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  • ginadmc
    ginadmc Member Posts: 183
    edited June 2011

    I recently finished the following books:

    Look Again - Lisa Scottoline - This was a good story, a little predictable but overall an easy read.

    Skeletons at the Feast - Chris Bohjalian - This was a WWII story from a German's family perspective. It took me a while to get into it and there were some graphic scenes but it wasn't as depressing as it could have been.

    The Third Angel - Alice Hoffman - Almost like 3 novellas in one tied together by the same characters and London Hotel. I love Alice Hoffman's writing style and her descriptiions. I really liked this book but I like all her books.

    I'm going to start Cutting for Stone next.  Happy Reading, Gina

  • Unknown
    edited June 2011

    I just finished The Girl who Played with Fire and am going to start The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest tonight.....I really like the main character.  I am a late starter on these since think most people read them a long time ago. 

  • sflow
    sflow Member Posts: 20
    edited June 2011

    Just finished Caleb's Crossing--it was great!  It was about the first Native American to graduate from Harvard.  It is historical fiction written by Geraldine Brooks. 

  • steelrose
    steelrose Member Posts: 318
    edited June 2011
    I'm reading Rockefeller Suit too... love it! I like to think I'm too sharp to fall for an imposter such as Mr. "Rockefeller," but I was quite intrigued by a millionaire "spy" in my naive 20's who claimed, like Mr. R, that his parents were killed in a car crash and he inherited a fortune... hmm... Innocent     
  • jakhope
    jakhope Member Posts: 16
    edited June 2011

    This is a great page. I just went to the library today and wished I had read all these suggestions first.

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    Well I've read a few new ones in the past few weeks,  Two that I didn't care for Tinkers by Paul Harding and The Judges By Elie WieselJudges was ok, but it didn't keep me up nights.

    I also read The Lake Shore Limited by Sue Miller and loved it.  I like her as an author and I think this might be my favorite of hers.  The story had a lot to do about obligations and expectations and relationships, ending them, complications.  I don't know how else to explain it without giving too much away.

    I am hoping to head to the library today to find some new ones.

  • Elizabeth1889
    Elizabeth1889 Member Posts: 509
    edited June 2011

    Laurie08

    I agree with you about Tinkers.  It was a disappointment.  I just finished reading Blame by Michelle Huneven which I enjoyed very much. 

  • ginadmc
    ginadmc Member Posts: 183
    edited June 2011

    I read Blame and liked it, too.I have not read anything else by Michelle Huneven. Right now, I'm reading A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick and I'm not loving it. I'll stay with for a little longer.

  • wenweb
    wenweb Member Posts: 471
    edited June 2011
    ginadmc I'm interested to know what you end up thinking about A Reliable Wife...it was the first and only book that I gave myself permission to skip to the last page of :>)
  • socallisa
    socallisa Member Posts: 10,184
    edited June 2011

    Laurie, I just finished "While I Was Gone" by Sue Miller..interesting..

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    Socal lisa- I liked that one!  You should read this other one of hers.  It has a lot to do with when someone dies and you aren't really in love with the person anymore or when it is just time for things to be over.  4 different story lines and characters tied together beautifully with a play.

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    also a strong 9-11 thread through the book.

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 3,696
    edited June 2011

    Our supreme book lover, Konakat, who took the time to start this wonderful thread has passed.  Rest in peace fellow book lover.  Thank you for giving all of us who enjoy books a place to go to get away from thinking about breast cancer. 

  • saralmom
    saralmom Member Posts: 216
    edited June 2011

    Thank you Konakat for giving us this place to talk about something we love.  Rest in peace.

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    I couldn't agree more thank you Elizabeth for starting this thread, for everything you shared with us.  Your laughter, your wisdom your bravery.  You are an amazing woman who showed us all so much about life and living it.  I hope you rest peacefully, you will be truly missed.

  • ruthbru
    ruthbru Member Posts: 47,793
    edited June 2011

    A profoundly sad day for us all.

