Littlegeek's triumphant return and 2024 reads.

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Littlegeek's triumphant return and 2024 reads.

1littlegeek
Dec 30, 2023, 12:50 pm

Greetings, Dragoneers!
I've been off LT for ages but I decided this year to start keeping track of my reading again, so where better? Plus, this really is the friendliest place in the internet, bar none.

For those who have asked, things have been pretty status quo in my life. I did contract COVID a couple of times. The first time left my lungs damaged so I don't move as quickly these days, but I still take the stairs. Hubby is well and still hilarious. I plan to retire in April of 2026 so just marking time til that magical day.

Last year I decided to only read classics that I had somehow missed. Finished up that project about a week before xmas, so I'm officially into 2024, reading-wise. Since I read nothing newly published in 2023, I've got some catching up to do! I'm planning to have one reading book and one audio book going at the same time. I do knit a lot, so audiobooks are great for that. Usually use Libby for audiobooks so those will be back catalog, whatever is available at the time.

So far I have read Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead (I'll read anything by Whitehead, the crime novels are very reminiscent of Walter Mosely), then Elena Knows by Claudia Piñeiro (very strange and sad, and a bit over the top), and now reading The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride, which is just lovely.

So far I have listened to Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman, which was ok, but for some reason the author is obsessed with grooming and shopping and those parts bored me. Then I started Olga Dies Dreaming by Xochitl Gonzalez which I think I'm gonna DNF. There's one white character in there that I just cannot stand and life is too short. Not a bad book, just there are too many books to read! Today I will listen to A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers, sequel to A Psalm for the Wild-Built, which I quite loved.

2Bookmarque
Dec 30, 2023, 12:58 pm

Welcome back and happy new thread!

3littlegeek
Dec 30, 2023, 1:12 pm

For those interested, here are the books I read in 2023:

100% Stone Classic
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
The Death of Ivan Ilytch by Tolstoy
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
The Quiet American by Graham Greene
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry

Solid Read
Ordeal By Innocence by Agatha Christie
Kitchen Confidential by Anthony Bourdain
Silas Marner by George Eliot

I get why it's a "classic" but I didn't love it
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens (only Dickens I ever finished!)
The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith

Meh and/or Dated
The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester
Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Awakening by Kate Chopin

DNF
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë

4Karlstar
Dec 30, 2023, 2:48 pm

Welcome back and Happy New Thread!

I think after good advice from the folks here, that my quest to read Dickens is going to end this year with David Copperfield. Thanks for helping to confirm that.

5Marissa_Doyle
Dec 30, 2023, 2:55 pm

Starred for 2024!

Cold Comfort Farm is dated, but I still think it's hilarious. Kind of like I Capture the Castle on drugs.

6pgmcc
Dec 30, 2023, 3:14 pm

>4 Karlstar:
David Copperfield was the Dickens book I least enjoyed.

7jillmwo
Dec 30, 2023, 3:29 pm

>1 littlegeek: Welcome back! And for the record >5 Marissa_Doyle: that's the best characterization of Cold Comfort Farm EVER. On drugs...

8littlegeek
Dec 30, 2023, 3:46 pm

>5 Marissa_Doyle: My problem with it was it's so very classist. City girl comes to town and fixes up the poor stupid country cousins doesn't really sit well these days.

9reconditereader
Dec 30, 2023, 6:35 pm

I like Cold Comfort Farm much better than I Capture the Castle, which is a book that enraged me.

10littlegeek
Dec 30, 2023, 11:59 pm

Well, A Prayer for the Crown-Shy was sweet. In this messed up world, it's sometimes nice to read a simple tale of friendship. Downloaded Upgrade by Blake Crouch for my next listen.

11Narilka
Dec 31, 2023, 11:18 am

Welcome back and happy reading in 2024!

12Karlstar
Dec 31, 2023, 9:39 pm

>6 pgmcc: Uh oh, I figured that was the one left that I hadn't read that I really should.

13haydninvienna
Dec 31, 2023, 10:15 pm

Happy new year!

>12 Karlstar: Does that mean you've read all of Dickens except that one, or just that there are some you think you should read and some you don't want to bother with?

14Karlstar
Dec 31, 2023, 10:38 pm

>13 haydninvienna: Some that it seems I should not bother with. I have read 4 so far, there must be at least 1 or 2 more to read.

15haydninvienna
Dec 31, 2023, 11:08 pm

>14 Karlstar: TBH I probably wouldn't bother with David Copperfield either. I remember disliking it some years ago. Somewhere I mentioned being unable to cope with Rosa Bud, so there goes The Mystery of Edwin Drood. I take it that you've read A Christmas Carol and Pickwick Papers. My next after that would probably be Bleak House. (I read this sitting on a train travelling across Canada, so it must be all right.) Note I haven't read all or even most of them either, and I am certainly not pretending to be a Dickens expert. But when he's good, he's very, very good; and when's bad, he's horrid.

16jillmwo
Jan 1, 9:13 am

>14 Karlstar: Have you read A Tale of Two Cities? (So many of us had that as assigned reading at some point...) Personally, I've had Bleak House on my shelf upstairs for a number of years and I have yet to really give full attention to it. (I really prefer Wilkie Collins to Dickens.)

17Bookmarque
Jan 1, 9:23 am

I didn't mind Copperfield (Aunt Betsy!!), but I couldn't stand Dora. Also liked AToTC...all that knitting.

