Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, July 21, 2019
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Your library is a cool place to go when the heat gets unbearable.
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Im reading The Moor by Laurie R. King, which is very cool. Mary and Sherlock revisit the Hound of the Baskervilles tale. Its quite funny in places but also eerie and intriguing. Ms. Kings writing makes you feel like you are actually reading an author from the early 1900s.
Still listening to 2019s Pulitzer Prize winner for Fiction, The Overstory by Richard Powers. Its a long one, but still quite good. And evidently its coming true now.
Please speak out to save our national forests while we still can. https://www.democraticunderground.com/10112852
What cool things are you reading this week?
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exboyfil
(18,126 posts)I have really enjoyed it. Already have the sequel queued on the player. Thank you Hoopla. It is a story about the descendants of H.P. Lovecraft and Randolph Carter. Lovecraft's great grand niece is of mixed European and African heritage. Something that I am sure would have given the old racist a heart attack.
Also reading on my tablet The Montauk Monster by Hunter Shea. I love monster stories (and movies). I like monster monsters over human monsters. I get enough of that in real life.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)and had it on my list of must-reads. But then my computer died, along with the list, so that one slipped away. I'm SO glad you brought it up again: 'Carter & Lovecraft, a Pandora's box loaded with wonderfully twisted stuff, including a two-fisted homicide cop turned PI, warped realities, a mysterious bookstore, the Cthulhu mythos, a dash of romance, and creepy fish-men. What's not to love?"
exboyfil
(18,126 posts)Thanks for the title correction. Took my old border collie for a walk (12,000 steps) and nearly wrapped it up. So happy the old boy was able to do the distance.
Hope it wasn't too awful hot out for you two.
matt819
(10,749 posts)If you think the first one is hard to follow, just wait.
Enjoyed both of them, but you really have to focus.
TexasProgresive
(12,368 posts)Takes place in Denmark. About half way through, it's got questionable suicide, artistic murder (I'll let you figure that out) kidnapping, theft and I don't know what else as I am only half way. What made me buy this book is a blurb, "Bladel is one of the best I've come across." Michael Connelly.
Sara Bladel is Danish but lived in the U.S. and is back in Denmark.The prose is very American in style to me.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)And I do love a challenge... So I'll be looking for that one.
leftieNanner
(15,848 posts)Dune
Left Hand of Darkness
Winters Tale - I know Mark Halperin is a lunatic, but it's a really good book.
Golden Compass trilogy
J K Rowling's murder mysteries under the nom de plume of Robert Galbraith.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)leftieNanner
(15,848 posts)But he thought it was the Shakespeare tale. As soon as I heard the name Peter Lake, I knew what it was. The book is a thousand times better.
Number9Dream
(1,705 posts)Thanks for the thread, hermetic. For me, this was the best Pendergast book in quite some time. It was primarily just Pendergast and D'Agosta against a serial killer known as "The Decapitator". It felt more like the early Pendergast books.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)Glad to hear that. I look forward to reading it. Thanks.
japple
(10,437 posts)https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/jul/20/colson-whitehead-reality-is-kids-shot-by-racist-cops
You can compare this case to what happened in Catholic orphanages or in aboriginal camps, Whitehead observes. Any place where you have corrupt, malevolent authority figures who can exert their will on the innocent and powerless, then youre going to have this: the school as a plantation. The ease with which these metaphors connect slavery to the present day is, he believes, very telling. In terms of institutional racism and segregation and white law enforcement attitude towards black people: you can say something from 1850 is true for now.
hermetic
(8,752 posts)And I totally agree.
This book just hit the shelves last week so good for you getting right on top of it. As brutal and horrifying as it sounds, I look forward to reading it.
Here's a brief interview with Colson on NPR, https://www.npr.org/2019/07/13/741391169/colson-whitehead-on-the-nickle-boys
Any place where you have corrupt, malevolent authority figures who can exert their will on the innocent and powerless, then youre going to have this." Get a clue, America.
japple
(10,437 posts)Thank you for continuing to host the weekly thread. Wish I could read a book each week like I used to.
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Paladin
(29,405 posts)Particularly heartbreaking, given how the main character clings to the words and ideals of Martin Luther King, in the face of such cruel treatment. Whitehead is a truly gifted writer.
matt819
(10,749 posts)Just finished an audio cast production of The Maltese Falcon. I'm not crazy about cast productions because they are often abridged, as this one was. Plus, it had a few idiosyncrasies that annoyed. Mostly where the actor portraying the character also narrates any text related to that character in the character's voice - the dialog and the narrative. Weird. Just downloaded the audiobook from Audible and am looking forward to that.
Reading An Absolutely Remarkable Thing by Hank Green. Sculptures, or may be aliens, show up in 63 cities worldwide. A graphic artist in NY is the first to get video up on YouTube. Hilarity ensues. I didn't know what to make of it, but it is something of a page turner. It's a lot of things. Sci-Fi (sculpture or alien first contact?). Social media - likes, follows, Tweet count, views - and all the possible related madness and money. Online hate and feuds, and their translation to violence IRL. Love, friendship, transactional relationships. In short, it's something of a riot. Have fun.
Scrublands by Chris Hammer. Australia. Maybe in the outback. Hot. Dry. In the first page a priest opens fire and kills at least two people. Can't wait to see where this is going.
Just started listening to Middlegame by Seanann McGuire. Not at all sure what this is or where it's going. Sci-Fi, maybe? Fantasy? Can't tell. I just finished listening to McGuire's Zombie Apocalypse Trilogy, Newsflesh, written under her Mira Grant pseudonym. That was a trip. So give that a try. Not sure about Middlegame yet, as I just started it.
And finally for this week, I just finished listening to Big Sky by Kate Atkinson, the lastest in her Jackson Brodie series. She is one heck of a writer, has an absolute blast with the English language and with relationships. Some of the most vile characters you will encounter (see also, in real life, Jeffrey Epstein). Narrated by the actor who plays Brodies in the TV productions, Jason Isaacs. He's brilliant. His timing is probably the best of any narrator I've listened to, and I've been listening to audio books since 1985. It helps to have read the previous books, but it's not critical. If you have read the previous books, then this one is a must-read, and you won't be disappointed.