  • wenweb
    wenweb Member Posts: 471
    edited June 2011

    :>(

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 3,696
    edited June 2011

    As if You Don't Have Enough to Read

    By HUGO LINDGREN




     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     





    AP
    Photo/Knopf/Brigitte LacombeJoan Didion, author of "The Year of Magical
    Thinking" and "Slouching Towards Bethlehem," among other books.

    Inspired
    by The Guardian's recent list of the 100 greatest nonfiction
    books
    , we here at the magazine decided to create our own list.
    Dispensing with all pretense to rigor - it's a list, silly! - we simply asked
    each member of the staff to pick their five favorites. The complete list is
    after the jump. But here a few details:

    First, the
    best nonfiction book of all time, according to the staff of the New York Times
    Magazine, is ...

    A
    tie! Between two books by Joan Didion - "Slouching Towards Bethlehem" and
    "The Year of Magical Thinking" - and Michael Herr's "Dispatches" and "The
    Emperor," by Ryszard Kapuscinski.

    Of the 33
    lists submitted, each of those books appeared three times. (Yes, I know that is
    a completely unscientific basis for deeming them our picks as the best of all
    time, but what did I say about rigor?)

    Jon
    Krakauer received four votes overall, but they were split among three books:
    "Into the Wild" (two votes), "Into Thin Air" (one) and "Under the Banner of
    Heaven" (one). Didion's "White Album" was also mentioned.

    These
    books received two votes:

    "Moneyball,"
    by Michael Lewis

    "The
    Forever War," by Dexter Filkins

    "Out of
    Sheer Rage," by Geoff Dyer

    "On
    Photography," by Susan Sontag

    "A
    Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again," by David Foster Wallace

    "Random
    Family," by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

    "The Path
    to Power," by Robert A. Caro

    "The
    Warmth of Other Suns," by Isabel Wilkerson

    Two
    members of the staff saw fit to pick six titles (they've been reprimanded), one
    identified the author of "On Photography" as Susan Sarandon (she has been
    ridiculed), and one expressed dislike of the term "nonfiction" (that poor soul
    will be reading the Lives slush pile for a week).

    The
    nuttiest choice, which has surely never before appeared on any list like this,
    not The Guardian's nor anyone else's, is: "Transit Maps of the World" by Mark
    Ovenden and Mike Ashworth.

    Can you
    guess what department that person works in?

    Oh, and
    the Bible got one mention.

    Please
    share your thoughts in comments - your own picks, withering critiques of our
    choices, doubts about whether Kapuscinski belongs in nonfiction, whatever you
    like.

    Here's the
    unabridged list, in no particular order.

    "The
    Gathering Storm," by Winston Churchill

    "The Dirt: Confessions of the
    World's Most Notorious Rock Band,"
     by Neil Strauss

    "Friday
    Night Lights," by Buzz Bissinger

    "A Brief
    History of Time," by Stephen Hawking

    "Homage to Catalonia," by
    George Orwell

    "The
    Author of Himself," by Marcel Reich-Ranicki

    "On
    Writing," by Stephen King

    "Transit
    Maps of the World," by Mark Ovenden and Mike Ashworth

    "Ways of
    Seeing," by John Berger

    "Fermat's
    Enigma," by Simon Singh

    "Twelve
    Who Ruled: The Year of Terror in the French Revolution," by R.R. Palmer

    "Into Thin Air," by
    Jon Krakauer

    "Surely
    You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" by Richard Feynman

