Oops. That's what I meant. You knew that, right?
Of course I did libkitty...I, myself, had to think a little while before remembering the right name.... (I'm bad with names)
ION. Right now I'm struggling through
Songs In Ordinary Time
by Mary McCarry Morris for my book club. I hate it. Not that I expect all the books I read to reflect real life, but seriously, how often is it that every person you meet (or read about) is a big fat loser? I am not feeling anything for any of the characters (other than pity and scorn, that is). Also, the style is totally over-the-top, and not really enjoyable, personally speaking, to read. I find myself constantly rolling my eyes. I know the Great Depression was... well...
depressing,
but why does the book have to be that way as well? Plus...
700 pages?!?!?!?!
Yeah, 'nuff said.
End rant. (YHMV)
edited for punctuation and other minor details
Huh. I liked it...didn't love it to bits or anything, cause there was only the one murder...kidding. But sometimes in the summer, I'm not a very tough audience. But Alice Hoffman could tell a similar story and kick Ms. Morris butt up and down the street.
"Reading Detective Fiction"- I am sad that I was literary and pretentious in college and spent semesters soaking in gin with John Cheever(Who admittedly was very talented) and I didn't find a course like that.
If I'm not mistaken I seem to remember Misha Tepper once taught a class on detective fiction?
I think you're right, Angus. I might need to actually get in on that action -- As a student, I get some deal on certain other classes.
I could see how
Songs
could be some people's cup of tea, erika. It's just not mine (clearly).
I took a detective fiction class in university. It was pretty cool. That's how I was introduced to the likes of Wilkie Collins and Laurie R. King. In related news, I have just started
The Lavender Butterfly Murders
by Sharon Duncan. I don't read too much of the genre ordinarily, but lately I've been in a slump and for whatever reason when I was at the library this afternoon every book that looked interesting was a mystery. I'm only a few pages in, but it's good. Anybody else read it?
I still thought it was too long. You're right about that.
Just back from Oregon, where I got to go to Powell's, all to briefly. Oh bliss! As a result, the TSAs destroyed my suitcase. It turns out you aren't supposed to pack books (ostensibly because they show up as dark blobs on X-ray, but really because books are evil) so not only did they open my suitcase and throw everything back in so that the books and other gifts got damaged, but they managed to bend the steel frame of my Samsonite.
OK, wasn't supposed to be a rant.
We were just talking about
The Handmaid's Tale
last night - my friend Ellen said that after she read it, she refused to check a box for Sex M/F on any form, since that was how they found you. But mostly we were talking about how a lot of the predictions have started coming to pass. Also, I'd just read
Black House,
the sequel to
The Talisman
by King and Straub and noticed that part of the "other" world was called Gilead, which was the world of
The Handmaid's Tale.
Matt! My brother in love for
The King in Yellow
! I'll have to check out
A Rebours.
But not that song; I've got Peter Wolf version somewhere, but not as effective. Although, since the Hungarians tend to have the highest suicide rate of any country, a few dozen in a year doesn't seem that odd.
I read Michael Marshall's The Straw Men on Saturday. It's a combination serial-killer/conspiracy novel. Quite well done, I thought: the writing moved along, and it kept me going, the story moved fast enough that I didn't stop to think how unlikely it all was until it was over.
And Marshall understands how computers work, which is nice. That said, the premise is really kinda silly. But you don't think about that until it's done.
Has anybody read Sophie's World, and have any opinions on it? I picked it up today because it looked intriguing. I'm trying to decide where to shoehorn it into my TBR pile. If it's really good, I'll move it toward the top.
I have not read it, but a friend of mine who read it in high school highly recommended it. I've been wanting to read it for a long time.