Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading the week of March 18, 2012?
Girl on Fire by Suzanne Collins - Hunger Games book #22012 - book #47
northoftheborder
(7,611 posts)Laurian
(2,593 posts)A relationship novel that is pure escapism.
russspeakeasy
(6,539 posts)Please don't waste your money or time.
Little Star
(17,055 posts)Have you read all the other ones in that series? I haven't read this one yet but they had a free offering of the first 11 chapters for Kindle so I ordered that just because I could, lol.
russspeakeasy
(6,539 posts)IMHO, this one is pretty weak. I'd be interested in yur thoughts, if you read it.
matt819
(10,749 posts)I've liked the Harry Bosch series. The characters have developed over time, for better or worse, have moved along in their careers. Etc. But this one just seemed a bit stiff. Maybe it's the overall sense that Connelly may be trying to depict, that Harry himself is getting on, stiff, cranky, etc. But it struck me as forced.
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)I read great reviews. What didn't you like?
russspeakeasy
(6,539 posts)Way too many coincidences for me. And their outcomes were predictable....But thst's just me.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)about the last 3 novels . . .
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)Book # 13 in the series. Only one more after this.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)She'll probably have another one out this year or soon thereafter. And you can start the series all over again...
Since you read book books, look up James D. Doss and read about Charlie Moon. You have to read the first 3 books out of 16 before you really appreciate him.....(the first one isn't about him), and the titles have virtually nothing to do with the stories...
Try Colin Cotterill too, about Dr. Siri, a coroner in Laos...sounds terrible, but quite good actually...
Both are at:
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/index.html
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)I'll look at those.
matt819
(10,749 posts)Not Michael Connelly.
Also, still listening to The Stand. I'm not sure if it ever ends.
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)Been on a list to read (working my way through the Pulitzer winners) for some time. I love reading Toni but something always seems to come up, so I'm reading it this week. So far very powerful.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Starting this one today. It's the first in Crombe's 14-book series about Scotland Yard Supt. Duncan Kincaid and Sgt. Gemma James. Takes place in England
(We know all this from MaineDem already, I know)
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/C_Authors/Crombie_Deborah.html
Book 25
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Dr. Siri Paiboun, the 70-something national coroner, Nurse Dtui, and Geung, a developmentally challenged morgue assistant, in 1970s Laos. A lot of humor you would not expect with this topic.
This is book book 4 of 8 in the series so far.
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/C_Authors/Cotterill_Colin.html
Book 26 of 2012
bluescribbler
(2,270 posts)n/t
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Book 7 of the Agatha Raisin series.....
Book 27 of 2012
skippercollector
(212 posts)Go ahead and laugh if you want, but I just reread Richard Bach's Jonathan Livingston Seagull from 1970. I'd read it in junior high school in the 1970s, but remembered almost none of it. I had gotten a bunch of used books for Christmas last year that had been purchased at Half-Price Books, and this was one of them.
If you've never read it, it's the story of an outcast seagull who wants to soar in the heavens like an eagle rather than flap his wings with the flocks at the beach stealing food. Two angelic-type birds visit him and take him to what I guess is seagull heaven. Jonathan learns to soar and then returns to Earth to teach other outcast seagulls about flight and about reaching what sounds like Nirvana. There are grainy black-and-white photos of gulls in flight accompanying the story.
The story seems to be a combination of Jesus' Transfiguration and of Buddha obtaining enlightenment. It's a very simply written story, only 127 pages with large type and lots of photos. Almost too simple, I think. Completely ignoring the religious aspect of the novel, the characters--I guess you would call them that--seem to be rather stereotyped and I found Jonathan annoying and arrogant and self-centered at times.
The most interesting parts of the book were the technical aspects, the information about how seagulls actually fly, and then Jonathan's attempts at soaring and speeding miles overhead.