    "Slouching Towards Bethlehem," by
    Joan Didion

    "Random
    Family," by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

    "The Lost City of Z," by
    David Grann

    "The Year
    of Magical Thinking," by Joan Didion

    "Cleopatra:
    A Life," by Stacy Schiff

    "Surprised
    by Sin," by Stanley Fish

    "Dispatches," by
    Michael Herr

    "A Civil
    Action," by Jonathan Harr

    "Under the
    Banner of Heaven," by Jon Krakauer

    "Brilliant
    Orange: The Neurotic Genius of Dutch Football," by David Winner

    "The
    Silent Woman," by Janet Malcolm

    "Maus," by Art
    Spiegelman

    "The White
    Album," by Joan Didion

    "A Season
    on the Brink," by John Feinstein

    "Deeper
    Into Movies," by Pauline Kael

    "The Diary
    of Anne Frank," by Anne Frank

    "All the
    President's Men," by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein

    "Personal
    History," by Katharine Graham

    "Out of
    Sheer Rage," By Geoff Dyer

    "Mayflower," by
    Nathaniel Philbrick

    "A Severe
    Mercy," by Sheldon Vanauken

    "Burning
    the Days," by James Salter

    "The Arcades Project," by
    Walter Benjamin

    "Twiggy
    and Justin," by Thomas Whiteside

    "Speak,
    Memory," by Vladimir Nabokov

    "On Being Ill,"
    by Virginia Woolf

    "The Arc
    of Justice," by Kevin Boyle

    "The Path
    to Power," by Robert A. Caro

    "The
    Emperor," by Ryszard Kapuscinski

    "The
    Warmth of Other Suns," by Isabel Wilkerson

    "A
    Midwife's Tale," by Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

    "The
    Elements of Typographic Style," by Robert Bringhurst

    "Tibor
    Kalman: Perverse Optimist," by Tibor Kalman

    "Seabiscuit,"
    by Laura Hillenbrand

    "Into the
    Wild," by Jon Krakauer

    "The Substance of Style," by
    Virginia Postrel

    "Voices
    From Chernobyl: The Oral History of a Nuclear Disaster," by Svetlana Alexievich

    "The
    Difficulty of Being," by Jean Cocteau

    "The Human
    Condition," by Hannah Arendt

    "Maps of
    the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer," by Peter Turchi

    "Nature's
    Metropolis," by William Cronon

    "The Looming Tower," by
    Lawrence Wright

    "A Savage
    War of Peace," by Alistair Horne

    "Understanding
    Comics," by Scott McCloud

    "Moneyball,"
    by Michael Lewis

    "The
    Emperor," by Ryszard Kapuscinski

    "The Price
    of the Ticket," by James Baldwin

    "Between
    the Woods and the Water," by Patrick Leigh Fermor

    "Confucian China and Its Modern
    Fate,"
     by Joseph R. Levenson

    "Basel in
    the Age of Burckhardt," by Lionel Gossman

    "The Heart That Bleeds," by
    Alma Guillermoprieto

    "In
    Patagonia," by Bruce Chatwin (arguably this is not nonfiction)

    "The
    Forever War," by Dexter Filkins

    "The Loss
    of El Dorado," by V.S. Naipaul

    "Is There
    No Place on Earth for Me?" by Susan Sheehan

    "The
    Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer," by Siddhartha Mukherjee

    "Zeitoun,"
    by Dave Eggers

    "Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey
    Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America,"
     by Paul Tough

    "Beautiful
    Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction," by David Sheff

    "Boswell's
    London Journal, 1762-3," edited by Frederick A. Pottle

    "Role
    Models," by John Waters

    "Popism:
    The Warhol Sixties," by Andy Warhol

    "I'm With
    the Band: Confessions of a Groupie," by Pamela Des Barres

    "Please
    Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk," Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain

    "On
    Writing," by Stephen King

    "Conditions
    of Liberty," by Ernest Gellner

    "The
    Invisible Woman: the Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens," by Claire
    Tomalin

    "I Will Bear Witness," by
    Victor Klemperer

    "What It
    Takes," by Richard Ben Cramer

    "Tears in
    the Darkness," by Michael Norman and Elizabeth M. Norman

    "Great
    Plains," by Ian Frazier

    "The
    Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500-1800," by Lawrence Stone

