Books on the Nightstand discussion

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What are you reading: February, 2011

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message 1: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3103 comments Mod
Starting the new folder. Believe it or not, today is the first of February.

I'm working on four - which seems to be on going:

War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy War and Peace with Ann's wiki discussion read-together

The Frontiersmen by Allan W. Eckert The Frontiersmen

The Source by James A. Michener The Source

and I'm listening to the only less than 600 page book of the bunch (and boy is it less than 600 pages): The Penultimate Peril (A Series of Unfortunate Events, #12) by Lemony Snicket The Penultimate Peril

Hopefully, since we are iced in, I'll finishThe Frontiersmen
tomorrow and move on to the pile of goodies I have from the library including The Invisible Bridge by Julie Orringer The Invisible Bridge, Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson Major Pettigrew's Last Stand or Unbroken A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption  by Laura Hillenbrand Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption.

And, our local independent book store is going out of business and I purchased A Fraction of the Whole by Steve Toltz A Fraction of the Whole for only $10 for the hardback. Looking forward to that one after Ann's raves.


message 2: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments Oy, this ice storm Linda. I did a face plant in the parking lot at work this morning. I really need to move somewhere that doesn't have an annual snowpocalypse.

I decided to read some junk food so I started Fangland: A Novel. It's about a producer from a 60 Minutes type show that stumbles onto some kind of vampire story in Romania. The old school kind of vampires that is, not the moping lovesick au courant types. It got kind of bad reviews here on Goodreads but I was curious.


message 3: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3103 comments Mod
Oh, Vanessa - are you o.k.? I just started a new job last week and should have gone in for training today, but the class was called off because of the weather. Good thing, since my cane and I fall on dry land - not talking about this ice.

My county is now at a level three (no one allowed on the roads) so looks like I won't be going in tomorrow either. READING TIME!


message 4: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments Yeah more or less. I have whiplash and apparently a mild concussion. None of which is as distressing as having to going to work and walking through that winter minefield again


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael (mkindness) | 537 comments Mod
Oh no Vanessa! Take it easy out there. Get some YakTrax!

http://www.yaktrax.com/


message 6: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments Hey this is a good idea. I worry every winter about falling.

On the bright side, I had my iPod in my pocket and I landed right on top of it. I was afraid I broke it but it's still chugging away.

I can't imagine walking in this with a cane, Linda. Don't go out. Even the grass is slick.


message 7: by Ann (new)

Ann (akingman) | 2097 comments Mod
Vanessa, I hope you are recovering OK from your fall!

Linda - sorry to hijack this thread, but I sent you a msg thru Goodreads a few days ago. Did you see it? Please email me: ann@booksonthenightstand.com Thanks.

My reading: a book coming out next summer called The Last Werewolf. I'm not much for the supernatural, but I figured if I could enjoy the zombies in The Passage, I might like the werewolf in this book. So far, I do!


message 8: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) I hope you are ok Vanessa. I fell down my front steps not long ago. I know than even when you are ok you are still left feeling sore all over.

I just finished The Nature of Monsters and I loved it even tho it was heartbreaking. I'm also about half way thru The Aeneid


message 9: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments Flora, so many people here wiped out yesterday. Some of them like you just leaving their houses (by the way--steps. Ouch!) At least I have power (for now.)

This is the worst ice storm I've seen since I moved to Ohio 10 years ago. I would rather have had the foot of snow they got up north instead than this.


message 10: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) I agree, Vanessa, snow is so much easier to deal with than ice. We had an ice storm here a couple of years ago and it was awful. All of the power lines for miles were down. We were without power for three weeks. I don't ever want to go thru that again. At night you would be laying in bed and hear breaking limbs hitting the roof, it was very unsettling.


message 11: by Cindy (new)

Cindy (cwsmith) | 104 comments Just started Emperor of All Maladies: a biography of cancer. Saw the author interviewed a couple of weeks ago and realized how little I knew about the illness that has taken several of my friends. I'll let you know how this goes. When I told someone what I was reading, the response was "How depressing!" Since when is knowledge a depressant?? This seems like a natural to follow on The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks which my book group read last fall.


message 12: by Linda (new)

Linda | 3103 comments Mod
One more thing on the weather - for Vanessa in 2008 there was in ice storm that knocked out some people's electric for WEEKS. Last summer the electric company did a massive tree cutting and cutting back - isn't beautiful, but I guess it was practical. We still have our electric.

