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January 2016 - What will you be reading?
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Gill
(last edited Dec 29, 2015 04:47PM)
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Dec 29, 2015 04:45PM

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Demon's Kiss
Coma
Kiss of Crimson
The Darkest Surrender
Read-a-longs: (2 classics for the goal of 10-12 for the year)
A Tale of Two Cities
The Little Prince
The Bazaar of Bad Dreams
I hope I can get that all done...

Also:
The Fishermen
and maybe one of The House of Mirth (I've never read Edith Wharton) or The Voyage Out

I will be focusing each month of 2016 on a different geographical area. I will read books from elsewhere as well (group reads, mysteries and books that capture my fancy) but hope to read at least one book by an author from the designated area.
January takes me to South America so I plan to read:
off my shelves/Kindle/iPod:
Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy (audiobook) {AAB Group Classic}
The Diary of a Provincial Lady by E.M. Delafield
Under Western Eyes by Joseph Conrad
The Art Forger by Barbara A. Shapiro
Don Juan in Hell by George Bernard Shaw
and perhaps The Doorbell Rang by Rex Stout, Underworld by Don DeLillo and/or Outlander by Diana Gabaldon (audiobook)
from the library:
Selected Poems by Gabriela Mistral (Nobel Laureate from Chile)
Solaris by Stanisław Lem {AAB Group Fiction}
Dancing at Lughnasa by Brian Friel {AAB Group Play}
The Cornish Coast Murder by John Bude
Rogue Island by Bruce DeSilva {Rhode Island mystery}
and perhaps
or maybe something by Nobel Laureate Mario Vargas Llosa (Nobel Laureate from Peru)

1, Chunky monkey Gone with the wind Margaret Mitchell
2, Sputnik sweetheart by Haruki Murakami with Charbel.
3, The nightingale by Kristin Hannah.
4, All the light we cannot see by Anthony Doer.
5, The Moonshine by Wilkie Collins.
I'm really looking forward to next year's books. :)

The Altman Code
Demon's Kiss
Coma
Kiss of Crimson
[b..."
Myst, [book:The Little Prince|157993] is fantastic. If you like that then I heartedly recommend The Tale of the Rose: The Love Story Behind The Little Prince written by his wife. these two, well they understood each other; they thought similarly.
why doesn't my first link work - sorry!

I'm planning on reading:
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Stoner
The Homecoming Party
The Tartar Steppe
Poor Folk
Bloodsucking Fiends
... and maybe squeeze in something else, too.


Two more I have requested from the library:
Will probably dive into the long list of books in my kindle. But these are definite as they have been sitting on my bookshelf for months now.
Girl Online On Tour by Zoe Sugg
The Girl in the Spider's Web by David Lagercrantz
Keep Your Friends Close by Paula Daly
The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton
Girl Online On Tour by Zoe Sugg
The Girl in the Spider's Web by David Lagercrantz
Keep Your Friends Close by Paula Daly
The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton

I will let you know, Chrissie. I'm very intrigued by Stoner as it recently went through a big hype here in Italy. It was given to me as a present for my birthday several months ago, so I thought I'd give it a try, seen it is also a Group Read in another group I'm a member of.

I will let you know, Chrissie. I'm ver..."
Maybe you will like it more than I did. I hope so.

See messages 14 and 50 and 51 for all books read this month.

I will be focusing each month of 2016 on a different geographical area. I will read books from elsewhere as well (group..."
That is a big list Leslie! I read Daughter of Fortune this year and really liked it.

1, Chunky monkey Gone with the wind Margaret Mitchell
2, Sputnik sweetheart by Haruki Murakami with Charbel.
3..."
I have read your numbers 1, 3, and 4 and enjoyed them all, happy reading!


I was looking for my copy of The Idiot but never found it. Must keep looking.

I will be focusing each month of 2016 on a different geographical area. I will read books from elsewhere..."
It is indeed Evelyn! I probably won't get to them all but having the list acts like a smaller pool of books from which to choose (rather than the larger pool of the many many books in my house which I need/want to read - not to mention the library!)

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
Cinder
Politics"
Cecilia - I read Wicked in October & was surprised by how much I liked it. Enjoy!

1. As You Wish by Cary Elwes
2. Walking Dead: The Fall of the Govenor by Robert Kirkman
3. Go Set A Watchman by Harper Lee
4.The 100 Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson
I would have posted the links, but my tablet is being moody right now.

I was looking for my copy o..."
Testament of Youth I have wanted to read for ages and now, finally, it is available - on Jan 7th! Happy me. I am really excited about it. that is the one I want to read more than anything else.

Then for January I plan to read
1. A Man of Some Repute by Elizabeth Edmondson
2. 183 Times a Year by Eva Jordan
3. Recalled to death by Priscilla Masters
4. Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers
5. Killer Run by Lynn Cahoon
6. The Cornish Coast Murder by John Bude
7. The Other Child by Lucy Atkins
That should keep me busy! *:D

A Window Opens
The Middle of Everywhere: Helping Refugees Enter the American Community
The Flood Girls - done
Finish, finally, Clean- had to return to library before I finished. Ugh!
A Tale of Two Cities - now reading
Marina wrote: "I have some big plans for January - not sure I'll be able to read all those books, though, but I'll try.
I'm planning on reading:
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Stoner..."
Looking forward to hearing what you think of Poor Folk Marina! It's the book by Dostoevsky that I haven't read yet which I'm most tempted to read.
I'm planning on reading:
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Stoner..."
Looking forward to hearing what you think of Poor Folk Marina! It's the book by Dostoevsky that I haven't read yet which I'm most tempted to read.

