a relationship of 2 people over the course of 20 years. Surprise ending. It's going to be a movie with Anne Hathaway soon. I got it for $5 at amazon. they have a bunch of best sellers for $5 special.

Fireflies In December. I did read it! It was a Kindle freebie. I did like it and thought it was a great read for free.

Right now I'm reading, Skipped Parts, by Tim Sandlin. It was a Kindle freebie. It's really good! Written in the eyes of a 13 yr old boy, alot like Catcher in the Rye style of writing and some really interesting experiences for his unconventional life.

I have yet to read The Hangman's Daughter, which I got for $2.99 on Kindle. Sounds really interesting. ... I was eyeing The Apothecary's Daughter, what is it about?
 
I just started The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. I haven't gotten very far yet but I really liked the movies.

I got a Sony Ereader for Christmas and read the Hunger Games Trilogy on it within a week. These books are more for teen/young adults but I really enjoyed them.

I read the Outlander books (except the last one) as they came out and loved the first four books but I didn't enjoy the later ones as much. Some of the characters started to get on my nerves, so after The Fiery Cross I decided not to bother getting A Breath of Snow and Ashes until it came out in paperback. I haven't even bothered with the latest one.
 
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I just finished The Help which was excellent! I am starting The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo now. I appreciate all of the tips here. I don't get to read as often as I'd like, but this thread will be good to refer back to!

Pam
 
I haven't been reading that much lately, one I've been thinking about rereading is a historical novel, Twilight at Little Round Top by Glenn W. LaFantsie it reads like the account of someone who was there, after visiting Gettysburg Battlefields, Cyclorama & Museum a while back, I picked it up, very good read if you like that sort of thing.

:)
 
Has anybody else read Room? I read it over the weekend, it was quick, but good. I'm going to look for other titles by that author.

I'm also reading The Slap. Very interesting read.

anne
 
I just finished The Apothecary's Daughter. (YA)
It is set in England, (I think in the 1800's). The story revolves around a family named the Haswells and particularly about the daughter , Lilly. She was left by her mother with her father who is the local Apothecary. Although she knows he needs her she does not want to spend the rest of her life in an Apothecary shop.
It is a very easy read and if you like that time period, you might like it.
Hope that helped. I have not written a book report in 15 yrs so I think I have forgotten how to summaize without giving too much away. Sorry if it is too vague.
 
Funny, I just pulled The Alchemist's Daughter of the library shelf yesterday on a whim. Can't wait to dive in.

I just finished Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand. The best book I've read this year, tragic and stunning. Highly recommened picking it up. I'm sure the movie will be right behind this one.

I'm just about finished reading Little Bee, I really wanted to like this story, but can't connect with the characters.

Edited, as I just noticed it is not the same book. Alchemist/Apothocary, very different indeed. : )
 
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Someone also suggested Unbroken to me the other day.

I am currently reading (a physical book) The Witch's Daughter. I'm not far into it, but I can tell it's going to be good. It is printed with a tiny font, so my eyes are really having to pay attention....lots of word on the page.

I broke down yesterday and bought a pre-certified Nook for my trip to Europe at the end of March. (I was discussing a book problem in another thread) I really wanted the Sony Daily Edition, but I really couldn't justify dropping another $150 above what the other ereaders cost....I am not going to use this Nook on a regular basis; I'll mainly use it when I can't take my iPad. I got a pre-certified ( pre-owned I guess) Nook wifi/3G for less than the cost of a brand new Wifi only Nook. I love the bigger screen on the Sony, and the touch pad capabilities, but at $300...I have plane tickets to buy, not to mention food while I'm over there, so I need to conserve where possible.
 
I am on book three of the Earth's Children series - The Mammoth Hunters. The first two books - The Clan of the Cave Bear and The Valley of Horses were excellent. I even found the move of the first one from the library. Loved it.

I want to be Ayla :)
 
Currently reading "The Three Junes" by Julia Glass, "The Lonely Polygamist" by Brady Udall and the graphic novel "Fun Home" by Alison Bechdel. Loving all three.

Junes is excellent writing, great characterization, love the use of language, a gifted writer. I keep turning pages when I should be putting out the light at night.

Polygamist is sad, poignant, hilarious, the story of a very large family told through perspectives of the father, a most reluctant polygamist who can't cope with it all, one of his lonely, misunderstood sons who misses his own mother and needs some loving and one of the wives who had hoped for better than this and really just wants a child of her own, one who might survive her miscarriages and pregnancies. It is a very interesting book and it engages you even if you are a rabid anti-polygamist. There is something to be learned by reading about things we hate on principle and the book is about real people muddling their way through this experience, not about politics. Udall is a talented writer.

Fun Home is an autobiographical look at Alison and her relationship with her father. She tells the story of growing up with an emotionally distant father who passed as heterosexual and she doesn't find out from her mother that he is gay until she herself comes out to her parents. She navigates the emotions she went through as a child and teen, chafing against her father's attempts to make her turn out straight. And did I mention that her father was an English teacher besotted with the literary greats who saw himself as a misunderstood Gatsby, loved to restore their Victorian mansion and also ran a funeral home? They called the funeral home The Fun Home. So, did her father die of negligence while crossing the road or did he wilfully step in front of the truck? And if it were suicide, what would that mean for Alison's own incipient sense of self and homosexuality?

All three are excellent books. Recommended!

Clare
 
I love book threads!

I'm currently reading Hotel On The Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford for my book group, and the sixth in the J.D. Robb In Death series called Vengeance in Death for escapism.

Hotel is an interesting story about the only two Asian students in an all-Caucasian school in the 1940s. The boy is Chinese and the girl is Japanese, and they become best friends. Despite being born in the U.S., they are both outcasts at school. The story is told from the perspective of the boy, both as a boy and as a 56-year old man. The boy's parents are old-fashioned and traditional and hate the Japanese. The girl's parents are modern and open-minded, and, despite being born in the U.S. and being American citizens, are sent to internment camps during the war. Perfect book group book.

I've read a lot of good books in the last year, but the best one was Case Histories by Kate Atkinson, recommended to me by Maddiesmum. Murder mystery elevated to the level of literature. Atkinson is one of the best writers I have ever read. Thank you, Clare!
 
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I have Case Histories on my bedside table, I'll be starting it as soon as I finish The Slap. I'm looking forward to reading it. Thanks for the recommendation, Clare!

anne
 

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