Glens Falls (NY) Online Book Discussion Group discussion
ABOUT BOOKS AND READING
>
What are U reading these days? (PART SIX) (2010)

I wrote the following in my review:
========================================================
I almost stopped reading this book because it saddened me. However, I decided to continue reading because it's a selection of our library's book discussion group. The theme is a serious and worthy one. As for the story, the suspense toward the end became compelling.
The book deals with poor farmers in Mississippi, their problems and the relationships between blacks and whites during the 1940s. In alternating chapters, each character tells his/her side of the story.
The writing style is straight-forward without flourishes, but there are some excellent similes.
An example:
p.183 - "Swiss Alps: ...and the snow so thick and soft that when you fell it was like sinking into a featherbed."
Like so many books, in order for one to truly realize what it's about, the story has to be read. Summaries and descriptions cannot do it justice and may give a misleading impression.
Because of the lasting impact of the story and the writing, I'm giving this book 4 stars. If I were rating only how I enjoyed it, I would give it just 3 stars. Sometimes enjoyment is only a part of the criteria.
=========================================================
Below is the link to the above review:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

*About the obscure start of the book, I plowed through it, not understanding at all what the narrator was trying to say. I figured things would become clear sooner or later. The meaning is slowly starting to make sense, but not entirely. It's the well-drawn characters which are keeping me reading.


Yes, Nina, it's nice to learn something new while at the same enjoying a story.
I haven't read Close Range: Wyoming Stories (1999) by Annie Proulx. I read her book, The Shipping News (1993). I remember reading somewhere that she's noted for her spare prose. I can't say I enjoyed her prose, but the story was a good one.
In the movie adaptation of "The Shipping News"(2001), I thought Kevin Spacey was miscast in the part of Quoyle. At least he didn't fit the description in the book. He was supposed to be homely, not good-looking at all. That fact had a great deal to do with the way story went.

The book I won is signed copy of The Hudson: A History by Tom Lewis, a historian (GR lists 24 books) and a professor of English at Skidmore College.
To me, this is a lovely coincidence because my first date with my husband back in 1959 was when he took me water-skiing on the Hudson River near the Tappan Zee Bridge in Tarrytown, NY. Also, since we recently celebrated our 50th Anniversary (of our marriage in 1960), this book is a perfect memento.

(quoted from Wikipedia):
For further info, see:
Also see this group's topic:
"_The Last of the Mohicans_ by James Fenimore Cooper (the book that made Glens Falls famous)"
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/7...

The book I won is signed copy of The Hudson: A History by Tom Lewis, a historian (GR ..."
Small world category: I know Tom Lewis very well. His daughter and my youngest son were in theater together way back when.
He's a great guy.

The book I won is signed copy of The Hudson: A History by [author:To..."Sometimes life deals you a good day and that sounds like one and to get a new book free, to boot. Congratulations. nina

Yes, Katherine. It IS a small world! :) That's terrific. Please give him my compliments.
At the Amazon website, Booklist says: "Spanning armies and aesthetics, the versatile, fluid Lewis writes with affection for the river and its history." Having boated for years on the Hudson River, we feel that affection too.

Thank you, Nina! Yes, it's nice to have good days. Today is another one. The temperature hovered near 60 today... with sunshine. What a great feeling!



As we are starting our busy season, I come home with my eyes very tired from the computer. I usually manage to read a little just before bed.
I love my days off and after supper, I can usually find a longer chunk of reading time. Sunday evening I rountinely read for about two hours after supper, making that one of my favorite times.

One of the best parts of reading a good book is having it to look forward to.
"As Daddy said, life is 95 percent anticipation."
-Gloria Swanson

Besides, I find that short stories aren't as appealing to me as longer novels. No sooner do you get into the short story, than you have to adjust to another setting or different characters. I miss the continuity, even though, as they said, in this book there was some "bridging material".
Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ description:
=======================================================
"These are the People. Marooned on this planet by the crash of their interstellar vehicle in the distant past, The People are never free of a sense of strangeness in this world and a yearning for the home they have half-forgotten.
"These are the chronicles of their arrival on this world, their estrangement from it, and their ultimate acceptance of their poignant exile.
"'Pilgrimage: The Book of The People' is one of the most unforgettable works in all of science fiction."
========================================================
See further information about this book (and another after it, Ingathering: The Complete People Stories of Zenna Henderson) at my GR review:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

I'm glad that you didn't give up on this book! I LOVED it! I haven't "read" the book, I listened to it, and thought it was quite moving. I laughed and cried, and did not want it to end. Do let me know how it continues to go.

