Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, March 24, 2024?
( postimage.com is dead. A real pisser as I have hundreds of photos stored there.)
Reading The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride. There seems to be something magical about this book. I started reading it and didn't want to put it down. Not because of any mystery but just because it was such a pleasure to read. It starts in a dilapidated PA neighborhood where immigrant Jews and African Americans lived side by side and shared ambitions and sorrows. I have no connection to any of these things but the writing made me feel comfortably at home with them. Now I can't wait to get back to it. This book was one of Barack Obama's favorite books of 2023 and I can sure see why.
Listening to Before the Fall by Noah Hawley. I'm liking this, too. It's an intense tale of a small jet that crashes into the ocean and only 2 passengers survive. A painter and a little boy. The rest of the passengers were wealthy and well known so a major investigation ensues. Was it merely by dumb chance that so many influential people perished? Or was something far more sinister at work? Events soon threaten to spiral out of control in an escalating storm of media outrage and accusations. It gets pretty wild.
What books are you liking this week?
flying_wahini
(7,943 posts)You and I are reading kindred spirits!
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Aloha! AND I was just watching the video Wailua I Ke Awawa O Na Ali'i posted in the Hawaii forum. Beautiful.
cilla4progress
(25,676 posts)It's on MY nightstand - for right when I finish Song of Solomon, Toni Morrison!
I loved Song of Achilles!
I'm a slow reader.
k55f5r
(386 posts)japple
(10,280 posts)I'm about halfway thru Luis Alberto Urrea's, Into the Beautiful North
Here's a blurb from amazon:
Nineteen-year-old Nayeli works at a taco shop in her Mexican village and dreams about her father, who journeyed to the US to find work. Recently, it has dawned on her that he isn't the only man who has left town. In fact, there are almost no men in the village -- they've all gone north. While watching The Magnificent Seven, Nayeli decides to go north herself and recruit seven men -- her own "Siete Magnv?ficos" -- to repopulate her hometown and protect it from the bandidos who plan on taking it over.
This book has had me choking with laughter several nights in a row. Urrea's writing is clear and flows like water. His characters just jump right off the page. The only problem is that my high school Spanish is inadequate, so I know I'm missing out on more of the humor.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Urrea. I have another of his on my TBR list.
txwhitedove
(3,995 posts)finished I Was Anastasia by Ariel Lawhon. Great read on Romanovs, thought provoking, maddening and that anger was acknowledged by author.
Book 3 of Spencer Quinn's Chet & Bernie, To Fetch a Thief. Such a fun read always, and this one with a circus elephant!
Flags on the Bayou by James Lee Burke, new author for me. Wow. Wonderful characters and lyrical mayhem about a horrible time in our world, the Civil War.
Off to the library Monday for new books...
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Anastasia and read a wonderful book that sounds a lot like this one. But from a different century.
I'll have to check this one out.
Happy reading!
MadLinguist
(825 posts)by Miciah Johnson. It's her second book. the first one, "The Space Between Worlds" was just such a masterpiece that I got this one as soon as it came out. It's is the same setting as the first book, but now the reader sits on the shoulder someone bearing witness to an evolving uprising.
What's so great is the way she unpacks the history as understood by the community in revolt in relation to the narrative as countenanced by the those within the prestige community. Historiography within science fiction is an unexpected treat
hermetic
(8,593 posts)mentalsolstice
(4,505 posts)Im reading When the Jessamine Grows by Donna Everhart. I cant put it down! A blurb from Goodreads:
From one of the most powerful and authentic voices in Southern fiction comes a historical novel with an unforgettable heroinethe extraordinary Joetta McBride, who defiantly opens her North Carolina home and farm to soldiers from both sides during the Civil War.
Have a great week everyone!
cbabe
(4,085 posts)Short stories set between 2010-2018. Written on authors phone literally from the front lines.
BBC nonfiction book of the year, 2018. But most stories are fiction.
Authors travels by motorcycle.
Sneaking into Chernobyl area was understated scare.
Deep peasant farmer poverty. Systematic corruption. Fractured and fractious, divided by language and religion and culture almost village by village.
Amazing Zelenskyy has pulled them together.
Awkward translation. But beauty revealed after later reflection.
A necessary book.
https://www.npr.org/2022/04/08/1091769512/artem-chapeye-a-writer-fighting-in-ukrainian-army-on-his-love-story-for-his-coun
Grocery store book on my library hold list.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)And important.
RSherman
(576 posts)Beyond That, the Sea by Laura Spence-Ash
Just finished The Diamond Eye. Very good--I have come to find that I really enjoy historical fiction.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Is that The Diamond Eye by Kate Quinn? It's not unusual for there to be several books with the same title. The Quinn one is about a quiet librarian who becomes history's deadliest female sniper. Sounds quite fascinating.
RSherman
(576 posts)The female sniper character, her friendship with Eleanor Roosevelt, etc., was intriguing. Then someone let me know Woody Guthrie wrote a song about the sniper!
NanaCat
(2,332 posts)Just started a new release, Listen to the Lie by Amy Tintera. Two women leave a wedding reception in a small town in Texas. One of them is found murdered the next day. The other is found wandering down a highway with a head injury, and she can't remember a thing of the previous evening. So of course everyone--even her own parents--thinks she killed her friend, although the cops can't find any evidence of it. She's bullied so much that she moves to California. The book starts when she has to return to that dump of a hick town just as a notorious 'true crime' podcaster has reopened the cold case. I've already picked up several malicious lies in the hick accounts, but we'll see how it turns out. Predictable factor: She's gonna hook up with the podcaster. I already see it coming.
Clap When You Land by Elizabeth Acevedo. Verse novel about two girls who learn they're half-sisters only after their father dies. He kept them in the dark by having one family in the US, and another in the Dominican Republic. I've loved everything I've read by Ms Acevedo. I expect to love this book, too.
hermetic
(8,593 posts)Thanks!
yellowdogintexas
(22,648 posts)My reading has slowed down for some reason; I am enjoying this book, I can't seem to stay awake long enough to get very far !!