Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, September 10, 2023?
Bookshop on wheels in Canada
I'm still reading A Visit from the Goon Squad, an unusual book. Sometimes it's great and sometimes it's grating. I'm at the final chapter that is supposedly taking place in our foreseeable future and not liking it at all. Earlier in the book there were mentions of major things being done to combat global warming but somewhere along the way, other important things seem to have somehow been lost.
Just finished listening to We Begin at the End by Chris Whitaker. I had a hard time staying with this one. It just did not hold my interest. Sometimes it made me laugh, though, and it did have a surprise ending.
Now I'm listening to Robert B. Parker's The Devil Wins by Reed Farrel Coleman. Parker was the famous author of over 70 novels including the series which became the TV show Spencer: For Hire. Sadly, he died in 2010 but some of his series have been continued by other authors, like Coleman. The Devil Wins is a Jesse Stone crime thriller involving the discovery of a recently killed man along with the skeletons of 2 young girls who had disappeared 25 years earlier. Good so far.
What fiction are you reading and listening to these days?
Easterncedar
(3,614 posts)Its wonderful. I read A God in Ruins, which is a later, related book, last month and it brought me completely to tears. Devastating. I didnt want it to end, so was glad to learn that this story involves the same family and the same period and delighted to discover it at my favorite home town book store when I was back for a visit. (The Book Corner in Niagara Falls, NY. Its a fabulous old palace/warren of books, and if Jeff Morrow doesnt have a book he will find it for you and ship it right out. Everyone should buy their books from him, or someone like him.)
hermetic
(8,646 posts)like a great place. Nice town, too. And good books.
The King of Prussia
(745 posts)The first in her "Miss Silver" series of mysteries.
Earlier in the week I read "Death of a Partner" and "Death among the Dons" by Janet Neel. I shall be looking for the rest of the series - although I think they're out of print.
hermetic
(8,646 posts)is from 1928. I'm surprised you found that one. That dear lady went on to write around 60 more before she left us in 1961. Her "ALTER EGO, MISS MAUD SILVER, IS THE CLEVER CRIME-SOLVER OF DIABOLICAL CASES OF DECEIT, MURDER, AND MISTAKEN IDENTITY... A CAREFUL INVESTIGATOR WHO SEES DEEP INTO THE DARK SIDE OF THE HUMAN HEART." Sounds delightful.
Ms. Neel is more recent and her latest, published in 2005, Ticket to Ride, sounds quite good. "A remarkably prescient mystery, flagging up the exploitation of illegal immigrants tempted by the offer of work in agriculture in East Anglia and begins with the discovery of eight bodies in shallow graves on a beach near King's Lynn."
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Since I often read old school mysteries, Amazon inundates me with the Miss Silver books that are on sale. The Miss Silver series is always in the recommendation lists for me.
txwhitedove
(4,015 posts)a great story that comes alive with colorful characters. This was written 15 years ago, but issues of big corporations, big money, political operatives and judicial corruption are very current.
Our local public library was destroyed by Hurricane Harvey in 2017. This week I found their current 1-room location in the arboretum next door, got a new replacement card, and found out they are finally in repair and restoration of original brick library. Yay! A true neighborhood library with computers, activities, movie night, etc. My project this week is online research of library ebooks and audible books. Did find these can be downloaded to my Kindle app. I still prefer real hardback books, but the library is always a cost saving alternative, especially for more newer titles.
hermetic
(8,646 posts)about your library coming back. Thanks for sharing that story, and your reading choice. Grisham always appeals.
mentalsolstice
(4,516 posts)Its been awhile since Ive enjoyed a good mystery/thriller. I picked this one up from Scribd, which Im trying out for 30 days. So far, so good.
I finished Good Night, Irene by Luis Alberto Urrea. It was so, so good! Thanks japple for recommending it. I never knew about the ARCs Donut Dollies and their clubmobiles during WWII. Interesting history, its too bad they are never depicted in the movies, etc.
hermetic
(8,646 posts)Jewell has written several over the past 15 years or so that have been award winners.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)When I was doing the cancer treatment thing. I had it for the interminable waiting room times, and the trip over in the car. When that all stopped, I didn't have a reason to listen to audiobooks anymore, and never got around to finishing it.
