21st Century Literature discussion

Some Luck (Last Hundred Years: A Family Saga, #1)
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2015 Book Discussions > Some Luck - General Discussion, No Spoilers (June 2015)

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Marc (monkeelino) | 3475 comments Mod
General discussion thread for Some Luck--please avoid any spoiler posts here.


Portia Almost finished. Really looking forward to this discussion!


message 3: by Lily (last edited Jun 27, 2015 10:09AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Lily (joy1) | 2506 comments Not directly related to SL, but reading Smiley put me on the trail of her 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel. While I haven't read her expository chapters yet, I am enjoying her commentary on each of the 100 novels she read in conjunction with the project represented by this book, which seems to have been at least partly one of training herself about the novel.


Portia Glad to hear someone is at least perusing it. I have the book and have promised myself a good chunk of reading time dedicated to it.

Has anyone read Moo? I started it a few years ago after reading A Thousand Acres but had a problem with the humor and out it aside. This may be the time to pick it up again.


Lily (joy1) | 2506 comments Portia wrote: "Has anyone read Moo? I started it a few years ago..."

I'm another one that has Moo among many other unread books on my shelves.


Marc (monkeelino) | 3475 comments Mod
FWIW, a few GR friends have read or attempted Moo with no one heralding it as of yet.


message 7: by Lily (last edited Jun 29, 2015 09:34AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Lily (joy1) | 2506 comments Portia wrote: "Glad to hear someone is at least perusing it. I have the book and have promised myself a good chunk of reading time dedicated to it...."

Portia -- I highly recommend, rather than dedicating a good chunk of reading time, jump to the 1-3 page reviews of 100 novels that comprise over half the book. Read a few for books you already know -- or for a book on your TBR (if you don't mind spoilers -- you may find them here -- I figure some books I may never get to read in their entirety, but I'd like to know more about them -- also, that any book worth reading is worth reading twice, even if one never finds time to do so -- but I know well not all share those attitudes). That's a lot less time than dedication, and a lot of fun in my experience, to sort of match wits on viewpoints about books against this esteemed teacher, author, and judge of literary awards.

(Unfortunately, page numbers for each novel aren't provided in the TOC, so one has to use the numbered sequence to find the desired entry.)

13 Ways...


Portia Thanks for the excellent advice, Lily:)


LindaJ^ (lindajs) | 2548 comments I am halfway through Early Warning. The main characters here are the children of the 1st generation and their children. I am a Baby Boomer, so the events are even more familar than the last book. A far more complex world than was life on the farm. It is interesting, and a bit painful, to see what is happening to Frank, Joe, Lillian, Henry and Claire and their spouses and children.


message 10: by Lily (last edited Jul 10, 2015 09:26PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Lily (joy1) | 2506 comments Another new book with a Midwestern setting -- the review isn't over enthusiastic. Sounds like more of a beach read. If a day had infinite hours, I'd enjoy reading and comparing.

Summerlong A Novel by Dean Bakopoulos Summerlong: A Novel by Dean Bakopoulos Dean Bakopoulos

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/12/boo...


Portia Linda wrote: "I am halfway through Early Warning. The main characters here are the children of the 1st generation and their children. I am a Baby Boomer, so the events are even more familar tha..."

I enjoyed it for the same reasons. Smiley kept my interest because I wanted to see which events she chose to highlight and which character was given which role in the event.


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