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Upcoming Monthly Reads > November 2018 - What will you be reading?

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message 2: by Chrissie (last edited Nov 30, 2018 11:14AM) (new)


message 3: by Colleen (last edited Nov 27, 2018 04:01PM) (new)

Colleen  | 353 comments Finish:
The Woman in White (audio) read - 4 stars
The Collector’s Apprentice read - 5 stars

Read:
Our Souls at Night (audio) read - 4 stars
A Tangled Mercy read - 4 stars
The Woman in Cabin 10 (audio) read - 2 stars
Gunpowder Moon read - 3 stars
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (audio)
Crazy Rich Asians (audio)
A Separate Peace (audio) read - 3 stars
The Care and Feeding of Ravenously Hungry Girls
Love Warrior - read 5 stars


message 4: by Norton (new)

Norton Beckerman. (nortsb) | 97 comments That's quite a lot of reading for 1 month. You haven't settled on any short stories. I've written a short story titled "DAD!" If you'd like to read it let me know.


message 5: by LauraT (last edited Dec 03, 2018 12:43AM) (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14417 comments Mod
Probably these:

Fernando Arambur Patria Reading now
Elif Batuman The Possessed: Adventures With Russian Books and the People Who Read ThemRead
Anthony Trollope The Eustace Diamonds Read
Maurizio de Giovanni Pane per i Bastardi di Pizzofalcone Read


Jonathan Raban Bad Land: An American Romance Read
Alexander Mccall Smith Espresso Tales Read
Penelope Fitzgerald La libreria Read

John Grisham A Time to Kill Read
Timothy Egan  The Big Burn: Teddy Roosevelt and the Fire That Saved America Read
Dafne Du Maurier Jamaica Inn Read

Carmen Korn Figlie di una nuova era
Maurizio de Giovanni Souvenir per i Bastardi di Pizzofalcone Read


message 6: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Norton wrote: "That's quite a lot of reading for 1 month. You haven't settled on any short stories. I've written a short story titled "DAD!" If you'd like to read it let me know."

No thank you.


message 7: by Pam (last edited Nov 03, 2018 09:48AM) (new)

Pam (bluegrasspam) It's so hard for me to plan what I'm going to read! I have good intentions to read the following. (We'll see what happens.)

1. Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel This is in continuation of my reading challenge of 25 translated authors, not on my 100 authors challenge. Each chapter starts with a recipe! Perfect for the holidays and for someone who doesn't cook much. I hope there is a recipe for making chocolate!
2. Children of God by Mary Doria Russell I was so devastated by The Sparrow but I'm finally ready to know the rest of the story!
3. Three Simple Men: And Other Holy Folktales by Leo Tolstoy (For my Translated Lit challenge/genre folktales)
4. Rush Oh! by Shirley Barrett
5. Last but not least, continue with Don Quixote and The Man Who Invented Fiction: How Cervantes Ushered in the Modern World

For short stories, I am listening to the LeVar Burton Reads Podcast. I love his narration and the music and sound effects!


message 8: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie You know why I like this thread? Because you see what people REALLY are reading. Everyone of us has monstrously long TBR lists but which books do we actually read?


message 9: by Jess (new)

Jess Penhallow | 129 comments I will be continuing with War and Peace and unlikely to finish it in November.

I might slot in one or more of these in between:
The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin
The Demon King by Cinda Williams Chima


message 10: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie LauraT wrote: "Probably these:

Fernando Arambur Patria

Elif Batuman The Possessed: Adventures With Russian Books and the People Who Read Them
Jonathan Raban [book:Bad Land: An Am..."


Have fun with the Penelope Fitzgerald book. I did. One of the books you will be reading I did not like, but I will not wreck it for you and say which,


message 12: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Erica, if I remember correctly I loved Euphoria! I remember thinking that she took a bit of Margaret Mead's life and created a fictional story from that. It is fiction but wonderfully drawn.


message 13: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I have added a couple more, and I might also add The Metamorphosis. IF we decide to read it for the ABB classic choice in November.

I maybe have too many books listed, but what I do not read I will read next month.


message 14: by Norton (new)

Norton Beckerman. (nortsb) | 97 comments I'm really interested in your reaction to War and Peace. I read it years ago, but pieces of it keep popping up. Time for a reread


message 16: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) I haven't participated much in these discussions since I no more plan my reading, at least not on a monthly basis. However, I find the discussions fun, so here I am again with a very rough plan:

Started in October, to be finished:

The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, Volume 5
Inseguendo le ombre dei colibrì

Currently reading:

Infiltration: A Novel

To be read, possibly:

Refuge: A Novel
Boredom
The Snow Child
Quello che ho da dirvi
Luftballonspiele
The Three Musketeers

... more to come


message 17: by Chrissie (last edited Nov 02, 2018 07:49AM) (new)

Chrissie Marina, you do not have to worry about actually fulfilling one's plans; plans ate often changed. It is also a good way of keeping track of what one ends up reading each month if you take the time to note changes! You can also easily see which book you liked best and which worst, if you fill that in as you read.


message 18: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) Chrissie, I do that in my personal reading space, but I am unsure whether I'll keep the same format next year. Anyway, I find this thread is a good way to see what the other members are reading :)


message 19: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Mariana, I checked out your thread and see what you mean. .......but it is kind of fun talking with others too, here,


message 20: by Marina (new)

Marina (sonnenbarke) Chrissie wrote: "Mariana, I checked out your thread and see what you mean. .......but it is kind of fun talking with others too, here,"

Of course it is, that's why I posted in here in the first place :)


message 22: by Robin (new)

Robin A I don't really plan my reading to far a head but here is what I'm currently reading or have on table waiting to be read.

1. Town in a Sweet Pickle
2. project 1065 by gratz, alan
3.Massacre Canyon


message 23: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie I added in another short story by W. Somerset Maugham --The Luncheon. It was good and will definitely make you laugh.

Diane found it and I had to read it too.


message 24: by Esther (new)

Esther (eshchory) Chrissie wrote: "I added in another short story by W. Somerset Maugham --The Luncheon. It was good and will definitely make you laugh.

Diane found it and I had to read it too."


Years ago I read a lot of Maugham's short stories in a collection and this was one of my favourites.


message 25: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Esther, go read The Verger. It is even better. I have a free link to it in my review. Reading stories on the web is a pain but if they are short it is doable.


message 26: by Esther (last edited Nov 28, 2018 10:21PM) (new)

Esther (eshchory) Chrissie wrote: "Esther, go read The Verger. It is even better. I have a free link to it in my review. Reading stories on the web is a pain but if they are short it is doable."

That is one of his sort stories I have read multiple times - another favourite.

My mother had the Penguin 4 volume collection of his short stories and I read them from start to finish when I was about 14.
I liked them so much that I reread the whole collection in my twenties and have been reading his short stories here and there even since.
As a result I think I have read 95% of his short stories.
I remember the first one I ever read was Rain. At 14 I didn't completely understand it but I thought is was brilliant and I haven't stopped enjoying them since then.


message 27: by Chrissie (new)

Chrissie Esther wrote: "Chrissie wrote: "Esther, go read The Verger. It is even better. I have a free link to it in my review. Reading stories on the web is a pain but if they are short it is doable."

Tha..."


I read Rain in one of his collections recently. I preferred others more. It did make me laugh a bit though. For me it was TOO open-ended.


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