If you liked the book abut Donut Dollies, have you tried The Bookwoman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michelle Richardson? It's about a woman who was a "pack librarian" in Kentucky during the Depression. FDR set up the pack librarian program to provide books by horseback to people in areas so poor and isolated that they couldn't get to libraries at all. There's far more to the book than that, but I'll let you discover the rest on your own.
mentalsolstice
(4,516 posts)Most of my family are from and still live in KY, except for me the native Floridian. Ill give it a look, and I see that she has written a follow up. Thank you!
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)And the title is... The Book Woman's Daughter, LOL.
https://www.kimmichelerichardson.com/thebookwomansdaughter
yellowdogintexas
(22,757 posts)The sequel is also very good. The characters are so beautifully drawn - from the main characters all the way to those only mentioned briefly.
I am a native Kentuckian and knew about the Book Project but no details really, so I had a double reason to want to read about it.
There is a secondary plot line which I will not reveal, but is quite fascinating. It was genius for the author to pull it into the story.
By the way, what part of KY ? I grew up in the Pennyrile area north of Nashville.
mentalsolstice
(4,516 posts)Moms family is from Winchester, Dads was from Carlisle.
yellowdogintexas
(22,757 posts)in the triangle of Bowling Green and Hopkinsville KY and Clarksville Tennessee.
Did you ever notice how Kentuckians nearly always identify what county they come from , not the town unless it is one of the (few) cities.
mentalsolstice
(4,516 posts)Theyre from Carlisle, Nicholas County, its much more rural, and they lived all over the county. My mom is from Winchester (Clark County), which is part of the Lexington-Fayette MSA. Her family all lived in Winchester, with a few in Lexington. However, they all identified by county or say outside of Lexington, even when talking about other counties in KY.
Its funny that you mentioned that, I never really thought about it. Every place I lived, we identified by town or city, no matter what size it was.
Polly Hennessey
(7,492 posts)Nice to be with Bosch again.
hermetic
(8,646 posts)Great story.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)After reading Black Echo, I all but inhaled all of the series up to the point that I started reading, which was Angels Flight.
It's torture every year since then waiting for the new Bosch to come out, but always worth it.
mike_c
(36,356 posts)...since this seems to be the only currently active reading group on DU, I'll mention that I'm reading American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin. I'm almost finished.
This is a period in modern history that has long interested me, from the Great Depression through the Cold War. I've read other biographies of Oppenheimer and other accounts of that period, but Bird and Sherwin's account is less the story about atomic energy or of other people's lives with Oppenheimer and more about Oppenheimer himself. If you like biographies and twentieth century history, American Prometheus is excellent. If you have a particular interest in Oppenheimer and the dawn of the the atomic age that's just icing on the cake.
Edit: I'm not a movie goer, so I haven't seen the movie and probably never will.
hermetic
(8,646 posts)I might see the movie after it comes out on DVD. Or not.
Scrivener7
(53,038 posts)hermetic
(8,646 posts)" bestselling writer returns with a masterpiece to rival Mystic River -- an all-consuming tale of revenge, family love, festering hate, and insidious power, set against one of the most tumultuous episodes in Boston's history."
Thanks for making us aware of this. "a superb thriller, a brutal depiction of criminality and power, and an unflinching portrait of the dark heart of American racism. It is a mesmerizing and wrenching work that only Dennis Lehane could write."
mentalsolstice
(4,516 posts)Love Dennis Lehane, Mystic River and Shutter Island are two of my favorites, books and movies. He is one of those authors who writes what he knows, and he knows the Boston area so well.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)I've read all of his early books, the Kenzie & Gennaro mysteries. But I've never gotten around to his newer stuff.
Don't know why.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,989 posts)finishing Midnight and Bex by Heather Van Fleet. It's billed as a dark YA romance, but quite honestly I am not entirely sure it's totally YA. Well, I do read YA and not ashamed to admit it, but this one handles a lot of pretty adult themes, including cults, dysfunctional families, alcoholism, psychological trauma, abuse of various kinds, etc., so maybe only older teens. Anyway, it was so good I stayed up way too late several nights reading!
Now starting Nefertiti's Sister by Felicia Roche. Not very far in, but it shows promise. Well written, to be sure. On the downstairs Kindle, Im sporadically reading Good Kings, Bad Kings by Susan Nussbaum. This one takes place in a youh home for the disabled and is told in multiple voices. It's kind of fragmented but interesting. It reminds me of the days I worked with disabled kids.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Normally, I can get through a book of this length in 2-3 days. But not this one. Sure, difficult literature or boring/silly subject matter often makes me sleepy and that always prolongs my reading time (hello, Moby Dick); however, this is neither difficult nor boring. At all.
