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

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  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited October 2007

    Just finished State of Fear, a 2005 book by Michael Crichton, amazing novel debating the whole global warming affect.  Mighty alarming.  His bibliography is profound and extensive against the affect.  A good novel, and interesting debate as well. 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited October 2007

    Have to post the synopsis of this book, can't recommend it enough ... Genesis Code by John Case

    Synopsis (from BN.com)

    In a remote hill town in Italy, a renowned scientist enters the confessional. A dying man, he pours out the secret that has consumed his life for years - a sin of such magnitude that the shocked priest refuses him absolution.

    In a suburb of Washington DC, Joe Lassiter's only sister and her young son have been killed in a sudden fire that engulfs their home. The police believe it was arson; they soon discover that mother and child were brutally murdered before the blaze was set.

    As Lassiter tries to find out why they were killed, he comes to believe others may have been murdered in similar fashion. And still more people may die if he cannot discover the elusive connection that links the innocent victims together.

  • AlaskaDeb
    AlaskaDeb Member Posts: 2,601
    edited October 2007

    Sue - I LOVE the Kate Shugak novels.  I have met Dana Stabenow several times and actually took a one day workshop from her at our local library on Fantasy and science fiction writing. She started out in those genres even though she now writes a lot of mystery and suspense.  She has a cool web site, http://www.stabenow.com/

    Roctobermom - thanks for the tip...I will look for it at the library.

    Iodine - I have read State of Fear.  I love all of his books.  They always make you think.

    Deb C

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited October 2007

    Roctobermom, thanks for the tip.  Found the John Case book at the local used book store today for a buck!  As soon as I catch up on my text book reading (I'm 3 chapters behind and will loan my book to a gal in class who can't afford one for just one semester, and I'm just auditing) I'll be enjoying it!

  • Raye99
    Raye99 Member Posts: 1,350
    edited October 2007

    I just finished "An Unquiet Grave" by P.J. Parrish - very good mystery; also another one by this author(s) (I believe two women write this seris) is Island of Bones. Both very good.

    Read "My One Night Stand with Cancer" by Tania Kattan last week -  about a girl who gets bc very young and then has a recurrence; this book is just tremendous - the author is so frank and funny! - she doesn't hold back about anything, so those of you who might not want to hear about sexual relations, etc., this might not be for you (might want to check out the synopsis on amazon.com). I loved it.

    Raye

  • pconn03
    pconn03 Member Posts: 643
    edited October 2007

    Rocktobermom:

    I am reading the Genesis Code now (on your recommendation) and it is fantastic!!!    I'm about half-way through and I already want to read other books by him (John Case).

    Raye:

    I've read a couple of the P.J. Parrish books too:  Dark of the Moon and A Thousand Bones.  You are right that they are written by two women - sisters, actually.  I heard one of them interviewed on WJR radio here in the Detroit area recently and that was when I got hooked.  They are from Michigan but live elsewhere now.  A couple other of their books are Paint it Black and Thicker than Water - I haven't read those yet but I agree they are very good.

    Pat

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited October 2007

    Well, I'm having to put off reading it--I'm behind on my chapters of History of Western Civilization and my prof. will eat me alive if I don't have ans. in class! I should be reading now, but hey--I'm auditing, no grade!

  • tommyD
    tommyD Member Posts: 8
    edited October 2007

    Just read "How To Outsmart Your Cancer" -- not sure who the author is.  It was a great read  - very different  but interesting about Alternative Meds.  I must say, I could possibly be interested in trying several of these ways of curing cancer -- there are so many success storys that it is definitely worth reading!

    Beth

  • tommyD
    tommyD Member Posts: 8
    edited October 2007

    Just read "How To Outsmart Your Cancer" -- not sure who the author is.  It was a great read  - very different  but interesting about Alternative Meds.  I must say, I could possibly be interested in trying several of these ways of curing cancer -- there are so many success storys that it is definitely worth reading!

    Beth

  • EachDay
    EachDay Member Posts: 400
    edited October 2007

    I just read "Undressing the Moon" by Tammy Greenwood.  The main character has breast cancer, though the story is not "about" breast cancer as such.  It was dark and I wouldn't recommend it to someone newly diagnosed or even those of us who are moving beyond.

    Also read Joan Didion's biography/memoir "The Year of Magical Thinking".  While this was mostly about the grief surrounding her husband's sudden death, there were elements of this book that would apply to breast cancer suvivors...loss and grief are universal.

  • sahalie
    sahalie Member Posts: 2,147
    edited November 2007

    I just returned from French Polynesia and while there picked up a book I couldn't put down.  Major reading on the beach, before bed, in the hammock.  I read it in two days.

