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Cross Country (Alex Cross series), by James Patterson.
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Hope you'll stop by with a review after :).
(I love Emily Dickinson!) Quote:
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Whether I need to or not...;-)
I know this thread lends itself more toward books etc but I just have to say that I recently decided I need to be more informed in my citizenry--and certainly more globally informed as well. So I recently subscribed to the New York Times, which in addition to being fairly global in it's scope also has the most amazing pictures! I've been enjoying them on my iPad...good for the soul. And also, the LGBT wedding announcements are fucking wonderful to read. That is all. Carry on. :-)
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Half Broke Horses by Jeanette Walls
I never read fiction. But I loved her Glass Castles |
"son of a witch". the second book in gregory maguire's "the wicked years" series
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I, Alex Cross
by James Patterson |
i bought the
wool omnibus edition - hugh howey just finished book 1 fan-freakin'-tastic |
"Rabbit Proof Fence"
Doris Pilkington A story about 3 brave Australian Aboriginal girls who were removed from their families by the English, who then made a great escape. |
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I read that 20th Century Fox bought the movie rights and that Ridley Scott is heading the project. If they do it right it's going to be awesome. |
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Juvenile Fiction
So for years everyone has been trying to get me to read Harry Potter and Twilight and stuff, and I'm like "Hmmm, no. How about I read some Mian Mian or Dostoyevsky or Michelle Tea because I'm a grown-up, no thank you." I'm pretty embarrassed about it, but I'm kinda super into the Hunger Games now. I had to buy the third book in hard copy, and I wanted to wear sunglasses and a trench coat to the juvenile fiction section. But I guess I don't care... I love those books.
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[ame="http://www.amazon.com/Whore-Diaries-Adventures-Independent-ebook/dp/B00BR0YBDO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1365507159&sr=8-1&keywords=whore+diaries"]Whore Diaries II: Adventures in Independent Escorting[/ame]
Each chapter details one night/one customer...fascinating. Read in one soak in the bath. "There is something open and honest about the words written in this book. I always feel a little more bare, a little more vulnerable after reading something so raw. Even if you think that this book isn't for you, I would encourage you to read it anyways. You might be surprised at what you learn about yourself in the process." - Chelsie Perkins |
Travels with Epicurus : a journey to a Greek island in search of a fulfilled life /
Daniel Klein Klein (Plato and a Platypus Walk into a Bar, 2008, among others) returned to the Greek island of Hydra at age 73. His return had a new and specific purpose: I want to figure out the most satisfying way to live this stage of my life. Prior experience with the island led to conclude that the old folks of Hydra have always struck me as uncommonly content with their stage in life. But just observing and absorbing what the people had to show and tell him didn't seem like quite enough. To augment his on-site learning, he took with him a stack of philosophy books by ancient Greeks as well as some modern writers. It's an interesting formula, resulting in a lovely little book with both heart and punch, an argument against the forever young syndrome so prevalent in contemporary American society. His contemplative time spent observing the old men of Hydra while reading his small library of the great thinkers led him to an evolving philosophy of a good and authentic old age. --Hooper, Brad Copyright 2010 Booklist |
Cross Fire, by James Patterson.
I'm also still struggling through The Book of Mormon. |
I just finished the Mortal Instruments series, and have started re-reading The Host.
A friend sent me a good 20 novels for the Kindle that I have to transfer over.. I am excited :) |
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Either way, glad you are enjoying it. Our 9 year old has finished the Harry Potter series I believe, and is now reading The Hunger Games. |
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What are you reading?
The Bible... New Standard Revised Edition.. I think that's what it's called.. It's so easy to understand and read...
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Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer
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Oh my Dog...I am an Amazon Prime addict...I hardly use my Netflix since I signed up for Amazon Prime, and don't get me started about the free shipping during the holidays! |
A Problem From Hell: America and the Age of Genocide by Samantha Power
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Truth, Goodness and Beauty....
I am currently reading "Kyudo---the Essence and Practice of Japanese Archery."
by Onuma and De Prospero http://www.karatekorner.com/images/pict/9350.jpg Kyudo-the Way of the Bow-is the oldest of Japan's traditional martial arts and the one most closely associated with bushido, the Way of the Warrior. Kyudo at a granular level is the search for Truth, Goodness and Beauty and to find those concepts within the self. I will admit I am currently taking classes in kyudo so there was a method to my madness in starting in on this book. I at first found it challenging and the stillness and centering difficult for my very Western spirit to embrace. As time has passed I find I enjoy this new way of thinking and am leaning into the challenge. |
Usually its a cookbook, but I've started Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. GWYNNE
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A romance..