18Karlstar
Jan 1, 10:30 am

>16 jillmwo: I have read A Tale of Two Cities, it was assigned reading in high school, then I re-read it later. I actually read a chapter or two of it from time to time, as it is on my Kindle. It actually seems better reading it at that pace.

>15 haydninvienna: I have not read Pickwick Papers.

19littlegeek
Jan 1, 3:05 pm

I tried so many Dickens, probably got farthest in Bleak House before last year when I finally finished Great Expectations. I really love Trollope and Collins, too, just Dickens doesn't work for me.

20pgmcc
Jan 1, 3:41 pm

>19 littlegeek:
Trollope's books are great. His humour is amazing.

21clamairy
Jan 1, 4:44 pm

WELCOME BACK! Please stay this time!

22littlegeek
Jan 1, 5:51 pm

>21 clamairy: I will try! Btw, you know my husband is a cheese monger now? I always have amazing cheese in my fridge!

23littlegeek
Jan 1, 5:56 pm

Finished Upload. Basic scifi thriller, sort of silly, but a good premise. I find that when choosing something to listen to while I knit, the best books are either mysteries, scifi, or thrillers - plot heavy stories that keep me interested. If I want to experience something with lovely prose or well-drawn characters, I have to read it in a book, the better to reread beautiful passages or savor a moment.

Gonna go find a mystery for my next listen.

24clamairy
Jan 1, 6:10 pm

>23 littlegeek: I have to agree. Scalzi writes a great book to listen to, Whitehead's writing is for my eyeballs only.

25littlegeek
Jan 1, 6:27 pm

Decided on a stand alone (or maybe first in a series?) by Laurie R. King, Back to the Garden. I have enjoyed many of her books, plus she's local to me here in Santa Cruz, CA.

26littlegeek
Jan 1, 6:28 pm

>24 clamairy: I love Neil Gaiman, but only his audiobooks! He's such a good reader, but I don't really love his prose to read.

27MrsLee
Jan 1, 7:16 pm

>22 littlegeek: Honestly. Pirate, funny AND a cheesemonger?! Angus amazes. :)

28clamairy
Jan 1, 7:45 pm

>22 littlegeek: We expect regular cheesy updates and recommendations, you know.

29Sakerfalcon
Jan 2, 7:55 am

Welcome back! Wishing you a New Year full of great books and CHEESE!

30littlegeek
Jan 2, 12:42 pm

>28 clamairy: Try Harbison. The most delicious soft cheese ever!

31MrAndrew
Jan 3, 7:19 am

Blessed are the cheesemongers.

32littlegeek
Jan 3, 10:01 pm

Finished The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store last night. Boy can McBride spin a yarn! Themes of community, diversity, and kindness. I loved it.

Now reading The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese.

33littlegeek
Jan 15, 11:46 am

Finished listening to Back to the Garden. It was ok, pretty standard mystery, not hard to figure out. I was noticing all the ways the author used stalling to hide certain clues until she was ready to show the reader. For instance, waiting for DNA results, or someone's in a meeting, etc. Anyway, I managed to finish despite hating that narrator!

I've decided to go ahead and listen to the Murderbot books. I had read the first one yonks ago but wasn't compelled enough to shell out full price for each novella. But now I can listen to them through Hoopla for nothing so cheapskate me is all over it. Listening to the first on again rn. I do find Murderbot an engaging protagonist.

Still reading The Covenant of Water. It's great but boy is it loooong. Not as much reading time for me rn as there is a Grand Slam to watch, go Coco!

34Alexandra_book_life
Jan 15, 1:24 pm

>33 littlegeek: Murderbot series is a favourite of mine, I hope you'll enjoy all of the books.

The Covenant of Water is on my "to read some day, just now now" list. Maybe I'll get to it...

35littlegeek
Jan 18, 10:06 pm

Finished The Covenant of Water. I'm a bit disappointed. I finished it, but it was very long and ran out of steam in the final third of the book. It was like Verghese suddenly forgot to make the characters compelling. And there was some creepyness in the end that was a turnoff for me. I did enjoy 2/3 of it, tho! I'm one of those nerds who loves the medical stuff.

Now reading On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong. Beautiful prose, but that's to be expected of a poet. It's very sad so far.

Listening to Artificial Condition, the second Murderbot.

36littlegeek
Jan 21, 11:09 am

Between the tennis tournament and the new crochet project I'm working on, I have more time for listening than reading rn. Finished the Murderbot. I am a little stymied as to why these books are so very popular. It's fine, but I guess there's been too much hype.

Then I listened to In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado. She manages to write about an abusive relationship without being lurid. Difficult subject, handled with care and with beautiful language.

Next up is Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt. I need a bit of whimsy after that (and still reading Vuong, which also deals with abuse).

37Karlstar
Jan 21, 12:09 pm

>36 littlegeek: I have a couple more of the Murderbot books to read, including the most recent and I will get to them. They are ok, not great.

38reconditereader
Jan 21, 3:56 pm

It's possible that the extent to which people enjoy the Murderbot books is related to how much they personally relate to Murderbot and its voice.

I love them.

39Alexandra_book_life
Jan 21, 4:34 pm

>38 reconditereader: I think you might be right. I love them too...

40clamairy
Jan 21, 8:39 pm

>38 reconditereader: & >39 Alexandra_book_life: Agreed. I find them both hilarious and touching.

