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hermetic

(8,646 posts)
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 11:18 AM Oct 2023

What Fiction are you reading this week, October 29, 2023?

Trick or treat.



Reading the 15th Mary Russell mystery: Island of the Mad by Laurie R. King. Searching for a missing friend, Mary and Sherlock travel from the grim confines of Bedlam to the canals and cabarets of Venice -- only to find the foreboding shadow of Benito Mussolini darkening the fate of a city, an era, and a tormented English lady of privilege. I thought that sounded like an appropriately scary tale for this week. Great little quotation at the front of the book from Thomas Tryon, 1689. "The world is but a great Bedlam, where those that are more mad lock up those that are less."

Listening to Cat Me If You Can by Miranda James. Charlie and Diesel take a bookish vacation but discover that murder never takes a holiday. They're headed to Asheville, NC, to spend a week at a boutique hotel and participate in a gathering of mystery readers. My favorite plot. If I ever attended a gathering of mystery readers/writers and there wasn't a murder, I would likely be disappointed.

Got anything scary on your reading list this week?

37 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What Fiction are you reading this week, October 29, 2023? (Original Post) hermetic Oct 2023 OP
I'm reading Dune. Rizen Oct 2023 #1
Such a great story hermetic Oct 2023 #2
The dreamy cat in the OP looks very much like my Cubby Bear, though with green eyes. He is japple Oct 2023 #3
That one is on my list hermetic Oct 2023 #5
Elizabeth George/Lynley & Havers cbabe Oct 2023 #4
Looks like a good one hermetic Oct 2023 #6
Public relations disaster results from cbabe Oct 2023 #7
No need to attend a class ExWhoDoesntCare Nov 2023 #32
Thanks. Although I do enjoy exchange of ideas in a class. cbabe Nov 2023 #33
The chances of being where they'll teach such classess ExWhoDoesntCare Nov 2023 #35
Aw, taking my daydream, or fiction, of a book class a cbabe Nov 2023 #37
"Grave Decisions," Stephen King Bayard Oct 2023 #8
Lots of good reads hermetic Oct 2023 #9
I'm reading "Little Fires Everywhere " by Celeste Ng Diamond_Dog Oct 2023 #10
I'm so glad you posted this! This is one of those books that got lost in my Kindle Library... Native Oct 2023 #13
I do the same thing! Diamond_Dog Oct 2023 #14
Thanks, and get better soon! Native Oct 2023 #16
TY! Diamond_Dog Oct 2023 #17
Sounds good hermetic Oct 2023 #18
currently reading " Getting A Head" a Kat Parker mystery by K.L. Phelps Volume 3 in a series yellowdogintexas Oct 2023 #11
LOL hermetic Oct 2023 #19
They are so much fun. The first one is "Mind if I Come In?" yellowdogintexas Oct 2023 #31
Jumper, by Steven Gould Jeebo Oct 2023 #12
Love this thread, always gives me more books to read. Today txwhitedove Oct 2023 #15
Yeah, me too. Thanks hermetic Oct 2023 #20
Woman They Could Not Silence ExWhoDoesntCare Nov 2023 #34
In the middle of ExWhoDoesntCare Oct 2023 #21
Just finished "The Amber Room" by Steve Berry Number9Dream Oct 2023 #22
I read the latest Reacher novel by Lee and Andrew Child -- The Secret. rsdsharp Oct 2023 #23
Thanks for the Lee Child tip. On order at the library, put on hold list. cbabe Oct 2023 #28
Purity by Jonathan Franzen mentalsolstice Oct 2023 #24
Sister! hermetic Oct 2023 #25
I'm back on the Harry Potter fanfiction happybird Oct 2023 #26
Gosh, don't apologize hermetic Oct 2023 #29
Thank you :) happybird Oct 2023 #30
What I always tell people who are "I'd like to read more, but ExWhoDoesntCare Nov 2023 #36
Demon Copperhead. TNNurse Oct 2023 #27

Rizen

(808 posts)
1. I'm reading Dune.
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 11:26 AM
Oct 2023

I recently finished The Chronicles of Amber. Now I'm reading Dune; it's something I've been meaning to read for a while. I hope it will improve my own writing.

japple

(10,368 posts)
3. The dreamy cat in the OP looks very much like my Cubby Bear, though with green eyes. He is
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:03 PM
Oct 2023

such a sweet, loving fellow. Not reading anything scary except for the daily news which is enough to make one retreat from life. I started Ron Rash's The Caretaker and read last night until I could no longer hold my eyes open. He is such a good writer, and the story is very compelling.