Will contact you, Ann.


message 13: by Nicole (new)

Nicole (pinkrain718) | 33 comments Vanessa, so sorry to hear about your fall! We just got another 15+ inches of snow where I live and I'll take that over ice any day!

I'm reading Snow Flower and the Secret Fan by Lisa See for my book group and it is very interesting. I just can't put the book down!


message 14: by Shruti morethanmylupus (last edited Feb 02, 2011 06:36PM) (new)

Shruti morethanmylupus (morethanmylupus) | 54 comments I'm finally starting The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon Kavalier and Clay because it took forever to get to the top of the library's request list. I'm also just starting The Bells. The Bells by Richard Harvell .


message 15: by Beth (new)

Beth Knight (zazaknittycat) | 65 comments I just started Revolution by Jennifer Donnelly and I'm loving it.


message 16: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 03, 2011 05:52AM) (new)

Finished "Finishing the Hat: Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes" by Stephen Sondheim.

Finishing the Hat Collected Lyrics (1954-1981) with Attendant Comments, Principles, Heresies, Grudges, Whines and Anecdotes by Stephen Sondheim


Normally I don't make a habit of reading song lyrics. Yeah, with a rock record I'll sometimes sit down with the liner notes and read along, but mostly I'll refer to the lyric only if I can't suss out what's being sung. This book is the exception for two reasons: 1) These aren't rock lyrics. Sondheim is a great writer in this form. Literate and witty, these are songs meant to tell stories. Although they're meant to be coupled with music, they're good enough to be taken on their own. 2) This isn't just a collection of lyrics. The lyrics serve as springboards to discussions of the creative process and creative outcomes. Sondheim, at age 80, is clear-eyed about his work. When he tells us what worked, what didn't, and why, his arguments are irrefutable enough that this reader can only nod his head in agreement.

Sondheim, in propounding his philosophy of lyric writing, also places some of the greats of previous generations under the lens and offers his opinions on their bodies of work. Even his mentor, Oscar Hammerstein, gets the treatment. ("Oh What a Beautiful Morning" --good! "Climb Every Mountain --bad!) The reader will learn the terminology used by insiders. Now I'll always know when I'm hearing a "list song", for example.

Sondheim's core principles are that content dictates form, less is more, and...er...a few others that I've forgotten. He also believes in rhyming. Not approximate rhyming, but "true" or exact rhyming. Not just as a creative restriction. The importance of rhyming, he tells us, is to reinforce what the ear has just heard. As someone who sometimes struggles to keep up with the words in theater songs, I agree wholeheartedly. One should not assume from this that Sondheim's lyrics are all "moon, June and spoon". They're creative as hell. Open the book to any random page and you'll see what I mean. Here, I'll do it right now: elixir/nick, sir -- gamut/dammit -- barbari[ans]/hairy.

The grudges and whines listed in the title are just the author being self-deprecating. But there are heresies. For example, he hates the time honored tradition of a group of people singing a single thought in unison. He shies away from doing this unless to highlight the fact that people are acting or thinking without individuality. And there are anecdotes. Some very funny ones are told, especially about Ethel Merman and Hermione Gingold. I don't think I'll ever be able to see Gingold on screen again without laughing inappropriately.

There are thirteen shows covered here, up to 1981's "Merrily We Roll Along". There is a sequel promised, yet these shows represent about 2/3 of Sondheim's output. So why a book of such length? Why not save more material for the sequel? I thought this until I read the section on "Merrily We Roll Along". Sondheim was 50 when he wrote that show, and its subject was a successful songwriter of a similar age, from a vantage point of financial and critical success juxtaposed with frayed and failed relationships. The story is told backward in time, ending with the promising start of lasting friendships and a career on the rise. Happier times. Although Sondheim rejects the notion that creative artists' characters reflect their own personalities, he confesses some autobiographical feelings expressed in "Merrily" (at east in so far as it portrays a young songwriter trying to get "the suits" to appreciate his good work), there couldn't be a more poignant place at which to end this book.


message 17: by Melissa (new)

Melissa I did a Facebook poll last month & read what my friends/family voted for...The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I'll be done shortly & will do a new poll, this time between The Hunger Games, The Honey Bee Girl & Unbroken: A World War II Story... I kinda like doing it that way so it's a surprise what I'll read next.


message 18: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 03, 2011 06:47AM) (new)

I'm currently listening to Caribou Island (by David Vann; narrated by Bronson Pinchot.) Bronson Pinchot is hitting all the right notes in telling the story of a family on the Kenai Peninsula in Alaska. The setting is lushly portrayed and the characters are fully drawn, warts and all. The keel of the novel is that Gary, the father, is building a cabin on an even more isolated part of the peninsula. You can sense the inexorable pull toward a dark or tragic event beyond their lives of seemingly never-ending regret and frustration. I'm not sure what this says about me, but so far, so good.