41littlegeek
Jan 28, 6:51 pm

Finished both On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous and it was so very beautifully written and so very sad. Obviously written by a poet. If you read for style and word choice, this book is for you. Glad I read it.

Also finished listening to Remarkably Bright Creatures. I really did love the characters, especially the octopus. But this is the kind of book where the reader can see early on where the book is heading and how each character will end up, and the reading experience is sitting from on high watching the missed connections and bad decisions that delay the inevitable ending until the book reaches novel length. If you are the type of reader who reads the ending first before you decide to commit your time, this book is for you. For me, it was sweet, but yeah, not really my favorite type of book. The octopus was great, tho.

Now reading The Bee Sting by Paul Murray. Liking it so far, and I have no idea where it's heading so it has that going for it!

As for Murderbot, I do love the character. I think sci-fi adventure isn't really my thing, tho. The parts where they are shooting people or the endless exposition is where it loses me. I felt like almost the whole book was exposition!

42littlegeek
Feb 4, 12:42 am

Well, hmmm. I can't say I didn't enjoy reading The Bee Sting but it left a lot to be desired. Let's just say there's a difference between an ambiguous ending and an unresolved one. That and the pretentious lack of punctuation were a turnoff. But it definitely kept my interest.

I'm going back to something reliable, book #17 in the Brother Cadfael series, The Potter's Field.

43clamairy
Feb 4, 8:24 am

>42 littlegeek: Ahh, well. Lack of punctuation would be a killer for me. I would have to do that as an audiobook in order not to be screaming the whole time.

>41 littlegeek: I loved the octopus in Remarkably Bright Creatures, too. I also could see exactly where it was going and it seems like it took forever to get there.

44littlegeek
Feb 5, 12:30 pm

>43 clamairy: The punctuation thing was different for each character. POV changed with each chapter. So not only was there punctuation weirdness, but you had to get used to a new type every time the POV changed. Gimmicky.

45littlegeek
Feb 6, 11:19 pm

Ah, the gentle joys of Brother Cadfael. I like a book with modest goals that meets them completely.

I have been hit by Alexandra's bullet and have started City of Stairs.

Btw, my audiobook is Imposter Syndrome by Kathy Wang. I had never heard anything about this book but it was available on Libby. I listened to about half of it on Sunday when our power was out. It's diverting enough for background for crocheting.

46Alexandra_book_life
Feb 7, 12:48 am

>45 littlegeek: I am looking forward to seeing what you think of City of Stairs :)

47littlegeek
Feb 12, 12:57 am

Finished Imposter Syndrome. It was ok. Just borrowed The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz. I have really enjoyed some of his other mysteries.

48MrAndrew
Feb 12, 4:19 am

Do you feel that you're not qualified to say more about Imposter Syndrome?

49Alexandra_book_life
Feb 12, 7:04 am

>47 littlegeek: The Word is Murder was enjoyable and very meta, the same goes for the rest of this series. I hope you'll like it.

50clamairy
Feb 12, 7:29 am

51pgmcc
Feb 12, 1:37 pm

>48 MrAndrew: Nice one!

52jillmwo
Feb 12, 4:39 pm

>44 littlegeek: I have to admit that kind of "playful" use of punctuation as a signal to the reader (regarding whose head you were in) would drive me totally up the wall and down the other side. Gack.

53littlegeek
Feb 12, 6:11 pm

>48 MrAndrew: Ha, I have missed you, Mr A!

54littlegeek
Feb 16, 11:53 pm

Finished The Word is Murder. I enjoyed it enough that I downloaded the next installment, The Sentence is Death.

55littlegeek
Feb 17, 12:11 am

Also, really very much enjoying City of Stairs. It's got a little of everything from fantasy to murder mystery to political intrigue to genuine horror. Plus Vikings. Or maybe a Viking. Anyway, good fun!

56Alexandra_book_life
Feb 17, 4:46 am

>55 littlegeek: I am very happy to hear that :)

57MrAndrew
Feb 17, 5:55 am

>53 littlegeek: right back atcha, lg

>55 littlegeek: dragons?

58littlegeek
Feb 17, 12:52 pm

>57 MrAndrew: I'm only half way through the first book, so there is hope.

59littlegeek
Feb 19, 2:34 pm

Finished The Sentence is Death. This series is pretty fun. Still working in City of Stairs and still enjoying it. I can't decide on a new audiobook. Nothing is appealing right now.

60littlegeek
Feb 19, 11:22 pm

I went with Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead. I had started reading this a while back and got distracted about 20% through so I thought I'd try the audio.

61littlegeek
Feb 20, 10:05 pm

Finished City of Stairs. What fun! I really enjoyed it. I will definitely be reading the rest of the trilogy, but I have other series I'm working on. Just started book 5 of the House of Niccólo series by Dorothy Dunnet, The Unicorn Hunt. Woot, I love Dorothy!

62Alexandra_book_life
Feb 20, 11:37 pm

>61 littlegeek: Just to let you know that City of Blades is an even better book than City of Stairs (imo, of course). I am looking forward to reading the House of Niccólo I am still reading King Hereafter with my buddy readers (65% done), and I have the last two Lymond books left to read. Dunnett is great :)

63littlegeek
Feb 21, 12:42 pm

>62 Alexandra_book_life: Looking forward to more City books! Thanks for that bullet!

64littlegeek
Mar 2, 2:37 pm

Once again got bored with Great Circle. Oh well, I tried. Signed up for Audible again to whispersync the Dunnett. Just have to remember to cancel before they start charging me. Now I know how to pronounce all those names.