From Penguin Random House:

It’s 1951 in Blowing Rock, North Carolina. Blackburn Gant, his life irrevocably altered by a childhood case of polio, seems condemned to spend his life among the dead as the sole caretaker of a hilltop cemetery. It suits his withdrawn personality, and the inexplicable occurrences that happen from time to time rattle him less than interaction with the living. But when his best and only friend, the kind but impulsive Jacob Hampton, is conscripted to serve overseas, Blackburn is charged with caring for Jacob’s wife, Naomi, as well.

Sixteen-year-old Naomi Clarke is an outcast in Blowing Rock, an outsider, poor and uneducated, who works as a seasonal maid in the town’s most elegant hotel. When Naomi eloped with Jacob a few months after her arrival, the marriage scandalized the community, most of all his wealthy parents who disinherited him. Shunned by the townsfolk for their differences and equally fearful that Jacob may never come home, Blackburn and Naomi grow closer and closer until a shattering development derails numerous lives.

A tender examination of male friendship and rivalry as well as a riveting, page-turning novel of familial devotion, The Caretaker brilliantly depicts the human capacity for delusion and destruction all too often justified as acts of love.


Happy reading and Happy Halloween

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
5. That one is on my list
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:24 PM
Oct 2023

Sounds really good.

Over in the Lounge I just posted a list of actual ghost stories one can find at various links. Sounds like a fun thing to do this week. Along with nibbling from the to-be-handed-out jar.

cbabe

(4,236 posts)
4. Elizabeth George/Lynley & Havers
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:08 PM
Oct 2023

Just finished ‘With no one as witness’.

Speaking of improving writing skills, I would attend a class on ‘how do they do it?’ Louise Penny, Stephen King et al. They get into one’s dna. Somehow.

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
6. Looks like a good one
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:28 PM
Oct 2023

The police never suspected a serial killer was at large until they found the fourth murdered boy, his body draped over a tomb in a London graveyard. Suddenly a series of crimes and a potential public relations disaster have Scotland Yard on the defensive...

That would be a good class.

cbabe

(4,236 posts)
7. Public relations disaster results from
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:34 PM
Oct 2023

first three murdered were black boys, and mostly ignored by police.

Fourth victim is white. Then attention is paid.

Timely plot. Nkata finally emerges as a full character.

(Got under my skin. Put George on the ‘class syllabus’.)

 

ExWhoDoesntCare

(4,741 posts)
32. No need to attend a class
Fri Nov 3, 2023, 10:33 AM
Nov 2023

Louise Penny hasn't published anything about the writing process, but Elizabeth George has written a book on that topic: Write Away (2004).

The writing books I most often recommend are the two by Stephen King:

Danse Macabre (1982). It's the same material he used for a writing course at University of Maine, "Themes in Supernatural Literature." So you get the actual class he taught--in book form.

On Writing (2000): It's half-memoir about his experiences as a writer, but also a master class for how to write well. Some literary critics consider this book among the finest non-fiction works ever written. It's so good that I actually consider it a character flaw if someone doesn't own a copy of it--and I am *not* much on reading SK's usual output. I adore all of his non-horror works, but his standard fare gives me many a sleepless night for weeks after reading them. Bloody hell, I *still* have nightmares about Pennywise from It.

The best writing advice, ever, isn't in a book at all, but in the essay, "Politics and the English Language," by George Orwell. You don't even have to buy anything to get it. It's available here:

https://www.orwellfoundation.com/the-orwell-foundation/orwell/essays-and-other-works/politics-and-the-english-language/

 

ExWhoDoesntCare

(4,741 posts)
35. The chances of being where they'll teach such classess
Mon Nov 6, 2023, 04:23 PM
Nov 2023

Are depressingly low. Iowa gets them and some of the Ivies. The rest of us are SOL.

Might as well read the book.

cbabe

(4,236 posts)
37. Aw, taking my daydream, or fiction, of a book class a
Tue Nov 7, 2023, 10:54 AM
Nov 2023

bit too seriously. My wish is of the ‘maybe someday if I ruled the world’ variety.

Maybe someday I can rustle up a group for pizza and chat.

Bayard

(24,145 posts)
8. "Grave Decisions," Stephen King
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 12:48 PM
Oct 2023

Its a small book of his short stories. I read the first one last night---good, and Halloween-y!

After seeing the movie, "The Secret of Roan Inish," and loving it, I had to order the book (Secret of the Ron Mor Skerry,), even though it is supposedly a kid's book. Read in one day, and enjoyed it.

Not fiction, but I just re-read, "Killers of the Flower Moon," after going to see the movie. It is enthralling.--not too many history books can say that.

