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What Are You Reading

T.E.W.Clough

New in Town
Messages
23
Location
Falmouth, Cornwall, England
Decided to read through a list of books made into films.
I've just finished 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' by Philip K. Dick (which became Blade Runner), now moving on to Elmore Leonards 'Hombre'(Paul Newman flick).

I've got quite a few to work through, but anyone else got any good suggestions? I'm open to pretty much anything...
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
About halfway thru a rereading of "The Dragon's Teeth," a 1939 Ellery Queen whodunit. This is one of the ones where I remember the solution from the first time around, and it's actually one of the less complicated puzzles in the Queen canon -- the clues stand out fairly strongly when you know what to look for. There's some nice character bits, though, and Ellery himself is far less of a self-important pince-nez-wearing prat than he was in the earlier books.

Next in the queue -- I'm looking forward to a reread of "Brinkley Manor," a 1934 Jeeves and Wooster novel by Wodehouse, well known for the unfortunate tragedy of poor Tuppy Glossop's introduction to beverages stronger than orange juice.
 

Caroline

One of the Regulars
Messages
244
Location
Hyde Park Mass, USA
AmateisGal said:
In a bit of a reading slump right now. Nothing I start completely captures my interest...

Me too! Right now I'm reading a Zombie anthology, and "Winning Low Limit Hold'em" by Lee Jones, which is genius. Now I truely understand what "giving them a free card" means if nothing else. Here's hoping the Fall will spark my interests in snottier works.
 

Starius

Practically Family
Messages
698
Location
Neverwhere, Iowa
Even though I'm in the middle of two or three different books which seem to have hit the back burner for awhile... last night I decided to take Neil Gaiman's Neverwhere off the book shelf and started to read that.

I watched the mini series years ago, but realized I never did read the book. And even though the mini series was a rather low budget production, it had such a perfect cast that my mental picture of these characters as I read the book closely follows them. (Or how I remember them)

Only this time, reading the book, I felt bad when the rat girl disappeared on the Knightsbridge. I don't recall feeling bad about that when watching the mini series...

Of course, the reason why I bring up the British tv miniseries at all is for the fact that Gaiman actually wrote that before writing the novel, in an unusual twist.
 

Lady Day

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
9,087
Location
Crummy town, USA
The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan.
A flushed out version of his engrossing New York Times essay 'Unhappy Meals'.

Im only 20 pages in, but there is a sentence in the intro that really rang true to me.
As a relatively new nation drawn from many different immigrant populations, each with its own culture of food, Americans have never had a single, strong, stable culinary tradition to guide us.

I hope to get through it this weekend :)

LD
 

Bertie Wooster

New in Town
Messages
38
Location
Truro, UK
Arthur & George by Julian Barnes, about Arthur Conan Doyle and The Great Wyrley Outrages in the early 1900s. Its encouraging me to re-read the Holmes cannon, which I've not done since Secondary school
 

Joie DeVive

One Too Many
Messages
1,308
Location
Colorado
I just finished: My Big Fat Supernatural Honeymoon (an amusing collection of romantic supernatural short stories) and Garage Sale America

I've just started: What Would Audrey Do?
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Going thru some 1940-41 issues of the Ladies Home Journal and enjoying very much a series called "How America Lives." Each month, LHJ profiles a different family, taken from a broad cross section of social and economic classes and presents a detailed, candid look at their daily lives -- analyzing the way they live at home, how they budget their money, how they spend their time, what they like and dislike about their lives, and even the clothes they wear. The series ran for a full year, and I can see where I'm going to need to go after the issues I'm missing -- it's a really fascinating window into the everyday culture of the times.

At this time, LHJ was the highest-circulation magazine in the world -- and it presented some excellent, serious journalism about the American family and how it fared as the nation straddled the line between the depression and the war. It was a far, far cry from a stereotypical household magazine, and copies are well worth seeking out for anyone seriously interested in the realities of the Golden Era.
 

splatt

One of the Regulars
Messages
261
Location
Melbourne, Australia
I just finished reading a great book written in 2002 by <a href="http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/04/04/1017206241887.html" target="_blank">Sarah Murgatroyd</a> called, "The Dig Tree".

It's probably one of the better books about the ill-fated 1860 Victorian Exploring Expedition who set out to cross Australia from South to North. It was later known as the Burke & Wills Expedition.

the_dig_tree.jpg


Completely by co-incidence, the day i finished reading it also happened to be 148th anniversary of the expedition leaving Melbourne on the 20th of August 1860 [huh]
 

Spiffy

A-List Customer
Messages
388
Location
Wilmington, NC
Franny and Zooey!
I love it, love it, love it. I literally got lost inside the story sitting in a sandwich shop waiting for parking on campus to open.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
LizzieMaine said:
Going thru some 1940-41 issues of the Ladies Home Journal and enjoying very much a series called "How America Lives." Each month, LHJ profiles a different family, taken from a broad cross section of social and economic classes and presents a detailed, candid look at their daily lives -- analyzing the way they live at home, how they budget their money, how they spend their time, what they like and dislike about their lives, and even the clothes they wear. The series ran for a full year, and I can see where I'm going to need to go after the issues I'm missing -- it's a really fascinating window into the everyday culture of the times.

At this time, LHJ was the highest-circulation magazine in the world -- and it presented some excellent, serious journalism about the American family and how it fared as the nation straddled the line between the depression and the war. It was a far, far cry from a stereotypical household magazine, and copies are well worth seeking out for anyone seriously interested in the realities of the Golden Era.

Lizzie, this series sounds fantastic! I would love to read it.

I think I'm going to see if there are any LHJ's on ebay...
 

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