The big news is I bought a new Kindle. My Paperwhite is 9 years old! No wonder she hardly holds a charge! My first Kindle died when I was on vacation, never going through that again.
I'm off to Indian Wells to see the greatest tennis players on the planet next week. Not gonna take the chance.

I got the basic model this time. Paperwhite hardly seems worth the extra cash. Plus, the basic still has a bevel, I like a safe place to rest my thumb.

65Alexandra_book_life
Mar 2, 3:40 pm

>64 littlegeek: It's lovely to have a new Kindle! My first Kindle lasted 8 years. I was on vacation and had misplaced it. I looked for it in panic for a while (the book was a page-turner), then I sat down hard, in anger - right on the poor Kindle. Ooops. I wouldn't want to go through that again ;)

66littlegeek
Mar 2, 3:46 pm

>65 Alexandra_book_life: We were in Tahoe when my first Kindle died. No book store! We were thinking of going to Reno when I found a small section of books in an antique store. May never have read Angle of Repose otherwise, but what a great book. Thanks, amazon for your device failure.

67clamairy
Mar 2, 4:03 pm

>64 littlegeek: Oh, enjoy! All of the Paperwhites I have bought are still functioning, although the 12 year old one had gotten very slow and has been donated to my daughter's housemate. I have a six year old one that has become my beach & travel Kindle, and a new Signature edition that I love.

Long may yours function!

68littlegeek
Mar 2, 4:27 pm

>67 clamairy: Thanks! My old one still works, I'm just worried the battery is about to go. I have to charge it every 3-4 days.

69clamairy
Edited: Mar 2, 4:52 pm

>68 littlegeek: Yeah, that's a lot. Have you tried taking everything off it, and just putting a few books back on? With my first Kindle I realized that for some reason a lot of the stuff I had sided-loaded was causing some processing error that was eating up the battery. The new ones can handle those files but the older ones couldn't. Once I took a bunch of stuff off the battery life improved dramatically.

70littlegeek
Mar 2, 4:54 pm

>69 clamairy: Interesting. I do dump books off fairly frequently but I could try that. Thanks!

71clamairy
Edited: Mar 2, 4:56 pm

>70 littlegeek: Let me know if it helps! I was getting free books from everywhere back in the old days. And I think some of them were not formatted properly.

72littlegeek
Mar 2, 5:14 pm

>71 clamairy: I did a lot of library and Project Gutenberg books last year when I was reading only classics. I thought I removed them all, but that might be a factor.

73MrsLee
Mar 2, 6:15 pm

>66 littlegeek: I would say you came out on the winning side there. I love that book.

74clamairy
Mar 2, 6:22 pm

>72 littlegeek: The library loans shouldn't be an issue, but the Project Gutenberg ones definitely might have a dodgy format.

75littlegeek
Mar 2, 8:55 pm

>73 MrsLee: Isn't it great? I don't think I had ever heard of it. Plus, I have contemplated the term ever since, being a little long in the tooth myself.

76Karlstar
Mar 2, 11:36 pm

>64 littlegeek: Congrats and good luck with the new kindle, I hope it lasts as long as your old one.

77littlegeek
Mar 12, 11:00 am

I'm on vacation right now, watching the world's best tennis players battle it out in Indian Wells, CA, but I have managed to finish the Dunnett. Great, as all her books. It had the obligatory "oh, were you not paying attention to this tiny detail from 600 pages ago around which the whole plot turns?" kind of twist she is so very good at. I love authors who are way smarter than me.

I am following the Tournament of Books this year again so I started their play-in round winner, The Librarianist. I read one of deWitt's previous books, The Sisters Brothers and loved it so gave this one a try. It's mostly a character study of a very confused and clueless character. It's rather comical.

Hope everyone is enjoying DST.

78MrAndrew
Mar 13, 2:54 am

i've always thought that daylight savings time sounds vaguely fiscal. Where would you store all that daylight that you're saving up?

DST ends here soon. I'll miss it, but i won't miss getting up while it's still dark.

79littlegeek
Mar 14, 3:27 am

>78 MrAndrew: Oh, pardon my Northern Hemisphere bias! How rude of me! But I like more daylight at the end of the day.

80littlegeek
Mar 14, 1:01 pm

On the way home from Indian Wells, I listened to The Guest by Emma Cline. OK for an airport book. There wasn't much there there.

81Bookmarque
Mar 14, 6:48 pm

OMG the lead character in The Guest was such a pig. That's my lasting impression of the book. A little style, but even less substance.

82littlegeek
Mar 28, 9:37 pm

Sorry, I've been neglecting the Dragon, time to play catch-up.
I enjoyed The Librarianist, but it did have a rather strange digression about 3/4 through which threw me off. Quirky.
After that, I began City of Blades but I haven't had much time for actual reading as I've been very involved in a crochet project, so it's been more audiobooks and tv lately. What I have read is intriguing so far.
As for said audiobooks, after The Guest I listened to The Maidens by Alex Michaelides. Meh. Ok, not great.
Now listening to The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilcher, which I am told is "beloved" but after 16%, I'm finding every character rather horrid. The problems of shallow rich people aren't terribly compelling to me, I'm afraid, but I will soldier on for a bit.
As for tv, I did enjoy the Netflix adaptation of The Three Body Problem, one of my favorite scifi books ever. Book is better, as usual, but they did a decent job. No idea how to adapt book 2, it's very trippy. I may have to watch the Chinese adaptation, which I believe is on AppleTV.