I finally dnf-ed Russian Winter (by Daphne Kalotay.) Technically there is nothing wrong with the book. The premise is interesting, the writing clear and, it's even got great cover art; but just like that, within a few chapters, I lost interest and was never able to get it back. The set-up for the novel is that a retired ballerina is auctioning off her jewelry. The lead-up to the auction triggers three seemingly disparate story lines: the ballerina's flashes back to her life in Stalinist USSR, another Russian emigre who has some sort of mysterious connection with the ballerina starts trying to re-connect with the dancer and, the love-disillusioned auction house agent engages upon her research efforts into the pieces being auctioned. The writing is straight forward and descriptive (even with the occasional phrases masquerading as statements for stylistic effect); but for all the scene building, there's a certain lack of lushness or romanticism to the story and; no tension. The whole of the book builds on the flashback structure that seems to be popular amongst book clubs (see Water for Elephants (by Sara Gruen) and Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet (by Jamie Ford)) but weights it a little more on present day action by including the Russian emigre and the auction house agent. Each chapter is preceded by a description of a piece of jewelry which provides a bit of a tease for the ensuing chapter; but the correlation between the jewelry and the following text is often tenuous at best. I didn't hate the book. I just set it down six weeks ago in the middle and forgot about it.
FYI: I got to page 270 of the 466 page book


message 19: by Alexia (last edited Feb 03, 2011 06:36AM) (new)

Alexia (crittersmom) | 29 comments Still plugging away at The Elegance of the Hedgehog The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery . I say plugging away but it's one of the best books I've ever read period. I'm just not finding enough reading time lately. :( I seriously need to do something about that.

My audio book is Falling Free Falling Free by Lois McMaster Bujold by Lois McMaster Bujold. Her Vorkosigan series is far better but this book is good enough to keep me interested. This is one of those books I don't know if I'd ever have read but am definitely enjoying listening to it.


message 20: by Amy (new)

Amy | 463 comments Tanya wrote: "I'm currently listening to Caribou Island (by David Vann; narrated by Bronson Pinchot.) Bronson Pinchot is hitting all the right notes in telling the story of a family on the Kenai P..."

I managed to finish, but was quite disappointed as well!


message 21: by Amy (last edited Feb 03, 2011 08:46AM) (new)

Amy | 463 comments I am working on Possession by AS Byatt for book club. Neat premise and intrigiuing mix in the format. But, it has too much poetry in it for me. Sure taking my time reading it. Also, still working on Free For All and 3 books for MBA classes. I will also read Something Missing for the Retreat Challenge because I only have it for 2 more weeks from the library. My other book club is reading Omnivore's Dilemma this month, and since I've already read it, I am listening to the CDs. Possession,Free for All: Fixing School Food in America, Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind, 20th Anniversary Edition, The Book on Writing: The Ultimate Guide to Writing Well, Framework for Marketing Management, A, The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals


message 22: by Kate (last edited Feb 03, 2011 12:09PM) (new)

Kate | 270 comments I finished bot Great Expectations and A Tale of Two Cities for book group tonight and "loved " them much more than I thought I would. Read them mostly in Oprah's new edition by Penguin, but for counting and challenge purposes I listed them as Kindle editions so they count as 2 books (read about 40% of each on my Kindle). Just started The Finkler Questionon my Kindle this morning as a break from the classics and the 18th and 19th centuries.


message 23: by [deleted user] (new)

Amy wrote: "I managed to finish, but was quite disappointed as well!"

You're talking about Russian Winter (by Daphne Kalotoy,) right?


message 24: by Robin (new)

Robin Robertson (mcrobus) | 254 comments Jusat finished The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova and Waiting for Columbus Thomas Trofimuk. Started The Finkler Question over coffee this afternoon.
I was surprised how much I enjoyed The Historian. Do not usually like vampire stories. This was good writing. Maybe I am changing as I had fun reading Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Slayer last year.


message 25: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) I'm almot 1/4 of the way into Saving Ceecee Honeycutt and so far I really love this one.


message 26: by Alma (new)

Alma Katsu | 4 comments Ann wrote: "Vanessa, I hope you are recovering OK from your fall!

