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archives > December 2014 - What are you reading? (No book covers)

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message 1: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments Tell us what you are reading this month.

Out of consideration to those of us who follow this topic on mobile devices, please use links rather than book cover images.


message 3: by Bryn (new)

Bryn Hammond (brynhammond) | 329 comments Islamicate Sexualities: Translations across Temporal Geographies of Desire
fascinating, though I may be feeling tired of theory.

highlights so far are Cervantes on Muslim subjects, with an argument to include him in Islamicate studies; and 'Female Cross-Dressing and Same-Sex Marriage', on French dilutions of Arabic originals.


Rambling Reader (ramblingreader) | 0 comments Bryn wrote: "Islamicate Sexualities: Translations across Temporal Geographies of Desire
fascinating, though I may be feeling tired of theory.

highlights so far are Cervantes on Muslim subjects,..."


This looks so gripping!

Thanks, added this to my never-ending to-read list.


message 5: by Bryn (new)

Bryn Hammond (brynhammond) | 329 comments :)


Rambling Reader (ramblingreader) | 0 comments You can see I am a nerd like that LOL


message 7: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!


message 8: by Clodia (new)

Clodia Metelli (clodiametelli) | 21 comments Kernos wrote: "Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!"

I enjoyed that book very much too. I want to read more by him.


message 9: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Clodia wrote: "Kernos wrote: "Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!"

I enjoyed that book very much too. I want to read more by him."


As do I. I love his style and new words he introduces me to, like 'horripilation', a most perfect word, IMO.


message 10: by Rambling Reader (new)

Rambling Reader (ramblingreader) | 0 comments Kernos wrote: "Clodia wrote: "Kernos wrote: "Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!"

I enjoyed that book very much too. I want to read more by him."

As do I. I l..."


Is he gay?


message 11: by Clodia (new)

Clodia Metelli (clodiametelli) | 21 comments Chris wrote: "Kernos wrote: "Clodia wrote: "Kernos wrote: "Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!"

I enjoyed that book very much too. I want to read more by him...."


No, I don't think so.


message 12: by Rambling Reader (new)

Rambling Reader (ramblingreader) | 0 comments I didn't think so either but he looks gay.


message 13: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. It's a bit too bonkers for me.


message 14: by Dana (new)

Dana (danarohinsky) | 89 comments I recently read The Unintentional Time Traveler, which was terrible, More Than This which was interesting but had (for me) an unsatisfactory ending, and Prudence: A Novel which I found rather boring.

So not a particularly good run!

Now I'm reading Harmonica's Bridegroom.


message 16: by Caddy (new)

Caddy Rowland (caddyrowland) | 90 comments Just finished City of Whores. Really enjoyed it. I think you will, too. It was really tought being gay back then. My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

City of Whores


message 17: by Bryn (new)

Bryn Hammond (brynhammond) | 329 comments Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman, the underappreciated sequel, forty years later, to A Canticle for Leibowitz.
I'm not sure where he's going with them but he has themes of androgyny, and he's made his main bisexual. There was no hint of this sort of thing in Canticle.


message 18: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I finished Kraken and started reading The Giver Quartet by Lois Lowry


message 19: by [deleted user] (new)

The Insidious Dr. Fu-Manchu

It's not bad per se, but the racism strikes hard and fast.


message 20: by Robyn (new)

Robyn (rlmpublic) | 40 comments I just finished Neil Patrick Harris: Choose Your Own Autobiography -- a fun, light read made more fun by the "Choose your own adventure" format. I probably read it through 5-6 times, choosing different options along the way. And then, for closure, I flipped through it page by page, reading anything that had been previously skipped. Curious to know how the audio book of this plays out...


message 21: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Hill | 173 comments The Not So Secret Emails Of Coco Pinchard and it's a scream. So funny!


message 22: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I finished The Giver Quartet—what a gem of YA fantasy. I saw the movie also which I really liked.

I started Forty Thousand in Gehenna an Alliance-Unionside novel by CJ Cherryh a prequel to her brilliant Cyteen. Cherryh is my favorite living Sci-Fi author.


message 23: by Jillyn (new)

Jillyn | 178 comments I'm reading Made for You and Rue Toulouse


message 24: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I finished Forty Thousand in Gehenna. Great book! I'm glad I read Cyteen first. Cherryh herself says 40,000 in Gehenna takes place Between Cyteen and Regenesis

When I finish a book, I have to start another immediately no matter the time or events. So I read a few pages of Makers by one of my heros Cory Doctorow at about 2°° am last nite—@BoingBoing


message 25: by Jim (new)

Jim (jkmfilms) | 91 comments Clodia wrote: "Kernos wrote: "Reading Kraken by China Miéville. What a wondrous author!"

I enjoyed that book very much too. I want to read more by him."