83MrsLee
Mar 28, 11:05 pm

>82 littlegeek: I did not care for The Shell Seekers, though like you, lots of people who should know told me they loved it. I did love Winter Solstice by Rosamund Plicher though.

84pgmcc
Mar 29, 1:13 am

>82 littlegeek:
I felt the same way about The Maidens, which was a disappointment after finding his first book, The Silent Patient wonderful.

85clamairy
Edited: Mar 29, 7:39 am

Count me as one of the people who loved The Shell Seekers, but I read it at least 35 years ago. I suspect the Suck Fairy would be flitting about if I attempted a re-read.

86littlegeek
Mar 29, 10:18 am

>85 clamairy: That damned Suck Fairy has gotten me a few times, which is why I rarely reread.

87clamairy
Mar 29, 11:43 am

>86 littlegeek: She's the worst!

88littlegeek
Apr 1, 12:45 am

Gave up on Shell Seekers. It was not for me. I want to read James by Percival Everett but I figure it's a good idea to reread Huck Finn first (not worried about the Suck Fairy there), so I found a free audiobook of it read by Elijah Wood. He's great with the dialects.

89Bookmarque
Apr 1, 8:48 am

That's what will probably keep me from reading James even though I've liked most of what I've read of Everett's work over the years. I just don't know the original story well enough to pick up on all that he could do with the basic tale. Maybe the audio you mentioned would work. Hm...

90littlegeek
Apr 1, 12:52 pm

>89 Bookmarque: I also really enjoy Everett's books. He's very original.

91Sakerfalcon
Apr 2, 7:29 am

>84 pgmcc: I too was disappointed with The maidens, for various reasons. I didn't even like it enough to try The silent patient.

92pgmcc
Apr 2, 7:55 am

>91 Sakerfalcon:
It is totally different. It is worth having a go at The Silent Patient. I got the impression he was overwhelmed with the success of the first book and rushed the second. I too would be reluctant to read another of his books had I read The Maidens first. Because of The Maidens I would be reluctant to read a third, but I am glad I read The Silent Patient first.

93littlegeek
Apr 2, 4:26 pm

>92 pgmcc: Another bullet, thank you!

94pgmcc
Apr 2, 4:36 pm

>93 littlegeek:
We aim to please.
:-)

95littlegeek
Apr 6, 6:55 pm

Have to admit, struggling a bit with City of Blades. It's SO gory! Please tell me this lets up at some point!

Finished Huck Finn. Boy, is Tom Sawyer an asshole! Some pacing issues in the book, a little too much of the Duke and the King, and a little too many plans for breaking Jim out. But such a great, great novel. Now I'm ready to read James.

96Alexandra_book_life
Apr 7, 3:13 am

>95 littlegeek: City of Blades is very dark and continues to be dark... There are things that make up for it, though, at least for me.

97MrAndrew
Apr 7, 4:25 am

Who would have thunk that a book called City of Blades would be gory! Honestly, they should put a warning sticker on the cover.

98littlegeek
Apr 7, 6:14 pm

>97 MrAndrew: Yeah, well

99littlegeek
Apr 7, 6:17 pm

I decided to read James while Huck Finn is still fresh in my mind. Might go back to City of Blades, might just read a synopsis and move on to book 3. It's the vivisections of humans described in detail that is turning me off.

100littlegeek
Apr 11, 12:09 am

Forgot to mention that my current audiobook is Birnam Wood by Eleanor Catton. Love those Kiwi accents!

101pgmcc
Apr 11, 2:58 am

>100 littlegeek:
I got Birnam Wood on the basis that I loved The Luminaries. I am looking forward to reading it.

102Sakerfalcon
Apr 11, 8:06 am

I managed to get Birnam Wood in a kindle deal. I look forward to your thoughts on it.

103pgmcc
Apr 11, 8:52 am

>102 Sakerfalcon:
My copy I have was the replacement for a book I received on that book a month gift a friend got for me. The one they had chosen did not appeal to me so I was able to pick one in their shop as a substitute.

104littlegeek
Apr 13, 3:54 pm

Finished James. What a great book! I'm glad I listened to Huck Finn first, although you could definitely read it without. It doesn't follow the plot exactly. So much to chew on with this one. But as with Twain, a very entertaining read. Highest recommendation.

105littlegeek
Apr 14, 2:11 am

I've decided next to read North Woods by Daniel Mason. It looks intriguing.

106littlegeek
Apr 22, 10:34 pm

Finished North Woods. What a weird book in every sense of the word. I guess narratives that can't decide what genre they're in are still in fashion. Writes well, some lovely description but for some reason all the humans end up dead in horrible ways.

Also finished Birnam Wood. Meh. It was ok I guess. Another everybody dies! book.

Now reading The Fraud by the incomparable Zadie Smith. 20 pages in and I'm already loving it.

107littlegeek
Apr 27, 12:49 pm

Just downloaded an Anthony Horowitz mystery audiobook, A Line to Kill. It's the third in a series. I find mysteries good candidates for audio as they are usually about plot and not theme or style. I enjoyed the first two in the series.

108Alexandra_book_life
Apr 27, 1:10 pm

>107 littlegeek: Nice! I enjoyed this series as well, had read up to A Line to Kill. Have you read The House of Silk, by the way? I thought it was a great take on the Sherlock Holmes canon.