    "Parallel Lives: Five Victorian
    Marriages,"
     by Phyllis Rose

    "The
    Politics of American English, 1776-1950," by David Simpson

    "Women's
    Diaries of the Westward Journey," by Lillian Schiessel

    "The
    Warrior's Honor: Ethnic War and the Modern Conscience," by Michael Ignatieff

    "Boys on
    the Bus," by Timothy Crouse

    "Politics," by
    Hendrik Hertzberg

    "Arc of
    Justice," by Kevin Boyle

    "The Devil
    in the White City," by Erik Larson

    "Marie
    Antoinette," by Antonia Fraser

    "In Cold
    Blood," by Truman Capote

    "Into the
    Wild," by Jon Krakauer

    "Infidel,"
    by Ayaan Hirsi Ali

    "Camera
    Lucida," by Roland Barthes

    "Mythologies,"
    by Roland Barthes

    "Regarding
    the Pain of Others," by Susan Sontag

    "The Year
    of Magical Thinking," by Joan Didion

    "The
    Elements of Style," William Strunk Jr. & E.B. White

    "The
    Devil's Teeth," by Susan Casey

    "The
    Autobiography of Malcolm X," by Malcolm X

    "Shadow
    Divers," by Robert Kurson

    "Silent Spring," by
    Rachel Carson

    "What Is
    the What: The Autobiography of Valentino Achak Deng," by Dave Eggers

    "The
    Gnostic Gospels," by Elaine Pagels

    "Understanding
    Media," by Marshall McLuhan

    "Extra
    Lives," by Tom Bissell

    "Lenin's
    Tomb," by David Remnick

    "On
    Photography," by Susan Sontag

    "The
    Americans," by Robert Frank

    "Dear
    Theo: The Autobiography of Vincent Van Gogh," by Irving Stone and Jean Stone

    "Life
    Adjustment Center," by Ryan McGinley

    "A Pattern
    Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction," by Christopher Alexander

    "Safe
    Area: Gorazde," by Joe Sacco

    "Revolution
    in the Head: The Beatles' Records and the Sixties," by Ian MacDonald

    "A Year
    (With Swollen Appendices)," by Brian Eno

    "Fast Food Nation," by
    Eric Schlosser

    "The
    Promised Land: The Great Black Migration and How It Changed America," by
    Nicholas Lemann

    "Genie: A
    Scientific Tragedy," by Russ Rymer

    "The Last
    Shot," by Darcy Frey

    "The
    Journalist and the Murderer," by Janet Malcolm

    "A
    Commotion in the Blood," by Stephen S. Hall

    "Always
    Magic in the Air," by Ken Emerson

    "The
    Bible," by Various

    "Lush Life," by
    David Hajdu

    "Outliers,"
    by Malcolm Gladwell

    "About a
    Mountain," by John D'Agata

    "We Wish
    To Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our Families," by Philip
    Gourevitch

    "The
    Perfect Storm," by Sebastian Junger

    "The Great
    War and Modern Memory," by Paul Fussell

    "Essays,"
    by Michel de Montaigne

    "Hiroshima,"
    by John Hersey

    "U and I,"
    by Nicholson Baker

    "A History
    of Western Philosophy," by Bertrand Russell

    "A
    Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again," by David Foster Wallace

    "Conversations
    With Igor Stravinsky," by Robert Craft

    "Discipline
    and Punish," by Michael Foucault

    "A Life of
    Picasso," by John Richardson

    "The
    Prince," by Niccolo Machiavelli

    "Mexico:
    Biography of Power," by Enrique Krauze

    "The
    Mysterious William Shakespeare: The Myth and the Reality," by Charlton Ogburn

    "A Giacometti Portrait," by
    James Lord

    "The Long
    Way," by Bernard Moitessier

    "Fear and
    Loathing on the Campaign Trail ‘72," by Hunter S. Thompson

    "The
    Poverty of Power," by Barry Commoner

    An earlier version of this posting
    misidentified a Michel Foucault book, "Discipline and Punish," as "Discipline
    and Punishment."