I, too, need to try more of his books. I've just read The City & the City, and was fascinated by it.


message 26: by Alexandra (new)

Alexandra (little_alex) | 591 comments Kernos wrote: "I finished Forty Thousand in Gehenna. Great book! I'm glad I read Cyteen first. Cherryh herself says 40,000 in Gehenna takes place Between Cyteen and Regenesis"

I've read and loved Cyteen and Regenesis as well. Do you like Cherryh's Foreigner series?


message 27: by Jim (last edited Dec 23, 2014 09:45AM) (new)

Jim (jkmfilms) | 91 comments Robyn wrote: "I just finished Neil Patrick Harris: Choose Your Own Autobiography -- a fun, light read made more fun by the "Choose your own adventure" format. I probably read it through 5-6 times, choosing different options along the way. And then, for closure, I flipped through it page by page, reading anything that had been previously skipped. Curious to know how the audio book of this plays out... "

I thought the audio was worth it, listening to him tell the story in his own voice. But the tradeoff is that he reads it straight through (ending each section with a slightly more vague, "if you want to do this, it's coming up; if you want to do that, you'll have to wait until I tell that story later") Well, he does it better, but you get the gist.

Fortunately, I was able to borrow it from the library, and borrow the hardcover at the same time, so I was able to see all the pictures, and the exact book format.

I grew up on Choose Your Own Adventure books, so this was truly fantastic to me.


message 28: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments Maurice by E.M. Forster, for my Queer Book Club. About an eighth of the way through. I'm enjoying the writing. But who is speaking in the dialogue is frustratingly hard to follow at times.


message 29: by Alexandra (last edited Dec 24, 2014 01:28AM) (new)

Alexandra (little_alex) | 591 comments Natasha (Diarist) wrote: "Maurice by E.M. Forster, for my Queer Book Club. About an eighth of the way through. I'm enjoying the writing. But who is speaking in the dialogue is frustratingly hard to follow at times."

That's the only E.M. Forster novel I've ever read. I heard it's one of his weaker works?


message 30: by Bryn (new)

Bryn Hammond (brynhammond) | 329 comments Melville: A Biography.

Forster's Maurice a cult book in my family.


message 31: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments Alex wrote: "That's the only E.M. Forster novel I've ever read. I heard it's one of his weaker works?"

I'm not sure yet, Alex. I'm loving the subtleties of the story, but I can't tell who's doing or saying what, which is annoying.


message 32: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
Bryn wrote: "Melville: A Biography.

Forster's Maurice a cult book in my family."


In mine too Bryn. I like the movie too.


message 33: by Bryn (new)

Bryn Hammond (brynhammond) | 329 comments Kernos wrote: "Bryn wrote: "Melville: A Biography.

Forster's Maurice a cult book in my family."

In mine too Bryn. I like the movie too."


So do we. A well-done movie, does justice to the book.

Meanwhile, my Melville biography is good so far on his sexuality, his bisexuality even though she doesn't like to use an anachronistic word.


message 34: by Nancy (new)

Nancy | 2838 comments I hope your dog gets well soon, Emma. Merry Christmas!


message 35: by Alexandra (new)

Alexandra (little_alex) | 591 comments Kernos wrote: "Bryn wrote: "Melville: A Biography.

Forster's Maurice a cult book in my family."

In mine too Bryn. I like the movie too."


I must confess, I like the movie better than the book.


message 36: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments I'm nearly halfway through Maurice now and I'm rather enjoying it. It's beautiful.


message 37: by Alexandra (last edited Dec 28, 2014 05:32AM) (new)

Alexandra (little_alex) | 591 comments Don wrote: "Noticed that I'm not going to reach my goal of reading 35 books this year. I've been very distracted the last quarter of the year and fell short..."

I almost didn't make my 52 books a year challenge, but I cheated last minute and grabbed a manga. I can always read those in under 30 minutes.


message 38: by Natasha (last edited Dec 28, 2014 10:39AM) (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments I'm on book no.52 (Maurice), so I'm on track for my challenge this year :-)


message 39: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
I'm still doing older Sci-Fi. I finished Port Eternity a great horror/SciFi by C.J. Cherryh and started Missing Man by Katherine Anne MacLean

Maclean is a new author for me—actually I've nor heard of her, but read great things about her work. Is anyone a fan?


message 40: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Hill | 173 comments Just finished Because She Loves Me (non-gay fiction), a very enjoyable page turner. Review here: http://www.100wordreviews.com/blog/be...


message 41: by K.N. (last edited Dec 29, 2014 04:38PM) (new)

K.N. (karmaplace) | 32 comments This month I've read:
Teeth by Chele Cooke (An urban fantasy vampire novel with a few LGBT characters.)
Cell by Stephen King (Surprisingly one of the main characters is a gay man.)
The Disassembled Life of Duncan Cole by S. Hart (A steampunk gay romance between a disabled mechanic and a coal miner.)

I'm currently working my way through an advanced copy of Douglas Wynne's new cosmic horror, Red Equinox.


message 42: by Jay (new)

Jay Those Who Saved Us by Jenna Blum. Historical Fiction taking place in Nazi Germany.


message 43: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments And Playing the Role of Herself by K.E. Lane for my Lesbian Book Club book of the month. Really enjoying it.


message 44: by Susinok (new)

Susinok I am reading Down and Dirty by Rhys Ford and also A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle.


message 45: by Natasha (new)

Natasha Holme (natashaholme) | 465 comments Oops, it's January 2015, people. We need a new thread :-)


message 46: by Bill, Moderator (new)

Bill (kernos) | 2988 comments Mod
This is Dec/Jan—

I finished and reviewed Katherine MacLean's Missing Man and made extensive edits to the library entry.

I started reading Beholder's Eye book 1 of the Web Shifters trilogy by Julie E. Czerneda a favorite author.


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