109clamairy
Apr 27, 2:01 pm

>106 littlegeek: I bailed on Birnam Wood very early in the book. Every single character was getting on my nerves.

110littlegeek
Apr 29, 8:29 pm

>108 Alexandra_book_life: No, but now I want to

111littlegeek
Apr 29, 8:29 pm

>109 clamairy: ahyup. They don't improve

112littlegeek
May 4, 6:31 pm

Finished A Line to Kill. Not as good as the previous installments. About all I have to say. I would read another.

Just downloaded Ms. Demeanor by Elinor Lipman for my audiobook. Seems innocuous enough.

Almost done with The Fraud. I really love Zadie Smith. There's so much to unpack here and I love the protagonist. A middle-aged woman, who would have thought she would be interesting!

113littlegeek
May 5, 9:59 pm

Finished The Fraud. Based on historical events, concerns a forgotten novelist, his eccentric cousin, and a "trial of the century" concerning a claim to a fortune. Themes include truth, deception (and self-deception), and the far reaching effects of oppression. Takes a lot of shots at Dickens, which amused me. It was excellent.

I think next I'm gonna read Tom Lake. I love Ann Pachett. I was going to reread Our Town first but I think I'll just go for it.

114littlegeek
May 11, 1:16 am

Gave up on Ms Demeanor. Too dumb. Recently, my husband has started digging into my shelf full of Aubrey/Maturin books, so I got a hankering to reread them. Easy to find audiobooks at Libby! So I'm listening to Post Captain, one of my faves!

Still reading Tom Lake. Sometimes it's nice to read something about regular 21st century people, no space ships or monsters or murders or corsets.

115MrAndrew
May 11, 3:42 am

Spaceships and murders and monsters in corsets, oh my!

116Alexandra_book_life
May 11, 6:09 am

>115 MrAndrew: I would read this book :)))

117Karlstar
May 12, 9:49 am

>114 littlegeek: How is Post Captain on audio? I enjoyed reading it, just wondering about the audio experience.

118littlegeek
Edited: May 14, 12:42 pm

>117 Karlstar: I have to listen at 1.20 speed because the narrator talks so slowly with big pauses. But he does a good Irish accent for Stephen. Good in that it's not overdone.

119littlegeek
May 14, 12:44 pm

>116 Alexandra_book_life: haha, I would too!

120littlegeek
May 14, 10:24 pm

Finished Tom Lake. Nothing earth shattering here, a simple story, really, but that is its strength. I'm kind of tired of the constant upping the stakes of narrative drama. More and more perverse, more and more exploitative, more and more violent. This book was filled with stuff that actually happens to people, nothing meant to shock. Breath of fresh damn air.

Upon a friend's recommendation, I'm about to start The Mask of Mirrors.

121Sakerfalcon
May 15, 11:12 am

>120 littlegeek: I loved this trilogy! Big and complex with interesting characters and excellent worldbuilding.

122clamairy
May 20, 7:23 pm

>120 littlegeek: I just loved Tom Lake, and I am glad you did, too. One of her best, I think.

123littlegeek
May 21, 1:10 am

>122 clamairy: I have enjoyed all of her books but nothing comes close to Bel Canto.

124catzteach
May 22, 9:20 am

>120 littlegeek: I really enjoyed Mask of Mirrors. I want to read the others this summer.

125littlegeek
May 22, 9:05 pm

>124 catzteach: I'm very much enjoying it so far.

126littlegeek
Jun 10, 1:49 am

Finished The Mask of Mirrors during my Mexico trip. I liked it well enough to finish it, but it was a little too complicated for my taste. I think it could have been way shorter. There's really no reason to rename the months, but give no context or explanation (not even in the glossary). At least it was a fantasy novel with no long traveling sequences. (Tolkien has a lot to answer for.)

Last night I started The Book of Love by Kelly Link. I have enjoyed her short stories so thought I'd give it a try.

127MrsLee
Edited: Jun 10, 9:46 am

>126 littlegeek: But, but, but, how was Mexico? Did the trip go well? What part of Mexico did you go to, and more importantly, what did you eat?

ETA: I saw the update on the weekend thread. Had forgotten it was a "business" trip. Oh well, long may your husband chew well.

128littlegeek
Edited: Jun 10, 10:33 pm

>127 MrsLee: Thanks, Lee! Yes, I am very happy for the hubs that he has fancy new teeth.

Mexico is hot. But the culture and people are lovely. There's very little to do in that part of the world. Yuma could benefit from some more interesting attractions for the dental tourists waiting for their next procedure. We did enjoy touring the prison.

We didn't stay in Los Algodones much but I did have one nice Mexican meal. Real refried beans are so yummy.

129MrAndrew
Jun 11, 5:10 am

>128 littlegeek: Yuma could benefit from some more interesting attractions for the dental tourists waiting for their next procedure That sounds like the plot for Coen brothers film.

Did you take the 3:10 to Yuma?

130MrsLee
Jun 11, 11:12 am

>128 littlegeek: My mom and dad spent many winters in the deserts down there. They were fascinated by the desert. Personally, I can only take so much. I need my trees and big bodies of water.

131littlegeek
Jun 12, 9:28 pm

>129 MrAndrew: No we drove. The high desert between Joshua Tree and Barstow was kind of beautiful. But once we hit Santa Cruz County and felt that fog, we were soooooooo happy!