    Top of Form

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 3,696
    edited June 2011

    Came across the above mentioned list in this weekend's New York Times.  I love non-fiction and have read so many of the books that are mentioned....including my favorite...Geoff Dyer!  Looks like I'll be busy reading many of the other books mentioned for a long time to come!

    Happy reading!

  • badger
    badger Member Posts: 24,938
    edited June 2011

    bump for Jo

  • jo1955
    jo1955 Member Posts: 7,545
    edited June 2011

    Thanks badger - will go back and to some reading.  I have add this to my favorites.

  • ktym
    ktym Member Posts: 673
    edited June 2011

    Thanks badger. Added to my favorites.  As I mentioned, I'm currently reading Ken Folletts latest Fall of Giants. So happy it is the first of 3, wonder how long it will take for the next one to come out.

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    kmmd- I think I read that the next one won't be out until 2012!  I too am happy it is part of a trilogy:)

    I've been reading Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley.  I needed a book to read while I waited for my inter library loans to come through.  My kindle recommended it to me and it was only 2.99 so I decided to try it.  I really like it!  It is set in Scotland, and has the characters talking in broag a lot in it.  It's about a woman writing a book that her ancestors lead her to the true story of a certain battle for Scotland. It has a great old castle and has a love story in it- I don't like love stories but this is much different than that.  Different from what I usually read but I have been enjoying it and am now almost done. 

    Thanks badger for the list!

  • ktym
    ktym Member Posts: 673
    edited June 2011

    So, I went to the opposite end of the spectrum today.  After finishing the thick Follett picked up the last Spenser book that Robert Parker wrote.  His books definitely had less writing and more white as  time went on.  So, change of pace.  Like them though, you know what you're getting and I enjoy them.  Very sad that this was the last book he wrote

  • Unknown
    edited June 2011

    I liked Parker's books. 

     I just finished The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest this morning....at lst I was having a hard time with it, so many names were similar (not really, but all Swedish and I had no idea how to pronounce most of them) and there were so many references to organizations and reports, but then I got into it and really think I liked it almost as much as the lst one.  So now I have read all three and am sorry that the 4th is still up in the air because I want to read more about Blomkvist and Salander. 

    Edited to add: I liked Reliable Wife. I liked the fact that it was not one where you always knew what was going to happen next.

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    marybe- I guess I was the only one who didn't care for that series, the first book was ok, second I thought was awful, third I just wanted to get through.  I felt I was reading through so much boredom to get to the good parts, but stuck it through.

    Am I alone on this? 

  • Alpal
    Alpal Member Posts: 112
    edited June 2011
    Sounds like Cutting for Stone to me! I've probably read 15 books since I finally finished that one. Can't tell you anything about them or even the titles, but I enjoyed each one!
  • Unknown
    edited June 2011

    The woman who lent me the last two, did not like them at all so you are not alone, Laurie, but I liked them.  I think someone on here pointed out earlier you take a risk when recommending a book since everyone has different tastes.  I love Cutting for Stone and a friend of mine did not like it at all, whereas another really did.  Right now I am supposed to be reading Twilight which one of the office girls brought in for me since she knows I love to read and I just cannot bring myself to read it....already have made up my mind that I won't like it

  • Unknown
    edited June 2011

    Wow, speak of the devil.....sorry I ever told you would really like that one Alpal. 

  • Laurie08
    Laurie08 Member Posts: 2,047
    edited June 2011

    Marybe- I felt the same way about the Twilight series.  I joined a book club for a little while and they decided to read the series.  I was so annoyed at their choice and got the first book- aughhhh.....OMG I loved it, lol!  I read them all and enjoyed everyone of them.  They are a bit predictable and a little  "young" but you read through them in a couple of days and somehow I got sucked into them.  It is funny how tastes vary so much.  Alpal you are right about the risk when recommending a book.