Tess of the D'Urbervilles
A Brief History of Seven Killings
Ulysses (to start for AAB group read) currently reading

I'm liking it. Hugo is very very wordy but it's not a problem for who likes very detailed descriptions and I like them. What I like the most are the descriptions of the characters; there are a lot of details and Hugo introduces his characters starting from their life many years before the story is set. I don't know if I explained very well: think of Dostoyevsky, when he introduces a character and you read about his childhood or former years, before the real time setting in the book. Hugo is similar.
There is also a lot of history. Till now I've read only the part about the Battle of Waterloo. It wasn't bad, and sometimes there were romantic descriptions of the battle field, but I don't like that much descriptions of battle strategies so I've read it very slowly. The whole book is historical and we have a very good description of life in that period.
Hugo also looks a lot to human condition. Above all poverty and how society doesn't help needy people; on the contrary, sometimes it's society's fault if a person starts to steal or gets lost. The book, till now, is full of accusations to society who doesn't care about the needy, about law and justice, about how it's easy to get lost if a person isn't helped. But Hugo's accusations aren't "lessons" he wants to give to the reader; they are added in a smooth way in the story.
There's really a lot in it: historical facts, a deep look to society of that period, detailed descriptions of the human/psychological part of the characters; justice, evil and goodness....I think there's everything relating to human beings, society, country.

A spool of blue thread by Anne Tyler &
All the light we cannot see by Anthony Doerr

I'm liking it. Hugo is very very wordy but it's not a problem for who likes very detailed descriptions and I like them. What I like the most are th..."
I DO understand what you are saying by comparing the writing to D. That made me understand perfectly. I think the battle parts would bore me to death, so I am still doubtful.

I'm liking it. Hugo is very very wordy but it's not a problem for who likes very detailed descriptions and I like them. What I like the most are th..."
dely, that's why Les Misérables has remained the favorite of all my favorites :)

So I'm going to continue to nibble away at my tbr list instead.

Good!"
I spent last night looking for good LONG audiobooks and never thought of it. Really ridiculous. It was staring me in the face.

I'm only half through but it's really good. Hugo's prose, his descriptions of characters, live in that period (and not only) are wonderful. Some parts are a little bit slower. like the Battle of Waterloo and a shorter part about Paris' toponymy, but all the rest is so good that I quickly forgot how slow (and sometimes boring) these parts were. I like how he introduces the characters and also the political background; I like his considerations about society and the needy of society. Chrissie, there's sometimes also humor and I know you like it.
Hugo also is never repetitive. This is amazing because the book is so long! But he ha a very rich vocabulary and so he never gets repetitive.

You simply must check out Testament of Youth. I am just glad you do not do audiobooks b/c in this case such is the wrong choice. It is really quite an amazing book, yet it sometimes goes goes over my head. I need notes and again they are not available in the audiobook format.I don't know if they are in the written book either....

You simply must check out [boo..."
Now I'm scared! What if you don't like it?
I've added Testament of Youth to my wishlist. Thanks!


You simply mu..."
dely, I get exactly the same feeling when someone reads a book b/c I loved it...... Don't worry, this is of course my choice! I don't know, I am worried about those slow parts, battles and stuff. The characterizations attract me though. I just wonder if The Hunchback of Notre-Dame would be a better place to start with the author. You know, I do not give up on books so I am hesitant to start. I am also considering Anthony Trollope 's (Can You Forgive Her?) and Sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser and Père Goriot by Honoré de Balzac and maybe another James A. Michener like this time Chesapeake. I feel like some long books. All of these are kind of iffy for me though.

..."
The slow parts are perhaps slow to read but I think they could be better with the audiobooks because there are so many details, that the reader (listener) is able to imagine everything in a good way. I'm reading it as a group read in another group and a member said that the battle of Waterloo was like a description of many paintings of a battlefield. And this is so true! Despite the cruelty of war, there was something romantic in these descriptions: details about the landscape, nature....It was like walking in front of paintings and a guide that explains you the battle through these paintings and you are able to feel the hope, the fear, the cold, the smell of blood etc.
I think that to pick up Les Misérables you must be in the right mood because it's a very demanding book that needs a full concentration.
I haven't read other books by Hugo or by the authors you mention in your comment so I can't help you.


I hope you will find an edition with a good narrator and of course I'm waiting for your opinions, whenever you decide to read it.

I found one with a narrator that should be good - Bill Homewood! I think I have listened to him before......

I will start with:
See messages 14 and 50 and 51 for all books read this month.
Books mentioned in this topic
Cousin Bette (other topics)Père Goriot (other topics)
Eugénie Grandet (other topics)
Diary of a Provincial Lady (other topics)
Diary of a Provincial Lady (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Booth Tarkington (other topics)Honoré de Balzac (other topics)
Cormac McCarthy (other topics)
Anthony Trollope (other topics)
Norman Mailer (other topics)
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