Yet I find myself falling asleep when I read it, even when I'm not tired. I love the writing, I love the narrative... So why the sleepiness? I finally realized that the book is so introspective and the pace is so measured and leisurely that it's soothing and tranquil, and that lulls me right to sleep.
I'm now reading a few pages of Dean Koontz's Darkness Under the Sun if I start nodding off. My husband, a big Koontz fan, tells me that his work will keep me awake. I have a feeling he'll wind up right. I'm only a couple of chapters in, and I'm already getting creeped out. But if it keeps me awake...
yellowdogintexas
(22,757 posts)It actually comes before House of Spies in the reading order and I wish I had realized they were connected before I read them. It was so good. I love this author
Now, our power went out on Friday (the 8th) and was out until Sunday afternoon. I could read. thanks to my fully charged Kindles. I ended up entangled in several books at once depending on which kindle I was using. We did not get internet until late Wednesday so I have been off DU since Friday the 8th!
yellowdogintexas
(22,757 posts)after Black Widow....
Pierced By The Sun Laura Esquivel she also wrote Like Water For Chocolate
Good Crime Alex King (Kat Makris Greek Mafia book)
These Silent Woods Kim Cunningham Grant
The Cult of Venus: Templars and the Ancient Goddess David Brody
Reborn: The Serendipitous Curse #1 by Aiden James and Lisa Collicutt
.
Aiden James does some great paranormal and scary writing.
This is just too long a list to put a big description of each one. It isn't often one can have a marathon such as this. Just glad my Kindles were charged so I got through the weekend.
yellowdogintexas
(22,757 posts)I love Ernest Dempsey's books. Lots of action and interesting stuff; great characters. Wonderful escape route from this insane world
THERE'S A TIME TO RUN, AND A TIME TO FIGHT.
On the run after his brothers-in-arms betrayed him in the Middle East, the former Delta Force commando has hidden in plain sight in, of all places, the art world. Turns out Daks particularly lethal set of skills translates well to hunting down stolen relics across the globe. The money he earns from his eccentric young benefactor means he can afford to lay low and keep moving.
Good thing, too, because his former commanding officer, Col. Cameron Tucker, still wants him dead. And has doubled his efforts to track Dak down.
In a last, desperate attempt to lure Dak from the shadows, Tucker somehow uncovers the only thing on earth Dak cares about, the one thing hes worked so hard to hide, the one person whose memory has kept him alive so farhis ex, Nicole.
When Tucker and his mercs kidnap Nicole, Dak fears the worst. But Tucker is willing to make a trade: Nicoles life in exchange for a priceless Renaissance painting from one of the worlds great masters.
Problem is that painting was stolen thirty years ago. And no one knows who took it or where theyve stashed it. It could be anywhere in the world.
Thats bad news for Dak, who has only five days to track down the masterpiece, steal it back, and make the trade with Tuckeror Tucker swears hell kill her.
Dak knows hes crazy to take these odds and that the old colonel has surely laid new hidden traps for him. He can almost feel himself in the crosshairs. But hes got no choice. He knows he has to give his all, maybe even his life, to save the one person in this world he loves.
This is galloping along, just like every other Ernest Dempsey novel I have read.
I'll be finished by SUnday and can start over fresh!!
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)I've always been a fast reader, and 400 pages in a day will fly by for me if a book is good enough. And as long as it's not too dry or abstruse. Or introspective/artsy.
Like this week. Soul Mountain was a tough read but not because it's bad or dry. The book is so peaceful that it's Zen (actually Dao), and that kept lulling me to sleep. I tend to be an insomniac, so I've caught up on my sleep this week--and feel better for it. Still, I have other books I want to get to, and needed to finish this one book to get to them.
That's why I have a back up plan to pick up something else to read for 15 or so minutes to give me a "break" from a difficult/sleep-inducing work. Sometimes it's been a chapter or two from another book on my TBR pile, but sometimes I'll tap a short story, essay, or some poetry. This summer, I decided to make the complete works of Edgar Allan Poe my primary tough-book-filler, and it turned out to be a brilliant choice for that purpose. However, he's so very weird that sometimes I need a break from him as much as I do from the tough books, LOL. Hence the random other works I read as fillers.