Diamond_Dog

(34,991 posts)
10. I'm reading "Little Fires Everywhere " by Celeste Ng
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 01:04 PM
Oct 2023

It sort of rambled at first but as I got into it more the plot started coming together. I’m enjoying it. What attracted me to this book was that the author grew up in Shaker Heights, Ohio, which isn’t too far from me, and the story is set there.

Native

(6,666 posts)
13. I'm so glad you posted this! This is one of those books that got lost in my Kindle Library...
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 02:02 PM
Oct 2023

I started it quite some time ago and then proceeded to get sidetracked and never picked it up again. Totally forgot about it until your post. I guess the 1st chapter just didn't pull me in enough to hook me. I really need to stop reading several books at once. Too many slip through the cracks and never get finished. Interestingly, my recently married daughter is hoping to move from Seattle to the Shaker Heights area. In-laws are near that area. I'll definitely pick it up as soon as I finish the 3 books I'm currently reading.

Diamond_Dog

(34,991 posts)
14. I do the same thing!
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 02:08 PM
Oct 2023

I might have also given up on this one except I’m laid up with a head cold right now and needed something to read. Once you get to the part about the friends of the Richardsons adopting the baby, it gets more interesting.

I hope your daughter enjoys Shaker! A very blue Cleveland suburb.

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
18. Sounds good
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 02:19 PM
Oct 2023
Little Fires Everywhere explores the weight of secrets, the nature of art and identity, and the ferocious pull of motherhood -- and the danger of believing that following the rules can avert disaster.

yellowdogintexas

(22,757 posts)
11. currently reading " Getting A Head" a Kat Parker mystery by K.L. Phelps Volume 3 in a series
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 01:42 PM
Oct 2023

Reluctant psychic Katrina Parker always suspected her love of tacos would one day get her into trouble. She just always believed it would come in the form of tight jeans, not a decapitated head and the quiet ghost attached to it.

Agreeing to lend a hand to the severed head, Kat discovers that the problems of lugging a head all over town, crashing a wake, and keeping it hidden from hunky detective Damian Johnson all pale in comparison to having to deal with the constant smell issue.

Each misstep brings her closer to an answer, yet even closer to danger. And with her friends and family now in the line of fire, Kat must keep all her wits about her or risk losing her own head.

Earlier in the week I finished book 2 of this series. Talking With The Dead

These books are quite funny. Just what I need in these harrowing times.

Stepping away from fiction, my book club read Cassidy Hutchison's book "Enough" . I reserved the E-book in the library immediately and received it Wednesday. I was #43 in the queue. The first part of the book is about her life before the White House and it's rather mundane except for her father who was a real piece of work. As the action gets closer to the events, the tension actually begins to rise. It did not take that long to read, and it was intriguing.

Our November book is a Jane Austen "Persuasion" and I found an e-book that is the original manuscript. I am looking forward to it.

yellowdogintexas

(22,757 posts)
31. They are so much fun. The first one is "Mind if I Come In?"
Mon Oct 30, 2023, 04:27 PM
Oct 2023

They are in the same category as Stephanie Plum

Also check out the other "Kat" series I love - the Kat Makris Greek Mafia series. I picked up another one of those the other day

Jeebo

(2,306 posts)
12. Jumper, by Steven Gould
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 01:57 PM
Oct 2023

I read this one 25 or 30 years ago and enjoyed it so much I'm re-reading it now.

-- Ron

txwhitedove

(4,015 posts)
15. Love this thread, always gives me more books to read. Today
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 02:09 PM
Oct 2023

reading DU and listening to music. Finished Q for Quarry by Sue Grafton, who is always great. A little off reading about searching for a pay phone, Jane Fonda exercise and heavy smokers. My how time flies. I missed the humor of Blaize Clement, so read Raining Cat Sitters and Dogs yesterday, which had a great African Grey Parrot and a Scottish Fold cat in the mystery mix this time.

Best read was The Woman They Could Not Silence by Kate Moore. Non-fiction so I reviewed it in your Best Books read in 2023. Great even for Halloween, pretend it's scary fiction, then realize it was all true. Wow.

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
20. Yeah, me too. Thanks
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 02:32 PM
Oct 2023

I put The Woman They Could Not Silence on my to-read list. Sounds really terrific.

 

ExWhoDoesntCare

(4,741 posts)
34. Woman They Could Not Silence
Fri Nov 3, 2023, 01:54 PM
Nov 2023

Is on my TBR for next year. Specifically the week of 21 October, because that's the weekly prompt in my ALA Banned Books reading challenge. This year, I decided to up the challenge factor by reading the book during its assigned week, rather than cheating and finishing all 52 at the beginning of the year.

