flight paths discussion
What are you reading?
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march madness
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I don't know any of these books: I guess I will become more educated over this next month!Just finished We Need New Names which I loved. About a child in Zimbabwe who is sent to live in the US with her aunt. Such brilliant writing.
I'm also finally reading A Little Life which got so much buzz. I'm only about 15% in and I'm liking it. Too soon to say "love" but it's certainly holding my attentionl
Currently in weightlifting training with 740, 970 & 1125 page tomes ! I find 3 books concurrent is as much as I can absorb.
yikes! that's heavy!I like to have a slimmer kind of book for moving around, lineups, the bus and waiting. I hate it when I'm interrupted when I'm totally engaged so its not just the weight that convinces me to have something short that I am not so lost in that it can be easily put down and picked up and, in the case of poetry, benefits greatly with each reading.
Ice wrote: "Currently in weightlifting training with 740, 970 & 1125 page tomes ! I find 3 books concurrent is as much as I can absorb."That's a huge commitment! I usually am reading about 3 books but not usually such big ones!
I like to have a volume of poetry along with other books I'm reading. I have a new one I am about to start. Do you ever have a feeling of excitement and almost dread before beginning a new book? It's like going out on a date with a new person. Will this be the one? Will it be awful?
I know-I'm a little crazy.
dear Ellie...yes, you are my kind of strange! I know just the feeling, now that you've pinned it down! whether its a blind date or one you've picked yourself from the stacks.
so who have you discovered?
I have a friend who's a poet and she's really wonderful, Mary Lou Buschi so I only discovered her because I met her. Does that count? It was a big risk reading her!An odd writer I really love is Enrique Vila-Matas. He writes very off-center fascinating books-semi-fiction/semi-autobiographical.
Ellie, how's a little life coming along?im going to find those last two you mentioned.
I just adore Heather O'Neill.
Have to look at O'Neill.I'm reading a book that I just love, At The Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and apricot cocktails with: Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert Camus, Martin Heidegger, Edmund Husserl, Karl Jaspers, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and others. Sarah Blakewell also wrote How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at An Answer which I also loved. She has a way of taking these difficult writers and making them friendly to an amateur reader like myself. Fascinating book.
was just thinking of youthanks for listing that long title :-) so it was easy to just put it on the mountain
( after all of my promises)
looks delightful
what about a little life?
I just was sideswiped by a book I picked up from the library because the author is reading at the arts centre here, tonight as it happens. I was feeling emotionally drained from all the wars I've been immersed in, never dreamed that is the subject of this book by local author Kathryn Para.
I didn't think I had any tears left. I was quite wrong.
But the book I want to recommend to you Ellie is one I came upon by serendipity and its a masterpiece as far as I am concerned. Its sad, yes, but there is a tenderness and playfulness and spiritual insight and marvelous writing. sorry I can't highlight link from the phone, but you should be able to find it,
a poet of the invisible world.
Hope the signs of spring surround you already!
What's the name of the book? (It's been beautifully warm but the forecast says snow tomorrow-to celebrate the beginning of spring, no doubt)
sorry that last message was abrubt, and wrong but I was taking advantage of the WiFi at the arts centre when I heard clapping and had to go in. its Michael Golding the author of poet of the invisible world, a real gem.as for Kathy Para, she was very interesting in what she had to say about the writing and publishing process. she also was nice enough to drive me home! I'll have to do her justice with my review.
Just looked up Golding and saw it's a novel not poetry. Oops. Well, I enjoy readings of all kinds. :)
gravity's rainbow!I am not sure why it took me so long to fully appreciate i was young and a bit overwhelmed, without a clue really, but once I got into it pure genius fun. highly recommended
The 'Mad Russian' brothers Karamazov are done but what possessed me to order 'The Possessed/Demons' from the library !Also ordered a Wallander book to keep me sane. And for night time still at the Edge of Eternity. Busy Easter arriving starting with potatoe planting and easter egg hunting with the grandsons.
Books mentioned in this topic
At the Existentialist Café (other topics)How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer (other topics)
We Need New Names (other topics)
A Little Life (other topics)
The Back Of The Turtle: A Novel (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Lou Buschi (other topics)Enrique Vila-Matas (other topics)
Katherine Govier (other topics)
Thomas King (other topics)



I have just returned from an intense voyage up the Labrador coast with Audubon and Katherine Govier
This month I will be focusing on Canadian books for the CBC Bingo challenge. I am really looking forward to Thomas King Back Of The Turtle, The