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What are you reading: December 2013
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Dec 03, 2013 10:52AM

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I'm a couple of chapters in and so far it has a lot of tongue in cheek humor, such as the one gay man in a sleepy conservative Mexican town names his bar "The Limp Hand" and all the straight men think he's super macho for being in their face about being gay or a comment that the local liberal arts educated parents name all their children after their indigenous "roots." (Which I found funny in a am-I-laughing-because-it's-true-and-does-that-make-me-offense? way because I have a friend who has done that exact thing with all five of her sons.)
I can see how this book could definitely generate some conversation b/c I'm wondering, can this author write this sort of thing and get away with it b/c he's latino or could an author of a different race write it and get away with it b/c it's true? I'll let you know what I think when I finish with it.

I just finished reading Mr Penumbra's 24 Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan for our library book group and thought it a delightful fun read that takes place at the intersection of OK (old knowledge and tech) and NK (new knowledge and tech), making it a thought provoking read too. There are plenty of nerdy references sprinkled throughout and plenty of laugh out loud moments. I would definitely give it to any book lover or tech lover on my gift list.

Thanks for the review, Brendle. I've been interested in this book for some time, but heard widely varying reviews. Your opinion counts for a lot - after all, you're the one who suggested "The Sparrow," one of my favorite SF books of all!

I will definitely put it on my reading list for my winter break. Thank you for the tip!
Chip wrote: "Brendle wrote: "I just finished reading Mr Penumbra's 24 Hour Bookstore by Robin Sloan for our library book group and thought it a delightful fun read that takes place at the intersection of OK (ol..."
I read it (and selected it for the book group) because several people around me had read it and recommended it. It turns out it is the start of a series. I am curious to see where he goes with the themes he raised.
I read it (and selected it for the book group) because several people around me had read it and recommended it. It turns out it is the start of a series. I am curious to see where he goes with the themes he raised.

Along with this I'm finishing up the audio book of "Sad Cypress," by Agatha Christie.
I'm reading the 'Maze Runner' trilogy (currently on book 2). They are so fantastic and exciting! : )


I've been reading A Commonplace Killing by Sian Busby which was mentioned on a best reads of 2013 list I saw on Twitter. It's based on a true incident from postwar Britain and though one might class it as a mystery, there is nothing especially mysterious about it. The pleasure here is in the way the author has structured the tale. We get alternating chapters from the victim's final day and the investigation into her death. It's a fascinating portrait of London in 1946 but also a strong tale of murder. Sadly the author died before publication so there won't be more books like this, making this truly one of a kind.

Pete Hamill's "The Christmas Kid and other Brooklyn stories" moves from poignant to vengeful, heart-warming to hopeless, yet each story is linked in this collection by its Brooklyn setting. Early to mid-20th century Brooklyn emerges as the main character of this book and now feels familiar even though I grew up in a very different time and place. The loyalty of working class immigrants to their neighbors, the fierce stubbornness that causes some characters to cling to their own clearly defined sense of right and wrong, the innocence of childhood and of young love that more often than not leads to disillusionment permeate these stories as ultimately does the lifelong hold Brooklyn has on its residents. While certainly not a book about Christmas, in spite of its title story, these stories are about community and family and friends, all of which are highlighted during every holiday season. The Seamus Heaney quotation from "A Herbal" that prefaces this collection aptly sums up the essence of each story as well as how this reader feels after completing this book: "... I had my existence. I was there. Me in place and the place in me." I'm grateful to have received this book as a Goodread's giveaway and to have been motivated to move it to the top of my "to read" stack by the December challenge.

After the last three books being fairly heavy reading (see above), I was looking for something quick and easy, a light, entertaining, page turner, so I thought I'd read Dan Brown's Inferno. I just finished it last night. I've read all of Brown's books and enjoyed them, but I hated this book! The plot is just too, too contrived. It felt like Brown asked himself how many plot twists he could cram into 500+ pages. Well, the answer is "too many." All the good guys turn out to be bad guys and all the bad guys turn out to be good guys. Except for those who appeared to be bad guys at first but then were revealed to be good guys but then turned out to really be bad guys after all. And those who appeared to be good guys at first but then were revealed to be bad guys but then turned out to really be good guys after all. Stupid! Like I said, I hated this book. I wish I could get the time back I wasted in reading it. I had read all his books up to now, but I'm pretty sure this will be my last Dan Brown.


I am about 70 pages into Night Film and I am loving it! I haven't read Calamity Physics yet, but I may have to.

"...Calamity Physics" is more traditional than "Night Film," but I recommend you read it, too. Pessl has made it onto my list of must-read whatever they write authors.