For those who want the complete list for that challenge, here you go:

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/189957.American_Library_Association_Recommended_Reads_2023_2024

This book will be a tough read for me, because I knew a woman who endured this horror, not long before no-fault divorce became legal where we were. It was like that put a curse on the entire family.

 

ExWhoDoesntCare

(4,741 posts)
21. In the middle of
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 03:02 PM
Oct 2023

A House for Mr Biswas by VS Naipaul.

After that, it'll be Raven Leilani's Luster and Allen Drury's Advise and Consent.

Number9Dream

(1,652 posts)
22. Just finished "The Amber Room" by Steve Berry
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 03:23 PM
Oct 2023

Thanks for the thread, hermetic.

This was one of his earliest novels, and was just okay. He got better with the later books. On the plus side, this one did have a couple of sexier scenes.

rsdsharp

(10,243 posts)
23. I read the latest Reacher novel by Lee and Andrew Child -- The Secret.
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 03:24 PM
Oct 2023

Although most Reacher novels are set in the present day, this is a flashback to 1992, when Reacher is a newly demoted (from Major) MP Captain. He is assigned to a task force with others from the FBI, CIA and Treasury Department to investigate the ongoing murders of scientists who were involved in a project in India in 1969. The task force was formed by the Secretary of Defense, and all of the members are having career problems.

This is pretty standard Reacher fare, although his physical exploits set in 1992 aren’t accompanied by the nagging thought that someone in his late 50s, early 60s, might not be able to beat the shit out of every opponent he encounters.

I also read A Nightmare in Vallisca: Investigating the Haunted Axe Murder House by Richard Estes. This isn’t fiction, per se (or maybe it is), but mostly focuses on the paranormal aspects of the house. For those not familiar with it, Vallisca is a small town in southwest Iowa. On the night of June 9-10, 1912, Josiah Moore, his wife, four young children, and two girls who were having a sleepover, were killed with an axe as they slept. The murders have never been solved.

The house has been restored to its 1912 state (no electric lights, no running water, and is laid out as it was that night) and is a favorite of paranormal investigators, together with sites in three nearby towns of which I wasn’t aware, despite living my entire life in Iowa. Although the discussion of the crime and subsequent investigation is not really the focus, it is discussed, and the paranormal things that supposedly happen in the house are pretty spooky.

mentalsolstice

(4,516 posts)
24. Purity by Jonathan Franzen
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 05:10 PM
Oct 2023

I’m a glutton for books where none of the characters are actually very likable. Maybe it’s because I was a psychology major and a retired attorney . I hope all here enjoys Halloween 🎃!

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
25. Sister!
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 07:13 PM
Oct 2023

Too funny! My sister is, too. But I know she's not a member here. What a funny coincidence, though.

happybird

(5,158 posts)
26. I'm back on the Harry Potter fanfiction
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 07:26 PM
Oct 2023

because I am trash.


It’s a guilty pleasure. I’ve been having a rough couple of months so deserve my Sirius Black/Remus Lupin romance escapism, dammit. I adore both characters.

hermetic

(8,646 posts)
29. Gosh, don't apologize
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 07:35 PM
Oct 2023

We all have the right to be in love with any book/character/author. And no one should ever have the right to take that away from us. Hang in there. We are here for you.

happybird

(5,158 posts)
30. Thank you :)
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 07:48 PM
Oct 2023

A friend, who also has a fanfic addiction and a Lit degree, and I joke about it all the time.

Reading has always been my refuge and the internet is an amazing tool for dialing up whatever you feel like reading at any moment. There are some amazing fanfic writers out there… and some truly terrible ones. Searching for and finding gold is half the fun. And, on some days, I just love the trashy stuff. Today is one of those days.

 

ExWhoDoesntCare

(4,741 posts)
36. What I always tell people who are "I'd like to read more, but
Mon Nov 6, 2023, 04:30 PM
Nov 2023

I only like to read {fill in the blank for non-"serious" reading}?

"Then read that. It's not what you're reading that matters. but that you're reading."

To a degree, schools and literary critics have made reading more daunting and sniffy then it needs to be. If you like reading shameless bodice rippers, then read 'em and have fun. Sheesh, life is difficult enough without having to be so bloody proper and serious about people reading for escapism.

Sure, it would be great if such people would expand their horizons a bit, but if they don't, then it's not the end of the world. Again, it's better that they're reading *anything* than reading nothing, like 33% of Americans admit to have done since leaving school.

TNNurse

(7,148 posts)
27. Demon Copperhead.
Sun Oct 29, 2023, 07:29 PM
Oct 2023

It is a slow go. Not because it is not wonderful and that she has an amazing way of saying things, but it is a tough subject and I just have to take breaks.

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