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What Are You Reading: March 2017
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Susan - I hate when publishers do that too. Its like they left something out for the reader to be aware of . Its like publishers change a series cover mid series . No one likes the change because the 1st book won't look like the 3rd book with covers. I get trying to get new readers , but the covers don't match.

Susan - I hate when publishers do t..."
I think it is more reprehensible when they "forget" to mention a book will include human trafficking or pedophilia. Some people have real issues with those topics. This just annoyed me. It was not the book it was represented to be!
Alas, this month I've been sick so I haven't gotten to do the reading I've wanted. Still, I've managed some reading like the latest Mercy Thompson book from Patricia Briggs, Silence Fallen and My Not So Perfect Life by Sophie Kinsella. Both were lovely escapes from the confines of my home, where I ended up spending most of my time.
Now that I'm feeling better, I cracked open A Conjuring of Light by V.E. Schwab, the conclusion to The Shades of Magic trilogy. I'm halfway through and can't wait to finish at the same time I hope it never ends.
Now that I'm feeling better, I cracked open A Conjuring of Light by V.E. Schwab, the conclusion to The Shades of Magic trilogy. I'm halfway through and can't wait to finish at the same time I hope it never ends.

I am so sorry!! The worst is being so sick you can't even read!
"History is all you left me" Adam Silvera and "The girl who drank the moon" Kelly Barnhill. I seem to be on a youth oriented reading run lately. Excellent and different writing from the authors.



Almost finished reading

Will soon start

It has been a busy reading month for me!



The Marvels was intimidating as it was over 600 pages, despite being a children's book, but the first half was all pictures.
NeuroTribes is a bit slow of a read as its history, but interesting learning about Autism and why it seems to have been diagnosed all these years.


I've also been listening to a couple of books. Hillbilly Elegy


For work I've been reading up on a lot of immigration stories which have been wonderful, revealing and so inspiring. First is Funny in Farsi



Just starting How to talk so little kids will listen by Joanna Faber and Julie King. Babysitting a tiny one is taking a lot of time from reading so naturally I'm using a book to figure out what to do about it.
I've just had the pleasure of reading News of the World by Paulette Jiles and I would highly recommend it to just about anyone. Set in 1871 Texas this book is short but intense. You feel the mud, see the swollen rivers, experience the tension of a virtually lawless land and all at the same time you care deeply for our main characters, Captain Kidd and Johanna, who are trekking to San Antonio so she can be "reunited" with her relatives after nearly 5 years as a captive of the Kiowa. Paulette Jiles wrote poetry before fiction and it shows. There is so much in so few words.
Currently holding my (audio) bookmark is something completely different, Dare Me by Megan Abbot, which is both a glorious and horrifying look into the world of high school cheerleader mean girls with a dash of mystery.
Currently holding my (audio) bookmark is something completely different, Dare Me by Megan Abbot, which is both a glorious and horrifying look into the world of high school cheerleader mean girls with a dash of mystery.
Books mentioned in this topic
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (other topics)The Queen of the Tearling (other topics)
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis (other topics)
The Kept Woman (other topics)
Funny in Farsi: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America (other topics)
More...
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