    Our Lives Are the Rivers by Jaime Manrique

    It's the story of Si'mone Bolivar and his life long fight for the the unification of Colombia, Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador, South America equal to the might of Europe and the emerging United States and to get away from Spains rule.  Also his relationship with another freedom fighter and his lover, Manuela Saenz.  

    I think it just came out this year.

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited November 2007

    I just finished a book called "Manny" about a guy nanny.  Pretty quick light read.

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited November 2007

    I am about to start the memoir by Deanna Favre.  Has anyone else read this book? 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited December 2007

    I just finished The Friday Night Knitting Club (Jacobs), about a single mother who owns her own knitting shop in NYC and the various characters that flow through her life via a Friday night club that sort of sprang up on its own. The author presents various knitting techniques and issues as a metaphor for life issues. Not bad. Without being a spoiler though, I'll say that though it seems to be a light read, the end is quite serious and even a bit disturbing.

    ~Marin

  • snowyday
    snowyday Member Posts: 1,478
    edited December 2007

    Fav author Ian Rankin, read everything he's written, but his new book waiting until it's cheaper. 

    Denis Lehane, he wrote Mystic River but also writes a detective series, the movie was good but the book floored me still does and I read way back in 2003. 

    Right now I reading the Romanov Prophecy by Steve Berry.

    Should say trying to read it can't concentrate recently so I've been reading magazines as well.  And just took two books out at my CC  by Dr. Robert Buckman, he's a funny guy, used to always see him on Cityline (Canadian talk show)  he has cancer and and often said it was so different being a patient and what a difference having cancer in the way he practices medicine now. Pearl 

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited December 2007

    I am currently reading Chill Factor by Sandra Brown.  It is pretty good. 

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited December 2007

    I just picked up Mirror Image by Sandra Brown.  It's an old one from the used book store.

    I won't be going back, they've stopped doing alphabetical with author.  Just put all of one letter in a Huge 10 shelf, 4 foot long book case..  Like I have time to read each and every book there!

    Really sad when people are too lazy to run a business right--and then act like they are doing you a favor by being there.

    Amazon, here I come.

  • LisaSDCA
    LisaSDCA Member Posts: 2,230
    edited December 2007

    Wow - I haven't checked in since I went in for my bilat mastectomies and reconstruction. I'll try and remember what I've read. Firstly, I finished the 900+ pages of Tony Judt's Post War and it was mightly worth the read. A foundation in recent history gives the best perspective on events in the present day. Zadie Smith's On Beauty - a sensitive, hilarious, provocative novel with a fascinating strong female protagonist A NYTimes 10 Best Books of the Year. Love, Medicine & Miracles, Bernie Siegel, MD - given to me by a well-meaning friend. A somewhat dated book that encourages you to find what negative destructive need within you invited illness and to use positive imagery, etc. to heal yourself.<gag> Then I got on a bit of an Ian McEwan kick - wanted to read Atonement before it became "a major motion picture" and destroyed my own visuals. What a wonderful book. A short novel, but full of complex characters and vivid, gripping, intense interactions. His other one, Amsterdam, winner of the Booker Prize, is another short novel - essentially a portrait of two men; having in common only that at some point they were lovers of Molly, the woman whose funeral the book opens with. A delightful piece of writing, chronicling the trainwreck of two lives. Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky - A novel set on the eve of the Nazi occupation of France, the peasantry to the local aristocracy learning to coexist with the enemy. Gives a personal sense of the futility, the loss of control a simple family experienced. A highly successful writer living in Paris, this book remained hidden and unknown for 64 years after the author was deported to Auschwitz, where she died. Amy Hempel's Collected Stories - 'stunning stories about marriages , minor disasters and moments of revelation'. This woman has a gift. Next came The Meaning of Night A Confession by Michael Cox - set in Victorian England, a story of murder, obsession, love, betrayal, wealth, vengeance, even opium. Highly praised critically, I give it a B-. But that may be because I had Mark Helprin's The Pacific and Other Stories to compare it with. This is probably my favorite living writer in the English language and this is his first published work of fiction in nearly a decade. Sixteen stories, each a jewel, polished prose - powerful and passionate.

    I am currently finishing up a bit of non-fiction, the 1916 work by Frank Harris, the biography Oscar Wilde. Yes, I know it turns out tragically and then even more so, but this is supposed to be the best one and I wanted to read more on this genius. Soon I want to find a good book on Benjamin Disraeli, so if anyone has any recommendations, let's have 'em!

