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What do you think?
******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I was thinking about The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon. A nice, short book, and easily available. Or how about The Hound of the Baskervilles by Conan Doyle?
—Ceci n'est pas un seing. |
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Either sounds good to me. I like reading other people's suggestions because it widens my reading horizons. I loved Bob's book. I just wish we had had more discussion about it; I felt a bit like I had hogged the conversation!
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The winners of the 2006 Pulitzer Prize were announced today. None are familiar to me. I'm going to suggest that we read one of them.
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I am glad we're not going to let the book discussion end with the first book! I like either of Z's (prefer Pynchon because I've not read it) or March by Brooks, as Shu suggests. It's sort of a companion to Little Women as it's about their father's Civil War experience.
I promise to do better this time. Bob - what do you think? ******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I've also been waiting for someone to suggest a new book. The only one of those I've read before is Hound of the Baskervilles but I'd be willing to read that again if others wanted to. Or any of the other suggestions. I'd prefer fiction but I'm willing to give anything a go providing I can get a copy - preferably on Amazon as I don't really get time to get to bookshops as much as I'd like and even if I did there's no guarantee they'd have what I was looking for.
"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. Read all about my travels around the world here. Read even more of my travel writing and poems on my weblog. My new blog - which I hope to keep more up to date than my old one. And don't miss this - my unpublished book, coming a chapter a week |
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Lost in the Forest was recently recommended to me by someone who is a discerning reader, but I've not read it yet.
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Well they all sound good to me. Somone needs to just pick. :-) Then we can keep the others in mind for next time!
******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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Well, we could go around and around on this. Bob was in charge before. How about putting CW in charge of this one since she suggested another book and, after all, she is a librarian.
What will it be, CW? |
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Wow - the pressure! Let me get the books in that I reserved and I'll pick on Saturday.
******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I've got _The Crying of Lot 49_ sitting on my desk, and the first few lines have already sucked me in. I vote for this book by Thomas Pynchon, published first in the year after I was born.
Let's put the other suggestions on our shelves for a brief time but come back to them as soon as we've finished this (or maybe even a little before!). Books are not like husbands - it is perfectly acceptable to be enjoying more than one at a time. ******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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Anyone ready for a new one? I have to admit that I've already got 2 books I need to read for "real-time" book groups. Care to choose one of these this time?
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books by Azar Nafisi. The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger. Oh, and we still haven't read/discussed March by Geraldine Brooks. ******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I'll try anything. We haven't really discussed the last one though, have we. Or did I miss it. There were a few cursory comments but no discussion. Should we get together sometime on the chat room?
"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. Read all about my travels around the world here. Read even more of my travel writing and poems on my weblog. My new blog - which I hope to keep more up to date than my old one. And don't miss this - my unpublished book, coming a chapter a week |
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I would vote for Reading Lolita in Tehran. I've been meaning to read it since hearing the author interviewed on the radio.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing. |
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Yes, we should discuss the last one, I agree. Perhaps we need a better format for discussions of books.
The NY Times just posted their list of the best fiction (American) in the last 25 years, and Toni Morrison's "Beloved" was number 1; we might consider that at some point. I have read it, and it was very good. Here is the list: Winner: Toni Morrison's 'Beloved' (15 votes) Runners-up: Don DeLillo's 'Underworld' (11 votes), John Updike's 'Rabbit Angstrom: The Four Novels' and Cormac McCarthy's 'Blood Meridian' (tied with 8 votes each) and Philip Roth's 'American Pastoral' (7 votes) Also receiving multiple votes: John Kennedy Toole's 'A Confederacy of Dunces,' Marilynne Robinson's 'Housekeeping,' Mark Helprin's 'Winter's Tale,' DeLillo's 'White Noise,' Roth's 'The Counterlife,' DeLillo's 'Libra,' Raymond Carver's 'Where I'm Calling From,' Tim O'Brien's 'The Things They Carried,' Norman Rush's 'Mating,' Denis Johnson's 'Jesus' Son,' Roth's 'Operation Shylock,' Richard Ford's 'Independence Day,' Roth's 'Sabbath's Theater,' McCarthy's 'Border Trilogy,' Roth's 'The Human Stain,' Edward P. Jones' 'The Known World,' Roth's 'The Plot Against America' Voting: The New York Times asked a couple hundred people — authors, literary critics, academics and others — to vote on the best American work of fiction of the past 25 years. A total of 125 people — including authors as well-known as Don DeLillo and Maxine Hong Kingston — agreed to participate. |
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What a high-fallutin' list! It certainly doesn't represent the books that check out from my library! Except for _Beloved_, I've never laid hands or eyes on any of them. LOL Ah well, I think we've already established that I'm bourgeois in many things, including my reading tastes.
I can't get the chat room function to work on my computer at all. I'd be willing to discuss _Crying_ more. It was a very interesting book. I"ll post something in the other thread to see if we can spark some more discussion. ******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I quite agree. I've never read any of those books and only read books by a couple of the authors. They certainly aren't the sort of books I'd want to read. Come on you raver, you seer of visions, Come on you painter, you piper, you prisoner, and shine! |
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Of the list that Kalleh posted. I've read: the first three novels of Updike's Rabbit Angstrom series, Toole's Confederacy of Dunces, DeLillo's White Noise and Libra, and Roth's Operation Shylock. They were all of them entertaining, and two of them were hilarious. I personally would read anything by Roth, DeLillo, Updike, or O'Brien. Of the latter, I read his thoroughly enjoyable Going After Cacciato which didn't make the list because it's more than 25 years old (1978). I guess my tastes are just out of synch with the rest of the members of this board.
—Ceci n'est pas un seing. |
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Maybe the simple fact that I've not read most of those books is the best reason of all to pick one of them to read! As a librarian, I often will place a request for a book that my customers seem to all be reading. It's good for me, and I have often found that my sense of entertainment can be satisfied in more ways than I will usually choose.
What book looks good to you, zmj? ******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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What book looks good to you
To quote, apocryphally, Sam Goldwyn, "include me out!" You folks pick one, and I'll join in later. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. |
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Well, that's strange to me. I could understand if you'd read them and didn't like them. But if you've never read them, how would you know? I doubt that I would have read either of the books that Bob or Zmj recommended, but I am so glad I did. They broadened my horizens, that's for sure. It's interesting to me how people decide what to read. [One point to remember, Arnie, is that this was American fiction, and that might be why you haven't read them.] I have read very few of them as well, but my daughter said she has read about half of them, and she says the ones she read were very good. I am not sure how we should discuss the books here, and I think we are stuck on that. CW, is there nothing to be done about your chat function? We miss you on the chats. I am feeling as though we should talk about the last book before we start a new one, but I tend to be a little compulsive sometimes! I am willing to go either way. |
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I'm pushing and recommending Reading Lolita in Tehran. I've got the first 5 discs loaded on my iPod and I started listening this morning. I love it so far - fascinating cultural study/memoir type thing. I'd like to hear what you all think of it. Maybe we could still keep discussing Crying of Lot 49 on that thread and start reading a new one at the same time?
******* "Show your true colors. Mine is Yellow." ~Big Bird |
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I will see if I can find it today at lunch. Thanks, CW.
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OK. I'll check the bookshop tomorrow "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. Read all about my travels around the world here. Read even more of my travel writing and poems on my weblog. My new blog - which I hope to keep more up to date than my old one. And don't miss this - my unpublished book, coming a chapter a week |
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