132littlegeek
Jul 3, 3:45 pm

Finally finished The Book of Love. It could have been about 1/3 shorter, but I usually feel that way about fantasy or horror books. Unique. It's about some undead teenagers, but indulges in NONE of the standard tropes. They are not zombies, vampires, or ghosts, but something else entirely. The world building is slow, and in some ways it detracts because it's difficult to really know the stakes. Still found it a worthy read.

Now reading Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy upon the recommendation of Ann Patchett. Very lovely prose.

I have a couple of audible credits and I think I will use one to whispersync with the next Dorothy Dunnett once I finish the current read.

133Karlstar
Jul 3, 4:11 pm

>131 littlegeek: How long was your drive?

134littlegeek
Jul 3, 5:11 pm

>133 Karlstar: About 11 hours including stops. But we broke it up both times.

135clamairy
Jul 3, 9:35 pm

>132 littlegeek: The Ann Patchett recommendation looks good.. I will wait until you finish, but that might go onto my Libby list.

136jillmwo
Jul 4, 9:38 am

>132 littlegeek: I'm with Clam in #135. That Sipsworth does look intriguing.

137littlegeek
Jul 7, 9:03 am

Finished Sipsworth. It was cute. I was told it wasn't sappy, but I can't say I agree, although that may just be my cold, cold heart talking. I did like the skillful way the author drew out the protagonist's backstory. But I wasn't quite sold. But if you're in the mood for a simple, gentle, fable-like story, you could do much worse.

Next up, To Lie With Lions, book 6 in the Niccolo series.

138Sakerfalcon
Jul 8, 11:30 am

>132 littlegeek: I've just started The book of love. I'm glad you gave it a positive review.

Your trip sounds great!

139littlegeek
Jul 8, 7:56 pm

>138 Sakerfalcon: Isn't it weird in a good way?

140Sakerfalcon
Jul 9, 8:09 am

141ScoLgo
Jul 9, 10:58 am

>138 Sakerfalcon: I need to read this one. I really enjoyed Link's Stranger Things Happen collection.

142littlegeek
Aug 3, 11:47 pm

Finally finished To Lie With Lions. What kind of courage does it take to intentionally make the reader hate the protagonist with two books left in the series? I'm pretty sure I will be rooting for Nicholas before all is said and done. What a great writer Dunnett is.

Decided to read something from the Booker prize long list, Orbital by Samantha Harvey. Literary scifi!

143Alexandra_book_life
Aug 4, 2:44 am

>142 littlegeek: The more I read Dunnett, the more I am in awe of her :) She is a fearless author, I agree.
I finished The Ringed Castle yesterday. Only one book left! Some time after that, I'll be ready to tackle The House of Niccolo ;)

144littlegeek
Aug 4, 8:51 pm

>143 Alexandra_book_life: I started with the Lymond books, which were also great. It's so amazing how it all clicks into place at the end. The clues are all there, every time.

145littlegeek
Aug 11, 12:37 pm

Finished Orbital. It ran out of steam near the end but was mostly quite lovely. A love letter to the earth and to humanity with all its faults.

No idea what to read next. Maybe another Booker nominee? I dunno what I feel like reading.

146MrAndrew
Aug 12, 7:32 am

Grab something completely different from Mount TBR. Something that you've never felt quite like reading. You may not finish it, but it will help switch circuits and give you an idea of what you really want to read.

147littlegeek
Aug 13, 11:40 pm

I decided on The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern. I need some whimsy, I think. I may go with whimsy until election day. Maybe longer.

148clamairy
Aug 14, 10:11 am

>147 littlegeek: Ah, yes. Light and/or just plain old distracting...

149littlegeek
Aug 14, 9:15 pm

I'm also listening to Round Here and Over Yonder, a travelogue by two Southern comedians.

150littlegeek
Aug 21, 12:15 am

Finished listening to Round Here and Over Yonder. Diverting. I really enjoy Trae Crowder.

Downloaded the 18th Brother Cadfael book, The Summer of the Danes. I am going to miss this series once I finish it.

151littlegeek
Sep 21, 6:29 pm

Hello, everyone, it's been a while.
I had about a two-week social media vacation, which was very nice except for missing that a friend was in the hospital. It was so nice that I have severely cut back on my screen time in general. Doing wonders for my mental health.

So, to catch up, The Starless Sea was a bit of a disappointment, sadly. The author is very skilled at imagining and describing mystical, made-up places, but seems to be so enamored of indulging in this skill that she neglects other important parts of a novel, like a plot. I could easily visualize exactly where the characters were, but with no idea why or what the stakes were. This book read more like a study for a video game (something the author actually admits in the text). At 85% I skipped to the epilogue.

Then I read Blindsight by Peter Watts, which was pretty much the polar opposite! Plenty of plot, lots of juicy scientific ideas, and just a fun time. But honestly, it seemed like a lot of important information was left out. I had a great deal of difficulty imagining some of what was going on, and I'm pretty good at that. Still an enjoyable read with all the best things scifi can bring.

Now reading Persuasion by Jane Austen. I needed an author who can reliably render character. It's just so satisfying to read about human types one can recognize. I'm not sure whether it's satisfying that these human types have not changed in 200 years.

My next read will be The Liar's Knot by M.A. Carrick, book 2 of the Rook and Rose series.

152Alexandra_book_life
Edited: Sep 22, 1:45 am

>151 littlegeek: Jane Austen is always wonderful to read!

