Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, December 18, 2022?
Still reading L.A. Requiem by Crais. Big book, a lot of it learning who Joe Pike is. And then, the plot thickens. Yeah, it's getting really good now. Suspenseful. Be advised: this is not a cozy. Definitely hard-boiled.
Listening to The Guest List by Fern Michaels. How cool is this? On Friday I was trying to find a new audio library book but everything on my list was either checked out or they didn't own. I was getting a little frustrated and when they said they didn't have this one they asked if I recommend they buy it. So I said yes and went on my way. Then yesterday morning I got an email saying they bought it, based on my rec, and now I am listening to it. Kinda feels like a Christmas present.
What's on your 2022 penultimate week's reading list?
FalloutShelter
(12,722 posts)Kim Stanley Robinson. VERY heavy but very important. Best friend gave me Truly Madly Deeply,
Alan Rickmans diaries. Will dig into that after the New Year.
hermetic
(8,604 posts)A masterpiece of the imagination, using fictional eyewitness accounts to tell the story of how climate change will affect us all. Its setting is not a desolate, postapocalyptic world, but a future that is almost upon us. It is a novel both immediate and impactful, desperate and hopeful in equal measure, and it is one of the most powerful and original books on climate change ever written.
Thanks. Hope I can find this one before it's too late...
FalloutShelter
(12,722 posts)Have you read Green World and New York 2140? Also great reads.
hermetic
(8,604 posts)This is my introduction to Stanley, although she has over 35 books out, many award winners.
Kim Stanley Robinson is of the male persuasion.
(Don't worry - I went for years thinking he was a she! I loved the Mars Trilogy.)
Jilly_in_VA
(10,838 posts)Now I'm reading Chaucer and the Legend of Good Women, by Philip Gooden. So far, much more to my liking. I liked the other book I read in this series. I like the Matthew Shardlake books too.
On my downstairs Kindle I'm reading Extraordinary Means, by Donna Levin. It's the story of a young woman who's in a coma after a (maybe) accidental overdose and the conflict in her family over whether to pull the plug. So far I hate everyone in the book except the victim, who hovers like a spirit above everyone and watches everything, telling the story from her viewpoint. It's the first time in a long time I've disliked so many characters so much! I wouldn't blame her for wanting to get away from them....
hermetic
(8,604 posts)of Arthurian legend books. Think I'll give that one a miss, though.
That Chaucer book looks like it was first written in '05 by a Philippa Morgan, then again in '14 by Gooden where it is longer and seems more detailed but seems to be the same story. Interesting.
That Kindle book sounds like a good story, too.
SheltieLover
(59,458 posts)Fun light read.
Also read 2 earlier in the week that were similar, but much more intriguing:
"A Spell for Trouble," Esme Addison. Excellent paranormal cozy!
Also by same author, "A Hex for Danger."
These works have an interesting cultural component: the protagonist is following her Polish roots.
Congrats on your library gifting you a copy of what you wanted to enjoy!
My gift from the universe this year was finding a wonderful kitty rescue who helped me trap the little homeless kitty. Snip snip Tues. morning.
Hoping my senior rescue will buddy up with this sweet boy. She attacks my pittie when he tries to lick her head, so....
Happy Holidays to All!
Ty for this thread!
hermetic
(8,604 posts)for all the great, fun suggestions.
Hope all works out for your little visitor. And that your season is merry.
SheltieLover
(59,458 posts)The King of Prussia
(743 posts)"Curtain Call at the Seaview Hotel" by Glenda Young. Set in Scarborough. Earlier I consumed "Shadow Falls" by Wendy Dranfield in one day. Hugely recommended.
Next up I might return to Three Pines - I need something to remind me that actually she's a pretty good author - dreadful TV series notwithstanding.
Away from books we have slowly been introducing and integrating Russo kitten with the other two cats. They will insist on eating each others' food, but otherwise it's going very well.
Pip pip! 🐈 🐈 🐈.
hermetic
(8,604 posts)Last edited Sun Dec 18, 2022, 02:38 PM - Edit history (1)
how Russo was getting along. Glad to hear it's going well. All my cats eat each others' food. I've pretty much given up on who is supposed to get what. Fortunately the babies are getting old enough to eat regular food, as long as it says "all stages" on it. Soon, one food to feed them all will make my life easier.
I will definitely look for Shadow Falls.
I belong to an online discussion group for Louise Penny and the arguments over the TV series are wild. I do hear, though, that her latest book is quite something.
Cheerio!
Edit to add Shadow Falls is called Find My Child here in the U.S., in case anyone else wants to read it.
