Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat are you reading the week of April 1, 2012?
Picture Perfect[/u ] by Jodi Picoult2012 - book #58
Turbineguy
(38,513 posts)Melissa G
(10,170 posts)by Robert Nathan.
Had a nostalgic hankering to re read it.
JitterbugPerfume
(18,183 posts)by Susan Jacoby, a re-reading.
I just finished Flow my Tears, the Policeman said by PK Dick
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)I LOVED Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (and BladeRunner--both for different reasons). Thought about adding Tears to my reading list. Would be a good lead-in read for me for the dystopian literature unit I teach in Brit Lit.
JitterbugPerfume
(18,183 posts)It is after the second civil war. The police state rules,and if you are caught without ID-----
Goblinmonger
(22,340 posts)It's a re-read, really. May toss in Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man if I get enough time to read this week. Just prepping for my 5th read of Ulysses this summer. It's been a few years. Plus I have a couple of my high school Brit Lit students that want to read it with me and I told them to read the two I'm reading this week as prep so I figure I should polish up on them for questions.
Also reading first three graphic novels of The Walking Dead but that's more pleasure reading.
dimbear
(6,271 posts)If you loved Sherlock Holmes, as I did, and are sorry that you've read all of his adventures, dip into this rival of Sherlock. Barr was actually a friend of Conan Doyle in spite of his literary larceny, and not a bad writer at all.
pscot
(21,041 posts)I read The Information over xmas, then his brief but useful biography of Isaac Newton. Gleick has a breezy style and can talk tech with out getting bogged down in math. I'm also plowing through Bernard Cornwell's oeuvre; the Sharp series and others. This is formulaic stuff, but he writes well and offers a ripping yarn with interesting characters. What can I say. It beats TV.
LearnedHand
(4,226 posts)Love Gleick's writing. Enjoy!
getting old in mke
(813 posts)which had, to my mind, an astonishingly high signal to noise ratio and entertainment value to boot. Though I am a math geek, I'm glad when an author doesn't have to appeal to that in a science writing situation. I'd say Simon Singh does well there, too.
Bernard Cornwell is such a natural storyteller, one of those authors who completely removes himself from the story. By that I mean his pacing and language and just the right degree of description seem to make the tale go from his brain to mine without stopping on the page in between.
mvccd1000
(1,534 posts)This is not a book from "The Cleaner" series; it's a standalone. I'm only about 1/4 of the way into it, but it started off with a bang and has Battles' usual fast-paced, easy-to-read, page-turning style. I'm enjoying it so far. Nice treat after a series of duds.
Moe Shinola
(143 posts)James Joyce's Ulysses. Wish me luck folks. I'm 3 chapters in and he's already starting to lose me(Goblinmonger, how many times before it revealed itself to you?). I'd include the insurance industry exam textbook and the music theory books I just got but they are homework.
dimbear
(6,271 posts)Last edited Thu Apr 5, 2012, 03:18 AM - Edit history (1)
James' adventure into the detective story genre. Or misadventure. Good writer, not quite aware of how detective stories work. (Made one think of that other remarkable book "The Red House." Milne, of all people, wrote a detective story which was a big seller in its day and is surely one of the most outlandish plots ever hatched.)
Some writers have gone very successfully from the genres to the mainstream or back. Not many. They're two different worlds.
Rex Stout was a good example. Zane Grey was humdinger example.
edit to remember a title right---oops
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)Mitch Berger, a New York film critic, and Desiree Des Mitry, a black police detective, in Dorset, Connecticut...
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/H_Authors/Handler_David.html
2012, Book 30
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)Book #5 in the Three Pines Series.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)YankeyMCC
(8,401 posts)MrCoffee
(24,159 posts)His first novel since 1998, and so far it's everything I'd hoped it would be.
Zoigal
(1,488 posts)Despite the title, the book is quite interesting. Features every day
life for all classes of folks......z