    May have to pick up Genesis Code in the meantime.Laughing

    Lisa

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited December 2007

    I just started "Third Degree" by Greg Iles.  It has really started off great.  I have read some very good books by Greg Iles in the past, "Sleep no More", "24 Hours".

  • iodine
    iodine Member Posts: 4,289
    edited December 2007

    Greg Isles has become one of my fav authors!  I got the latest book for Christmas and am saving it for the winter blues--Feb. or there about.

  • JoniB
    JoniB Member Posts: 346
    edited December 2007

    I always make sure I have a book with me when going to doctor's appointments - that way I am not angry when I am left waiting for an hour!  I just finished Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen, which is about the traveling circus world in the early 1900s.  It was very fast moving and interesting.  I am now reading Snow Flower and the Sectret Fan. 

  • evilelf
    evilelf Member Posts: 1,066
    edited December 2007

    Just finished with Lisa Jackson's Twice Kissed.... It was pretty good

    I've been listening to audio books also, I've started listening to Clive Cussler and Nelson Demille love the suspense

    peace

    V

  • acgw
    acgw Member Posts: 286
    edited January 2008

    My husband found a book called WHITTAKER'S WIFE in a second hand shop and bought it for me as the protagonist and I share a last name.

    It was written in 1962, takes place in Rhodesia and was written by Harry Bloom, father to the actor Orlando Bloom. 

    The book was relatively melodramatic but had some fabulous observations regarding white colonials in Africa. 

  • TerryNY
    TerryNY Member Posts: 603
    edited January 2008

    I just finished A Thousand Years Over A Hot Stove, A History of American Women Told Through Food, Recipes, and Remembrances by Laura Schenone.   A very good read and had some fascinating history about immigration and food all intertwined that helped shape our country and what we eat today. 

     I received four books for Christmas: 

    I'm in the middle of Crazy Sexy Cancer Tips by Kris Carr, she's pretty funny.  

     I also started Stephen Colbert's I Am America (and so can you).  

    He's hysterical!

    Also, Lisa's Story by Tom Batiuk but I'm not ready to read that one yet already knowing the ending.

    The last is a book called Animal, Vegetable Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver about her family's attempt to eat only locally grown foods for one year.  

  • BlindedByScience
    BlindedByScience Member Posts: 314
    edited January 2008

    OK, I've read all the Hiaasen novels and had to move on. 

    I spent the last summer reading the Jim Butcher series of the Dresden Files. New one due out in April. The main character, Harry Dresden, is a wizard, lives in Chicago, and helps solve crimes for the police. It's written a bit like the old detective novels except Harry doesn't drink (much) and almost never gets the girl. This series is low-key humorous at times with a few good one-liners. Not a serious read at all. 

    The books spawned a short-lived TV series on the Sci-Fi channel.

    If you pick one up, be sure to start with the first one as each book builds on the previous ones. 

  • karol61
    karol61 Member Posts: 128
    edited January 2008

    Deb,

    i love to read,too. i also enjoy Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovitch.

    Nora Roberts  novels are most enjoyable.

    this Fall,I discovered a new book series about a female detective living in Botswana, by Alexander McCall Smith. 

    Right now,i'm reading Richard North Patterson's Exile. It's very good. 

    Karoline 

  • Raye99
    Raye99 Member Posts: 1,350
    edited January 2008

    I love Dennis Lehane - have read all of his books. Snowyday, yes! Two of the series he wrote were quite disturbing - "Gone, Baby, Gone" and "Darkness, Take my Hand", scary.

    Finished Sue Grafton's T is for Trespass (very good) in about two days, best one in years. Also read the new Patricia Cornwell "Book of the Dead", it didn't get great reviews, but I enjoyed it. Kay Scarpetta book. Just finished a light read called "Sparkles" by Louise Bagshawe - genre somewhat like Jackie Collins with less sex. Beachy fun read.

    What next?

    Raye

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited January 2008

    I just started "The Follower" by Jason Starr and I literally do not want to put this book down.  I have never read Starr before and if this book remains as good as it started, I will look for everything else he has written.T  It reminds me of Chic Lit written by a guy with some stalking, date rape, and I am sure there will be a murder or two.  So far it is about a bunch of 20-30 somethings in Manhattan.  I can't wait to read more.

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited January 2008

    I am now reading "Lights Out" by Jason Starr.  I liked "The Follower" so much that I now want to read everything Jason Starr has written.  "Lights Out" is good but not as good. 

  • newter
    newter Member Posts: 4,330
    edited January 2008

    Am I the only one reading good books these days?  I just got Glenn Becks "An Inconvenient Book" out of the library and hope to start it tonight.

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