The King of Prussia
(743 posts)Is that the two older cats are on a special diet, so whilst their food won't be especially harmful to Russo - his will certainly not be good for them. Surprised about the Louise Penny group - I would have expected all fans to loathe it (apart from Alfred Molina's performance.)
hermetic
(8,604 posts)that the series says, "Based on" the books and this gives them much leeway. Personally, I don't think I would enjoy them.
The King of Prussia
(743 posts)And I have - so we've got all bases covered. Both of us think it's rubbish.
bahboo
(16,953 posts)re-reading one of the Thorn novels by James W. Hall, Tropical Freeze. Great South Florida noir....
I've never read anything quite like this one. I'll for sure be reading more, even though they're probably pretty dark.
Tropical Freeze sounds good: A tense thriller set in an exotic locale where greed and criminality thrive. Yup.
I've checked out a couple!
cbabe
(4,104 posts)Detective against the world is almost an American archetype. Travis McGee and Robert Crais and McConnelly and James Lee Burke and Hillerman and onwards.
Id forgotten what a great storyteller Francis was. Easy page turner prose but characters with depth and very twisty plots. Plus horses. And English weather.
Sadly library has incomplete collection so will be hunting titles at used book stores. Christmas gift to me.
That should keep you busy for a while. I like stories with horses in them. Good luck with your search.
cbabe
(4,104 posts)Felix. He took over the series after his fathers death. Lacks the magic touch.
Dick really knew his horses:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Francis
After wartime service in the RAF, Francis became a full-time jump-jockey, winning over 350 races and becoming champion jockey of the British National Hunt. He came to further prominence in 1956 as jockey to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, riding her horse Devon Loch which fell when close to winning the Grand National. Francis retired from the turf and became a journalist and novelist.
hermetic
(8,604 posts)Thanks!
SheltieLover
(59,458 posts)I've checked out a couple of ebooks!
cbabe
(4,104 posts)SheltieLover
(59,458 posts)Apparently, very popular. Most had dozens of holds. Unusual for such old books!
Ty again!
Happy Holidays!
snowybirdie
(5,592 posts)Boys from Biloxi. Afraid he's losing his touch. So far about a third in, I'm bored. Don't know if I'll finish
hermetic
(8,604 posts)sorry to hear that. Maybe it's just a slump.
Jeebo
(2,240 posts)I read "Dark Matter" three or four years ago, and, well, wow. Ditto this one, although I'm only about a hundred pages in. I'm going to have to read all of his novels, starting with "Recursion" next.
The central character is the son of a brilliant geneticist who is working for noble goals (spoiler alert: with disastrous unanticipated side consequences). On page 104 she identifies the greatest threat we face, for her son and some of her assistants, "The greatest threat to our species lies within us. ... It's denial. Selfishness. Magical thinking. We are not rational beings. We seek comfort rather than a clear-eyed stare into reality. We consume and preen and convince ourselves that if we keep our heads in the sand, the monsters will just go away. Simply put, we refuse to help ourselves as a species. We refuse to do what must be done. Every danger we face links ultimately back to this failing."
Those are the words of a character in a novel, but Mr. Crouch wrote the novel and thus wrote those words himself. I have a feeling that anybody who could articulate that sentiment that well is not a Republican.
My aging, failing 73-year-old eyes will not allow me to read as much as I used to, but I think I'm going to go through this novel pretty fast.
-- Ron
hermetic
(8,604 posts)Profound.
I know what you mean about the eye thing. Got that going on myself. I'll keep at it, though. Best wishes to you.
yellowdogintexas
(22,652 posts)EVEN GRIFTERS HAVE FAMILIES.
THEYRE JUST MORE COMPLICATED
At least Dani Silvers is. Complicated, unconventional, criminal, and worst of all to some--downright amoral. But whathehell, familys family.
A PREQUEL TOLD IN SHORT STORIES....
Duane Lindsay brings to life the tale of this very odd, yet affectionate kinship group in a completely original prequel, told in interconnected short stories, some of them stretching to novellas.And each one chronicling one of their cons.
At its heart, the book is the Byzantine yet surprisingly tender tale of artists in love. Con artists, that is. Meet legendary con Leroy Logan and his crime partner Kate Mulrooney, whos known reverently in their circle as Fast Kate, an homage to her famous ability to spot a mark at a thousand paces.
Leroys a lovable, irresponsible, untrustworthy, unfaithful lazy lug, unlucky at gambling but renowned for criminal brilliance. In other words, the quintessential bad boy.
So of course Kate loves him.
It's starting out pretty good.
I was reading Society for Paranormals, which is a series. The Grifter's Daughter intrigued me so I am going to alternate these two series.