I quite liked The Starless Sea, more than The Night Circus. I just had to accept that there wasn't going to be much plot. All the stories within stories were a delight.

153clamairy
Sep 22, 10:50 am

>151 littlegeek: & >152 Alexandra_book_life: I enjoyed it as well, though I didn't like it quite as much as The Night Circus.

Austen was masterful with realistic character depictions. No, people have not changed. LOL

154littlegeek
Sep 22, 12:24 pm

>152 Alexandra_book_life: Maybe I would have enjoyed it more as a short story collection. As such, my review would have improved, lol.

Just started Liar's Knot this morning and I'm having flashbacks to Mexico, which is where I read most of the first book.

155catzteach
Sep 29, 11:15 am

>151 littlegeek: I, too, have been limiting my time on my devices. Because of this, I’m behind in reading the threads here and posting here. But I am getting way better sleep! It’s crazy. I didn’t think it would make such a big difference.

When I got done with The Starless Sea all I could think was “what did I just read?” It was beautiful writing, but it was, well, bizarre.

I have The Liar’s Knot on my library pile right now. :)

156littlegeek
Sep 29, 5:06 pm

Enjoying Liar's Knot, but with the same caveats as the first volume - there's a little too much going on. It's like the author renamed every kind of occult practice and crammed them all into the elaborate plot. The characters are good, if too numerous (especially when some characters have 3 or 4 aliases)

I have come up with a theme for 2025. Some years I have limited my reading by author (people of color or women only) or last year I only read classics. I tend to read very long novels, fantasy and historical fiction, so next year I am going to limit my reading to works of under 350 pages. I want to work in a lot of short stories, novelas, and poetry. I used to read a lot of shorter works, but lately not so much. Should be fun.

157littlegeek
Nov 4, 10:49 pm

Hi everyone, it's been a while. Finished Caprice and Rondo and barrelled ahead to Gemini to finish out the series before the end of the year. C and R was a little more subdued than some of the installments, less action and more backstory. Still solid. I'm sure the final book will wrap things up satisfyingly.

Struggling to find time for LT lately. It's the same thing every time I come back, too many threads! Ever since it split up into individual reading threads, I just can't keep up. But this place is the nicest place onthe internet, everyone is great here. Maybe when I finally retire I will have the time.

158pgmcc
Nov 5, 3:42 am

>157 littlegeek:
Good to see your post.

Word of warning. I retired in Feb. 2023. I have never been so busy in my life. My wife finds loads of things for me to do and places for us to go.
:-)

159MrAndrew
Nov 5, 5:57 am

Whenever people say they'll have time when they retire, it reminds me of the twilight zone / family guy skit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5_5aLOc5Ng

160littlegeek
Nov 5, 9:52 am

Yeah, you all may be right. But at least I won't be working!

161jillmwo
Nov 5, 9:59 am

>160 littlegeek:. For what may be worth, I'm finding PLENTY OF TIME to read. Also acquire new books. By the way, I like your theme for 2025.

162pgmcc
Nov 5, 3:37 pm

163littlegeek
Nov 5, 7:54 pm

>161 jillmwo: Thanks, I'm looking forward to it.

164catzteach
Nov 7, 2:38 pm

>156 littlegeek: the multiple names for characters always throws me for a loop. Especially when there are either more than two names/aliases or more than 4 characters. My brain just can't handle it. I never did get to Liar's Knot. It was due back and it's too big for during the school year. I'll put it on my summer list.

165clamairy
Edited: Nov 8, 5:19 pm

>159 MrAndrew: I am chuckling.

>157 littlegeek: No worries, we've all hit patches when we couldn't keep up. I think mine lasted several years.

166jillmwo
Nov 15, 2:10 pm

>165 clamairy: You're so right. Life goes in cycles.

167littlegeek
Dec 1, 3:55 pm

Finally finished the House of Niccolo series. Very entertaining, as always. What a genius Dame Dorothy was!

Now about to embark on an extended exploration of shorter works. Up for recs for all novelas, short stories, and poetry.

Think I am going to start with a reread of Mother Night. (192 pages it fits my page limit) It would seem to be somewhat topical.

168Alexandra_book_life
Dec 1, 4:12 pm

>167 littlegeek: What a nice coincidence, I am just starting Niccoló Rising! Four chapters in at the moment :)

169littlegeek
Dec 1, 7:25 pm

>168 Alexandra_book_life: You are in for a treat! Enjoy!

170Alexandra_book_life
Dec 2, 12:02 am

>169 littlegeek: Thank you, thank you :)))

171littlegeek
Dec 3, 12:14 am

Finished Mother Night. Sigh. Too much to say that might get me in trouble around here. Vonnegut is always worth your time.

So, beginning my short story adventure, I'm going to bounce around a few collections I already owned and a couple of new ones by these authors: George Saunders, Kelly Link, Ottessa Moshfegh, Alice Munro and Ted Chiang.

172MrAndrew
Dec 3, 4:14 am

i can recommend Here Be Leviathans by Chris Flynn, the only short stories i've read recently. Might be hard to come by in your neck of the woods tho.

173clamairy
Edited: Dec 3, 8:46 am

>171 littlegeek: I have no memory of this Vonnegut even though I am 99% sure I've read all of his fiction. Edited to add: I just looked, and I own it, and there is no rating!!! The horror... I might try to squeeze it in before the holidays.