AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
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Just started "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah - only a few pages in, so no real opinion yet.
I'll be curious as to what you think of this one. I enjoyed it a lot.
Just started "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah - only a few pages in, so no real opinion yet.
I'll be curious as to what you think of this one. I enjoyed it a lot.
Currently reading At the Water's Edge by Sara Gruen (author of Water for Elephants, which I haven't read).
I dunno. I rather detest all of the main characters, and I keep hoping they will redeem themselves, but so far, nothing.
To enjoy a novel, I need someone to root for. I'm sure that's shallow, but I find books with all negative people that I dislike, eventually, fail to hold my interest.
Exactly. Which is why I'm not sure I'll keep reading this one...
P.S. Half way through "Nightingale" and a big fan of both Vianne and Isabell.
Sounds keen. I think this is one I will have to order!Make Me a Map of the Valley, being the journal of Jedediah Hotchkiss, topographical engineer under Stonewall Jackson.
The flaw for me in "The Great Gatsby" is that Daisy isn't worth it, isn't close to being worth it, isn't even interesting. I get the whole "poor boy loves the unattainable rich girl" thing, but then the poor boy grows up, goes to war, builds a shady business and, eventually, should get over a early dull crush.
"Like many Americans, I will never recover from my sparse childhood in Kansas. The blackness, weight, and terror of childhood in mid-America strike deep into the stem of life. Like desert flowers we learned to crouch near the earth, fearful that we would die before the rains, cunning, waiting the season of good growth. Those who survived without psychic mutilation have a life cunning, to keep the stem tight and spare, withholding the deep blossom. letting it sour rather than bloom and be blighted."