Just for fun...What is everyone reading??

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  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2006
    Shirlann,

    I LOVED the Kite Runner. It is actually on my list to reread some day...when I get to the bottom of the towering stack of books by my bed, that I want to read

    Deb C.
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2006
    Dear ADK.

    Watchers by Dean Koonz is in my all time favorite books list! I like some of his other stuff, but think that was his best book. I totally bought into the whole premise of the story, even though it was a bit over the top. I still want that dog!!!

    I've read all the Prey books too...like them a lot.

    Thanks
    Deb C.
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2006
    Julie-

    I read all but the most recent Alexander McCall Smith #1 Ladies Detective Agency Books. They are so sweet and so unlike anything else I have read. I find them refreshing and I love the little glimpse of Africa.

    Did you read A Girl Named Zippy before you read She Got Up Off The Couch? I liked them both, but thought Zippy was the better of the two.

    Sounds like we like the same type of books

    Deb C.
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2006
    Shirlann,

    I actually had this book in my hand to buy and then set it down...does Marley and Me have a sad ending? I just can't stand reading books where the Mom, Dad, Kid or DOG dies at the end right now!

    I know, I know, I'm a wimp, but this summer I am avoiding all those types of books. Now a good suspense book with murder victums everywhere, where they spend the whole time looking for the psychotic bad guy is OK...Just not anything that says "Touching" or "Heartwarming" on the cover, and ABSOLUTLY no Chicken Soup books. I can get my self crying without any help, thank you very much! *grin* One funny thing about that...a BUNCH of people have gotten me Chicken Soup books, which I used to read before B/C. They are all sitting in a pile for when I am on a more even keel!

    Thanks,
    Deb C.
  • straykat
    straykat Member Posts: 95
    edited June 2006
    Just another vote for "The Kite Runner," undoubtedly the best book I've read in many years.

    Rarely do I get so agitated as I did when the main character didn't stand up for his friend (those who have read it know the scene I'm refering to), so much so that I wanted to throw the book across the room! It takes powerful writing to evoke those emotions.

    I realized how little I know about Afghanistan and have since read "The Bookseller from Kabul," and "The Sewing Circles of Herat." Both were good (the former more than the latter) and are non-fiction, whereas "The Kite Runner" is fiction.

    Afghanistan is getting messy again; the Warlords are once again dividing the country and some of the prohibitions they put on the people (particularly women) are rasing their ugly heads again. I don't think we've heard the last of this.

    On a much lighter side, anything by David Sedaris, Carl Hiaasen and Alexander McColl.

    Amy Tan, Gabriel Garcia Marquez - the list goes on.

    I read a lot while going through chemo; unfortunately I don't remember many of them! Good opportunity to reread, I guess.

    Sometimes I only have 'feelings' about books I've read or movies I've watched. I know that it was either good or bad, but damned if I remember what it was about.

    Sigh.
  • pdgd
    pdgd Member Posts: 21
    edited June 2006
    Shirlann, I read Kite Runner and couldn't put it down... hard to read (emotionally) and impossible not to read!
    I have just finished the sixth in the Number 1 Ladies Detective Agency, In the Company of Cheerful Ladies. i loved it! They are light, quick reads, and i love his language, descriptions and characters. Pam
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    Hi, if you like Koontz, make sure you read the first 2 of the 3(3rd one is due this summer)of the Frankenstein novels. A real twist on the old story taken to today. I'll read anything but really prefer the King, Straub, Koontz stuff. Just like the action. Jenene
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    I'm reading the bc.org board.
    Shirley
  • baldeagle
    baldeagle Member Posts: 199
    edited June 2006
    Here is my list of what has been tops for me.

    Gap Creek by Robert Morgan - a great story of young marriage in Appalachia
    Back Roads by Tawn O"Dell - an Ophrah selection - a great rwde of a brother trying to raise 3 sisters after parents deaths. Unusual plot
    The SEa of Grass by Conrad Richter - excellent read. short, great literature, wonderful descriptors, good story.
    Cure for Death by Lightening - Gail Anderson-DargatzYoung girls coming of age - haunting and well wrtiiten
    Indecent Obsession by Colleeen MxCullough - a re-read for me but a good read. Well written and good plot.
    Salvation on Sand MOuntain by Dennis Covington - about snake handlers in the South and Appalachia. Well written and different .
    The Way the Crow Flies - by Anne Marie Macdonald - well-written, but eerie. Is a Canadian best seller. Don't know about its availability in the States.
    Also; Fall on you knees by the same author (Anne Marie Macdonald.) A good but dark book. Unusual plot - I really enjoyed it. Excellent prose - worth the read for how well it is written.
    Enough for now. I have been gobbling books - mostly looking for good literature. Will report further on a couple I have just started.
    Jeannette
  • Hattie
    Hattie Member Posts: 414
    edited June 2006
    Two good historical and fascinating mystery series:

    "Maisie Dobbs"--not sure the author, take place in England around WWI.

    by Barbara Cleverly: "The Last Kashmiri Rose", set in India in the last days of the British Empire there.

    Alexander McCall has a new series "The Sunday Philosophers' Club, set in present day Scotland. Fun, but not as good as the ladies' detective agency.