Thanks for mentioning that it's available as an audio-book. I'd like to listen to it, just to see how it was done.
PS-Jenni, you should take a look at the hard copy of the book just to see how it was presented. Very unusual. There are even drawings!
PPS-I can't believe that when I first heard the title, I confused it with The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan. Two VERY different books! :)



I wanted to get away from Fantasy because lately, I'm not enjoying it. I'm not sure if I'm burnt out on fantasy or if I've just been making unwise choices in what to read. I have a feeling it's the latter.
I thought I'd read a detective novel since my friend Lara gave me quite a few, but none of those are feeling right.
I chose A Soul to Take by C. N. Bean, a psychological thriller featuring a female detective. I hope it's good, I can't handle another dud. Wish me luck!

Right now I'm into Wally Lamb's I Know This Much Is True (1998). I've already written a pre-review of the book at:
http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...
I start out by saying: "I'm not sure I'll be able to get through this book because it's depressing and very long." Besides that, there are too many sub-plots. But I'm very curious about how the story will progress. I just wish it could be more upbeat. As one of the GR reviewers said: "It's about mental illness, dysfunctional families, and domestic abuse." Not exactly what you would call a feel-good story. Even so, most of the GR reviews are favorable.
PS-At Amazon, Publisher's Weekly says: "Some may be daunted by its length, its seemingly obsessive inclusion of background details and its many digressions."

I was just talking to my friend Lara and she got into a good book last night and is almost finish; she can't put it down. That's the experience I want. I find that if I'm not enjoying the book, it takes me longer to read it. Mainly because I won't go back to it during various parts of the day. When I'm enjoying a book, I don't want to do anything else but continue reading.
I'm just begining A Soul To Take, barely into it but the crime is unique. I've never read about a crime this strange and that makes it interesting to me. I want to know more. That's what I'm looking for. As Joy wrote: all we want is a book which compels us to read it!
I finished Shutter Island tonight, after seeing the movie Wednesday night. Great adaptation, actually using dialog from the book in the film, and only compressing bits and pieces of action. Of course the book is better, always is, more background etc. But to my mind, the film does express the author's true intent, and isn't that wonderful.

Jakes has an excellent flair for American history and for mixing real characters into his historical fiction.

Jakes has an excellent flair for American ..."
Have you ever read his Bicentennial series? That was really good, too. I've never read 'Homeland', though. His "Brak the Barbarian" was fun - totally different than his historical fiction. I read several of those stories before I found the Bicentennial series. I had trouble believing it was the same author.

Homeland is similar in style to the Bicentennial Series and you would enjoy it I think. It is very long, but well worth the effort.

Hi KM. Glad to hear the good report. I have "Shutter Island" on my Netflix queue (date of availablity "unknown":
"Shutter Island" (Ashecliffe) (2010)
Netflix says:
"Genres: Thrillers, Mystery, Crime Thrillers, Dramas Based on Contemporary Literature, 20th Century Period Pieces, Dramas Based on the Book
This movie is: Dark, Emotional, Violent"
Haven't read the book. Here's the GR link:
Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane

Wow, Mary, 1200 pages! Daunting! :)
The GR links: Homeland by John Jakes

Here's the GR link:
The Patriots: The American Bicentennial Series Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 by John Jakes
I should probably put at least one of his books on my GR shelf.

==========================================================
"John Jakes is the acknowledged contemporary master of the family saga. He is the creator of the legendary eight-volume Kent Family Chronicles, the Main and Hazard families of The North and South Trilogy, and the Crowns of Chicago, German-Americans whose stories interweave the history of the twentieth century in Homeland and its sequel, American Dreams. His 2002 novel, Charleston, returned him to the turbulent years of the Revolution and the Civil War, and became his sixteenth consecutive New York Times bestseller.
"Praised as "the godfather of the historical novel," "the people's author," and "America's history teacher," Jakes mingles the lives of his fictional characters with those of historical personages, and involves them in the great events of U.S. and world."
=========================================================
There's much more at the GR page.