Linda - sorry to hijack this thread, but I sent you a msg thru Goodreads a few days ago. Did you see it? Please email me: ann@booksonthenights..."


Ann, looking forward to your review of The Last Werewolf. I've heard good things. It has the same pub date as The Taker, both are literary/supernatural--I'm hoping it will be a good thing!


message 27: by Amy (new)

Amy | 463 comments Tanya wrote: "Amy wrote: "I managed to finish, but was quite disappointed as well!"

You're talking about Russian Winter (by Daphne Kalotoy,) right?"



Yes sorry, took out too much of the quote.


message 28: by Efrat (new)

Efrat | 2 comments Right now I am waiting for a book I've ordered online, so in the meantime I am reading: The Help by Kathryn Stockett
And the book I am waiting for is: Burned Alive by Souad


message 29: by Chris (new)

Chris Stanley (christinelstanley) I have a seventeen year old daughter, who is following the "current trend" to read anything vampire, gothic or werewolf. I'm told that every one of these books cluttering up the house is a "must-read", therefore, I am asking you to advise me on whether there is any series worth checking out myself.
Huge thanks in anticipation


message 30: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments I finished Fangland: A Novel which is as ok-ish as the average Goodreads rating would lead you to believe. Kind of interested to see what John Carpenter does with it though.

I just started The Fever: How Malaria Has Ruled Humankind for 500,000 Years. I heard the author on Fresh Air and she was riveting.


message 31: by Nicole (new)

Nicole (pinkrain718) | 33 comments Chris wrote: "I have a seventeen year old daughter, who is following the "current trend" to read anything vampire, gothic or werewolf. I'm told that every one of these books cluttering up the house is a "must-re..."

The Mortal Instruments series is highly addicting. Cassandra Clare is a wonderful writer and all sorts of fantasy characters are included. The series starts with City of Bones (The Mortal Instruments, #1) by Cassandra Clare and so far it is a trilogy. Book 4 is set to be published in April of this year.

In addition to these series, there is a prequel called Clockwork Angel (The Infernal Devices, #1) by Cassandra Clare . I do recommend reading it after the first three Mortal Instruments books since that is the order of publication.


message 32: by [deleted user] (new)

I've just started The Double Bind by Chris Bohjalian which is my 2nd book in the BOTNS Reader Retreat Challenge.


message 33: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) I finished Saving Ceecee Honeycutt and loved it.

Currently I'm just getting started on City of Ashes (The Mortal Instruments, #2) by Cassandra Clare and so far its pretty good.


message 34: by Kate (new)

Kate | 270 comments Just finished Before You Know Kindness By Chris Bohjalian and am trying to continue The Finkler Question,but I'm not loving it. I may move onto something else either In the Woods or Saving Ceecee Honeycutt which are very different books.


message 35: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Kate wrote: "Just finished Before You Know Kindness By Chris Bohjalian and am trying to continue The Finkler Question,but I'm not loving it. I may move onto something else either [bo..."


I LOVED
[book:Saving Ceecee Honeycutt|6617928], would recommend that to be next.


message 36: by Kate (new)

Kate | 270 comments Thanks Flora! Saving Ceecee Honeycutt it is.


message 37: by Jay (last edited Feb 07, 2011 02:49PM) (new)

Jay Bullman I finished up Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption and there really isn't anything I can add that hasn't already been said. I attempted the first 70 pages of Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace... One School at a Timebut could not get into it so now I'm trying The Likeness It's not grabbing me right off the bat but I will give it a bit of time. The premise is interesting to me. I also read the last several trade paperbacks of Ex Machina which were okay but not nearly as good as this series originally promised to be.


message 38: by Camilla (new)

Camilla (camicami) I took a break from books after finishing Cormac McCarthy´s The Road, but now I´m back reading Kazuo Ishiguro´s The Remains of the Day. I will probably move on to something by Ray Bradbury after this.


message 39: by Flora (new)

Flora Smith (bookwormflo) Finished City of Ashes and thought it was much better than the first one. Looking forward to City of Glass, hopefully I can pick that up this weekend.

