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African Laughter...Doris Lessing
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Dystopian classic
Ray Bradbury's ~~>>> Fahrenheit 451 (1952/1953).
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My Tuesday morning clients have an admirable book collection....
today she caught me looking at titles while I dusted and offered to let me borrow books any time I like... squeeeeeeee!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! So... I am reading My Struggle: Book One by Karl Ove Knausgaard A Norwegian Marcel Proust. This nerve-striking, addictive piece of hyper-realism, by the Norwegian Critics’ Prize-winning author of A Time For Everything, has created a phenomenon throughout Scandinavia. Click here to read The New Republic’s profile of Knausgaard & the My Struggle series. Almost ten years have passed since Karl Ove Knausgaard’s father drank himself to death. Vulnerable and assailed by doubts, he is now embarking on a new novel. With an uncanny eye for detail, Knausgaard breaks down his own life story to its elementary particles, reliving memories, reopening wounds, and examining with candor the turbulence and the epiphanies that emerge from his own experience of fatherhood, the fallout in the wake of his father’s death, and his visceral connection to music, art, and literature. Negotiating intimacy, love, and fear lie at the heart of his movements and mind as he moves from self-deprecation to self-absorption, from craving solitude to exposing an insatiable need for love and admiration, from alienation to harmony. Karl Ove’s dilemmas strike nerves that give us raw glimpses of our particular moment in history as we witness what happens to the sensitive and churning mind of a young man trying- as if his very life depended on it- to find his place in the disjointed world around him. This Proustian masterpiece opens a window into one of the most original minds writing today. His picture is on the cover of the copy they have. His eyes are so piercing...his memoir promises to be engaging. https://encrypted-tbn2.gstatic.com/i...aM9WhDHr1odr30 |
Just started...
The Gravity Between Us by Kristen Zimmer Looks like it will be one of those guilty pleasure books because it's not my typical genre to read. ;) Also reading... As Texas Goes...:How the Lone Star State Hijacked the American Agenda by Gail Collins This one is biting and fun and scary and true. Love Gail Collins! |
I just finished the War Room (Chris Fabry) I'm not an overly religious person so at times it was a bit much for my tastes but if you have enjoyed this authors other books and believe in the power of pray check it out!
Btw yes it's a movie also out in theaters now too! |
Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality without Religion
by Sam Harris Extra reading for a class, but loving the book! |
Sounds cool! If you have time to come back and review it when done, please do! I have the book "The Atheists Little Book of Spirituality" (I think that's the title). I haven't read it yet but love the concept!
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Diviners by Libba Bray
I just finished her "Going Bovine" and loved it so I thought I would explore her other works. So far it is pretty interesting, I like the way she develops her characters and her playful use of language. Diviners is set in NY in the 1920s and is about a group of people who have powers, for example the main character is able to read objects by touching them. Of course there is a supernatural bad guy and peril ensues. |
Currently trying to get 'into' Dark Places by Gillian Flynn. It took me a while to get into Gone Girl too, but I was glad I did. By half way through I was addicted. Hoping this will be the same. P.S the movie didn't do it justice
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I recently re-read The Rosie Project and The Rosie Effect by Graeme Simsion!
If you looking for a good read, dotted with humorists twist that leaves you feeling hopeful about finding love, check these out:glasses: |
Today I bought three books. Little Gone Girl by Alexander Burt (also known as Mia is Missing)
The Girl with A Clock for A Heart by Peter Swanson AND Harry Potter and the Philosophers Stone. I'm ashamed to say I never read the HP series. Fantasy is not a genre I part take in much. But I do remember seeing maybe 2 of the movies years ago and enjoying them. For some reason for the passed week I've had a niggling feeling to read them... Or at least give them a shot. So I may start with Harry, and move on to my usual genre of Thriller... Don't judge me.... :D |
I have a few books going. Still trying to make my way through a Song of Ice and Fire. I'm on Book 3.
I just started House of Echoes by Brendan Duffy. And I'm also reading The Whispering Skull by Jonathan Stroud. |
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So I'm half way through the first Harry Potter since picking it up this afternoon. Hooked.
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"go set a watchman", harper lee
"the half brother", lars saabye christenson "into the river", ted dawe |
Just started "Tiny Beautiful Things" by Cheryl Strayed. Very much enjoying it. The snippet below describes it so much better than I could.
“It is very rarely that I am a ridiculous fangirl about anything. It’s so emotionally taxing, so inherently undignified, that I try not to fall into the trap. So it took me by surprise when, upon discovering Dear Sugar at the Rumpus, I gradually fell down the rabbit hole into ridiculous fangirlishness for the first time in years. [Strayed took me to] the edge of the dark wood, staring into the place where the most wrenching and lovely truths reside. A place to lose your heart and find it again. If there is a common thread that unites the columns, it’s work. Sugar doesn’t tolerate laziness: doing the work to reach one’s full potential, to write that novel, to exorcise ghosts, to let go of resentments and jealousy and commit instead to generosity and love—all of these are sacred, lifelong tasks for which there are no shortcuts. The columns are a gift, and so too is the book. As Sugar herself bids in her column of the same name, I've written this now on the eve of her book’s publication with one intent: to say thank you.” —Ilana Teitelbaum, The Huffington Post |
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Deliver Us From Evil
Ralph Sarchie and Lisa Collier Cool (2014) The scariest book I've ever read, and Folks, I read alot! True story about a tough, New York cop, who becomes an exorcist after experiencing real demon possession among people. With the help of priests, he also instructs people how to recognize, and exorcise demons. Beware: Very, very, scary!
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C# Quick Syntax Reference
Sometimes I get mixed up flipping back and forth between Visual C# and Visual Basic languages For some unknown reason, Microsoft Visual Studio will not compile a few lines of Visual Basic in their Visual C# Integrated Development Environment. *chuckling* Yes, I know I am being goofy. Lack of sleep makes me punchy!!! :) |
Etiquette (1892) by Agness H. Morton - A cute vintage read.
Curious, If True by Elizabeth Gaskell |
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