Gabriel's Woman....by Robin Schone
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Da Vinci code
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Haha, see, I'm reading the same books as 9 year old, that's what I was worried about! Oh well, your 9 year old has good taste. Just finished the Doomsday Prepper's Pocket Guide, which was unsuprisingly weird and poorly written. Don't laugh! There's a civil emergency going on outside my window right now! The roads are closed, the government buildings. About half of the commercial buildings are closed, too. Second or third time this winter, and my friends are still speeding their cars into telephone poles on their way to the grocery store like a bunch of dummies, because they don't even have 24 hours worth of ramen noodles in their apartments. The whole world shuts down here, regularly, and I'm always just fine. And I just started This is How by Augusten Burroughs. |
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The Summer We Got Free
-- Mia McKenzie (Oakland, CA: Black Girl Dangerous Press) http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1355016448l/16286376.jpg I just ordered it online today @ Amazon. I'm looking forward to reading McKenzie's book (it's an early birthday present for myself). |
Got my recent order this afternoon.
"8 Steps to a Pain-Free Back" by Esther Gokhale, L.Ac. Comes highly recommended, since I know so many peeps with bad backs thought I might learn something to help them. Am also hoping to prevent the same in myself. Having back pain can make your life sooo freaking miserable. |
What Did We Use Before Toilet Paper?: 200 Curious Questions and Intriguing Answers.
I went out and got this to educate myself for those never ending questions my 7 yr old grandson stumps me on from time to time. lol |
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I finished one book by Mary Roach (Gulp), and started another by her- for some odd reason, both books were published the same week. This one is called My Planet: Finding Humor in the Oddest Places, and is a collection of articles previously published in Reader's Digest. The book is cute, quirky and quick- nothing that sticks with me, but entertaining. Mary Roach cracks me up even when she's writing for a magazine that is usually found in my parents' bathroom. Recommended.
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Oh yeah...
And thanks to the barrage of promos and teasers for the upcoming HBO movie Behind the Candelabra, I went looking for the book of the same name. The book is about Liberace's turbulent relationship with Scott Thorson, his lover and chauffeur (the movie is about the same, but with Michael Douglas as Liberace, and Matt Damon as Thorson. I admit I'm intrigued.)
The book won't come out until May, though I found an out-of-print copy on Amazon- I guess it's being reprinted, thanks to the HBO movie. It was originally published in 1988, a year after Liberace's death from AIDS, and marketed as a tell-all memoir by Thorson the Chauffeur himself. The puzzling part is that the book is labeled "an autobiographical novel." Whaaa? Wait, why isn't it nonfiction?? I might pass on the book now, but I'm still all atwitter over the movie's debut. Damn you, HBO. http://www.avenueswank.com/wp-conten...iberace-EW.jpg |
Reading book again..
I'm currently reading "Of Drag Kings and the Wheel of Fate" by Susan Smith. I first read this book years ago, and every so often I read it again. After I'm finished, I'll be re-reading the sequel to this book, "Burning Dreams". :) Susan Smith is an amazing author.
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The Broken Window, by Jeffrey Deaver
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Not becoming my mother : and other things she taught me along the way / Ruth Reichl
Bestselling author Ruth Reichl embarks on a clear-eyed and openhearted investigation of her mother's life, piecing together the journey of a woman she comes to realize she never really knew. Looking to her mother's letters and diaries, Reichl confronts the painful transition her mother made from a hopeful young woman to an increasingly unhappy older one and realizes the tremendous sacrifices she made to make sure her daughter's life would not be as disappointing as her own. |
[ame="http://www.amazon.com/Life-After-A-Novel/dp/0316176486/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1366312599&sr=8-1&keywords=kate+atkinson"]Life After Life by Kate Atkinson[/ame]
from the book description: "What if you could live again and again, until you got it right? On a cold and snowy night in 1910, Ursula Todd is born to an English banker and his wife. She dies before she can draw her first breath. On that same cold and snowy night, Ursula Todd is born, lets out a lusty wail, and embarks upon a life that will be, to say the least, unusual. For as she grows, she also dies, repeatedly, in a variety of ways, while the young century marches on towards its second cataclysmic world war. Does Ursula's apparently infinite number of lives give her the power to save the world from its inevitable destiny? And if she can -- will she? Darkly comic, startlingly poignant, and utterly original -- this is Kate Atkinson at her absolute best." It is very readable, as are all her books. And it's a great concept. I'll let you know what I think when it's done. |
Minimalist Parenting: Enjoying Modern Family Life More by Doing Less
by Asha Dornfest and Christine Koh Ok, so I was thinking this book was going to tell me to get rid of my stuff, but not so. Here's a partial review from Moxie, which I think is spot-on: "This book is probably going to overwhelm you if you have a first baby under three months. If you have kids older than that, though, this book will give you a nice framework for thinking about all the areas of family life so you can assess what you can control and streamline things so you can process the chaos as it happens and spend more time enjoying life and less time feeling like it's dragging you around." |
Incidents in the life of a slave girl
Harriet Jacobs |
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