Getting started now on The Scarlet Letter


message 40: by Maggie (new)

Maggie | 24 comments I'm reading Never Let Me Go - I'm finding it a bit of a hard read right now but am determined to read it before I see the film.


message 41: by cazdoll (new)

cazdoll | 20 comments Scarpetta (Kay Scarpetta, #16) by Patricia Cornwell but I haven't had time to read it yet, new author to me too :) hope to start tomorrow


message 42: by Maggie (new)

Maggie | 24 comments Sorry but I really can't get into Never Let Me Go so will probably start something else - still want to see thefilm though. Life's too short and I've too many other books to be read!


message 43: by Kate (new)

Kate | 270 comments Quinn wrote: "I've been working on The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay for a few weeks now - I like it, it just hasn't really grabbed me.

I started The Corrections last week, and ..."


I am in the same boat as you are: I pick up and put downThe Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay. I like it but it is long and I want to read other things. The Corrections was the only book I have ever put down and never picked up again. Half way through I found the characters insufferable and did not care what happened to them. Then I had a big glass of wine and moved on!


message 44: by Becky (new)

Becky (beckymurr) | 557 comments Catherine wrote: "Scarpetta (Kay Scarpetta, #16) by Patricia Cornwell but I haven't had time to read it yet, new author to me too :) hope to start tomorrow"

I have not read this one but I may make a suggestion....I would find her 1st Scarpetta book & start with that one, there may very well be quite a bit of background story for this to be a stand alone book.

I believe the first one was Postmortem


message 45: by Alexia (new)

Alexia (crittersmom) | 29 comments Maggie wrote: "Sorry but I really can't get into Never Let Me Go so will probably start something else - still want to see thefilm though. Life's too short and I've too many other books to be read!"

While I didn't love this book I didn't hate it either. I won't say it was worth plodding through the book but the plot did pick up a little at the end. When I finished the book I felt the same way I did when I watched the series finale of Lost - many of my questions were answered but I was also left with more questions.


message 46: by Alexia (new)

Alexia (crittersmom) | 29 comments Last night I finished reading The Elegance of the Hedgehog and listening to Falling Free

I really, really loved Elegance of the Hedgehog, and the ending took my completely by surprise. I am not yet able to put into words what made this book so special to me but the feeling I got as I read this book is amazing.

Falling Free was a fine book, though not one of Bujold's better works. I happened to start listening to it as I was reading Never Let Me Go, which proved extremely interesting. Both dealt with the social implications of medical ethics but in completely different ways. Someday I may sit down and compare the two books more thoroughly.

Not sure whether to start Russian Winter or The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake. Any thoughts?


message 47: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa | 330 comments I'm still reading The Fever: How Malaria Has Ruled Humankind for 500,000 Years which is kind of slow going in the beginning-my eyes are crossed from reading about the number of Plasmodium mutations. I had to put it aside to start One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest for book club next week. I can already tell I should I had started it earlier. Reading something narrated by a paranoid schizophrenic requires some patience it seems.


message 48: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 09, 2011 09:20AM) (new)

Alexia wrote: "Not sure whether to start Russian Winter or The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake. Any thoughts? "

If you belong to any sort of book club whatsoever, I would wait on reading Russian Winter (by Daphne Kalotay) until they pick it (and they will!) Like The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (by Mary Ann Shaffer) and Water for Elephants (by Sara Gruen) it's pretty irresistible fare for book clubs.

Personally, I found the premise intriguing, but somehow disappointing in execution and I ended up DNF-ing it 270 pages in. I set it down one day and completely forgot about it :-/


message 49: by Alexia (new)

Alexia (crittersmom) | 29 comments Tanya wrote: "Alexia wrote: "Not sure whether to start Russian Winter or The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake. Any thoughts? "

If you belong to any sort of book club whatsoever, I would wait on reading [book:R..."


Thanks, Tanya. Unfortunately I'm not in a book club. So, that doesn't help me choose. :(


message 50: by Mis_Reading (new)

Mis_Reading (tenoko1) Hm. I need to read something new. Was recently completely disappointed with American Gods (Eric, I think you said you're a big fan, but maybe it just isn't meant for women to read). I also read The Sandman: The Dream Hunters, and liked it though it's very short. The illustrations are gorgeous, and I like the IDEA of the King of Dreams, I say idea because i hear Sandman would not be much to my liking.

Considering reading The Count of Monte Cristo, as I have been meaning to forever. What do you guys think?


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