    Straycat, I read tons during chemo but can't remember much either!

    Take care,
    --Hattie
  • Poppy
    Poppy Member Posts: 405
    edited June 2006
    Deb & Lauren - I think you'll enjoy them
    He also has a book called SuperStud. It's not as good as Kick Me but if you can find it at a library...

    Erica
  • twingle99
    twingle99 Member Posts: 42
    edited June 2006
    Oops!! I meant "The Four Blind Mice."

    I think I did read Running with Scissors. I think there
    might have been 2 books to go with it????

    Rhonda
  • straykat
    straykat Member Posts: 95
    edited June 2006
    Twingle99,

    I think Burrough's others that go with Running with Scissors are Magical Thinking and Dry.
  • NancyLee13
    NancyLee13 Member Posts: 496
    edited June 2006
    I'm currently reading "Mercy" by Jodi Picoult. I've read several of her books starting with "My Sister's Keeper" which I enjoyed very much. I also liked "Vanishing Acts". She writes very well. Other authors that I read and like are Jonathan Kellerman, Tami Hoag, Luanne Rice and Stuart Woods. I have so many paperback books by these people that my brother always told everyone that someday I'd be found under a pile of books and that's the way I'd "check out". I guess I can think of worse ways to go!! Happy Reading!!
    NancyLee
  • PoohRN1962
    PoohRN1962 Member Posts: 241
    edited June 2006
    Since my mind can't absorb anything new, I recently RE-read the Earth's Children series by Jean Auel. (Clan of the Cave Bear, etc...)

    After that, moved on to every "Sweet Potato Queen" book by Jill Conner Browne to keep me laughing.

    I have a nice pile of books I am saving for post-op, though, hoping that my mind will start working again soon.
  • dash
    dash Member Posts: 766
    edited June 2006

    Can You Keep a Secret? By Sphie Kinsella. It is laugh out loud funny in spots!

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited June 2006
    Ah, the Sweet Potato Queen books!!!!!!!!!!! YES
    Laugh out loud is right, dh thought I'd gone around the bend!!!!
    Loved those books and bet you all will too
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006

    My latest FAVE is the series by Sue Grafton. A light, witty detective series staring Kinsey Millhone. It starts with A is for Alibi, B is for Burglar, etc. Just read S is for Silence and can't WAIT for the rest! This is the kind of book that light enough and funny enough to enjoy, but at the same time you can't put it down until you know WHO DONE IT!!!!!!

  • twingle99
    twingle99 Member Posts: 42
    edited June 2006

    Yes!! It was "Dry". I read both of them!!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    Vicki-

    I've read that series...isn't it wonderful?

    Peggy
  • karlalarae
    karlalarae Member Posts: 9
    edited June 2006
    I love reading--Nora Roberts, Janet Daily. I am really into series (and anything "smutty"-LOL)
    Karla
  • silvergirl9114
    silvergirl9114 Member Posts: 381
    edited June 2006
    The Known World----kind of a confusing start with lots of characters but stick with it, it's worth it. It didn't win the Pulitzer Prize for nothing!

    The most recent "couldn't put it down" book? In the Company of the courtesan---about 15th century Venice. wonderful!
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006

    The one about Venice sounds interesting ~ do you remember the author?

  • holli
    holli Member Posts: 6
    edited June 2006
    Will read anything by Kellerman, Patterson and Sanford. Also Like Mary Higgens Clark. Read "Two Little Girls in Blue" by her. Very good book. Might have to check into the Stephanie Plum series. Sounds very interesting. There isn't much that I won't try to read. I like a certain type though.

    Holli
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    Holli-

    I love Kellerman & Patterson...have not read anything by Sanford...first name please? I'll check him/her out of the library!

    Another author I recently ran across and I really like is Harlan Coben.

    Peggy
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited June 2006
    If you just need a sick and twisted laugh you need to read Christoper Moore's "A Dirty Job". A bit of a warning, the whole thing is about death...but I laughed until I thought I would pee my pants. His humor is kind of like Carl Hiaasen's only a little more "out there". This book is so different than anything else I have read I can't even put it in a category. It is irreverent, bawdy, fantastical and weird…but most of all milk-out-your-nose funny.

    Deb C.
  • holli
    holli Member Posts: 6
    edited June 2006
    Peggy,
    First name in John. I always get Jonathon Kellerman and John Sanford confused (even before chemo) so got so I called them by their last names. Both do thriller mysteries and Sanford is a bit more gory than Kellerman.

    Holli
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2006
    Thanks...I'm going to our library website and look him up!

    Peggy
  • Sandra1957
    Sandra1957 Member Posts: 1,701
    edited June 2006
    Quote:



    I actually had this book in my hand to buy and then set it down...does Marley and Me have a sad ending? I just can't stand reading books where the Mom, Dad, Kid or DOG dies at the end right now!





    I read Marley and Me. Received from one of my Bunco Divas as a gift. I actually enjoyed it. Stop reading now if you don't want to know the ending.

    The dog does die at the end, but of old age. It was a really sweet book, especially if you are a dog lover.

    Lini

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