I'm also reading Under the Lilacs, and am almost finished with it. I hate to admit it, but I think that Little Women is the only Louisa May Alcott book that I've read, until now. I really should have read more of her, as I can't even count how many times I read Little Women as a child. Better late than never, right? :)

Thanks for the links and for mentioning the audios read by Neil Gaiman himself. I'm going to make it a point to find them at our library.
As I've said before, I used to confuse the book, Outlander by Diana Gabaldon, with Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. Silly me. I LOVED the non-fiction _Outliers_. Haven't gotten around to _Outlander_ yet. I really should check it out.


The North & South books were so well done, I was sorry there were only 3.

Jim, that's an encouraging recommendation. Sooner or later, I'll probably get around to sampling John Jakes' writing... especially now that you've made me even more curious. :) The books are on my GR shelf to "keep-in-mind". I should probably move them to my "to-read" shelf. :) But that's too big a step at this point, at the rate I'm going! LOL

The North & South books were so well done, I was sorry there were only 3."
Wow, Katherine, another encouraging recommendation! Perhaps I should create a new shelf called "must-read". :) But then again, a shelf like that might be too niggling in my brain. It would start nagging at the back of my mind. Oh, the pressure of wanting to get through too many bogging books in order to get to the really good ones!
PS-As I've said elsewhere... I'm really getting annoyed with Wally Lamb's digressions in _I Know This Much Is True_! At Amazon they refer to its "seemingly obsessive inclusion of background details and its many digressions."

Review of Homeland to follow!

A well-deserved break, Mary. Congrats on reading such a long book.
How long did it take you to read Homeland?


Jackie, another member finishing a book. I'm afraid I'm still plowing my way through several books. I've read a good part of the way through all of them but because I'm splitting up my time between them, I'm slowed down on finishing them.
I often read several books at once because when I'm temporarily bogged down with one, there's always another to turn to. Later, when I do return to the "boggy" book, I have renewed interest in it.
Don't know why some books bog down for me. I guess there are several reasons.

I used to spend most of my day reading and one book was not enough, I needed more stimulation. But now with the computer and TV, a good portion of my time is spent on those pursuits which limits my reading time.

You said it, Jackie! Me too! :) Netflix, more than TV!
I like to keep several books going at the same time as well. Right now I'm reading Elizabeth Costello, and just finished Little Bee, but still have a few others going from before as well.


And speaking of TV, I'm now on a Smallville kick. My nephew lent me 8 seasons, 23 eps each. Smallville is currently in it's 9th season and I figure by the time I finish these 8 seasons, the 9th will be available on DVD. It's definitely keeping me occupied.

The books which both Katherines mentioned sound very interesting. I will follow up and look into them.


Werner, that sounds like a very unusual book.
Women in the Old Testament - Twenty Psychological Portraits
From the product description at Amazon:
====================================================
"... So here is a book, written by a woman, about a group of people who have nothing in common save their sex and the fact that their names or their stories happen to be included in what is one ix x foreword of the most magnificent pieces of history in the whole of literature if not the most magnificent. There are twenty of them and they differ from one another far more sharply than would the next twenty women you would meet in the busiest London street different as they would be, could you know their stories They range from simple nomadic desert women to palace-bred princesses here are women of sound good practical sense and mystics prudes and harlots women who have attained immortality because some man once looked upon them with love, and women who by their own actions influenced the history and thought of their times. ..."
FROM:
===================================================
Books mentioned in this topic
The Thirteenth Tale (other topics)A Game of Thrones (other topics)
The Sight (other topics)
Hotspur (other topics)
Aunt Dimity's Christmas (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Diane Setterfield (other topics)George R.R. Martin (other topics)
David Clement-Davies (other topics)
Rita Mae Brown (other topics)
Nancy Atherton (other topics)
More...
Nina, those are the moments we never forget.
Greg Mortenson is a familiar name from his bestseller:
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time (2006).
Now, I see he has another good book:
Stones into Schools: Promoting Peace with Books, Not Bombs, in Afghanistan and Pakistan (2009)