Has anyone else read Where'd You Go, Bernadette? I just started it and I love it! Really sharply funny and I think about to be sort of heartbreaking, too.
'War Stories'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Yes--I have it on my list to re-read soon, because I don't remember it very well. But I do remember how funny and Seattle-y it was
Yes to both! I have so much stuff to do this afternoon, and I resent all of it because I just want to read this book.
Has anyone else read Where'd You Go, Bernadette? I just started it and I love it! Really sharply funny and I think about to be sort of heartbreaking, too.
Ooh! We're reading it for bookclub this year.
Has anyone else read Where'd You Go, Bernadette? I just started it and I love it! Really sharply funny and I think about to be sort of heartbreaking, too.
I read it last year and really thought it was great even if a bit random.
I read it with my book group a year or so ago. I had trouble getting the main character, which I think interfered with my enjoyment of the book. But my group had a great conversation about it.
A few of the things that are extra-funny are the very Seattle things. For instance, weather scientist Cliff Mass. Who is a real guy who really does have a blog that many of us follow (and used to be on the radio). I just re-read it and enjoyed many parts all over again, even if some of the main plot was not my favorite
I read it last year and really thought it was great even if a bit random.
Yeah, I'm not sure Where'd You Go, Bernadette has an overall thesis statement (and it seems like it should?), but I really enjoyed the writing. Her cultural observations are amazingly precise.
I think a lot of the book wound up being about how easy it can be to get lost -- in the world, in the narrative you create for yourself, in anger or passion or love. But I also think there's a thread in there about the things we worship, and the ways we worship them -- lifestyles, people, religious icons -- that was unexpected and really fascinating.
I'm definitely going to look up her other book.
I thought they both were really funny and the kinds of stuff reviewers write "keenly observed" about but not in a tiresome way.
My library website is down, so I'm just going to leave it here that Sharp Objects is the Gillian Flynn book I haven't read yet.
And in news that might be interested to people not-me, it is going to be on HBO: [link]