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hermetic

(8,663 posts)
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 10:09 AM Sep 2024

What Fiction are you reading this week, September 15, 2024?




I'm reading Happiness Falls by Angie Kim: a mystery, a family drama, and a novel of profound philosophical inquiry. Great writing. She really puts you inside the story.

Listening to Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka. "A chilling portrait of womanhood as it simultaneously unravels the familiar narrative of the American serial killer." Lots of harrowing incidents, at the beginning anyway. Just started it.

What books are you chilling out with this week?

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What Fiction are you reading this week, September 15, 2024? (Original Post) hermetic Sep 2024 OP
Starting on "The Truths We Hold" by Kamala Harris Diamond_Dog Sep 2024 #1
Cool hermetic Sep 2024 #3
Ekam The One Arne Sep 2024 #2
Who's the writer? LearnedHand Sep 2024 #19
My friend wrote this just now and offered it on Kindle. Arne Sep 2024 #20
Thanks! LearnedHand Sep 2024 #22
The New York Times and the Washington Post! Lonestarblue Sep 2024 #4
I'm almost done with The Pagan Lord, the seventh book in Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Tales series. rsdsharp Sep 2024 #5
Murder in Tuscany by T.A. Williams The King of Prussia Sep 2024 #6
Excellent hermetic Sep 2024 #8
Little library finds: cbabe Sep 2024 #7
Must read hermetic Sep 2024 #9
Thanks for adding the most important point I left out: Bosch as suspect. cbabe Sep 2024 #10
I just posted in the Writing Group hermetic Sep 2024 #11
Thank you for the weekly thread, hermetic! Still reading Attica Locke's 1st in japple Sep 2024 #12
I see the 3rd hermetic Sep 2024 #13
I just finished Missionary Stew by Ross Thomas pscot Sep 2024 #14
Caught my interest hermetic Sep 2024 #15
I'm a bit old pscot Sep 2024 #16
Me, too hermetic Sep 2024 #17
In my teens pscot Sep 2024 #18
"I Was a Teenage Slasher," by Stephen Graham Jones LearnedHand Sep 2024 #21

Diamond_Dog

(35,159 posts)
1. Starting on "The Truths We Hold" by Kamala Harris
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 10:11 AM
Sep 2024

Not exactly fiction, but I am enjoying it nonetheless!

hermetic

(8,663 posts)
3. Cool
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 10:20 AM
Sep 2024

I didn't know she had written a book. But I'm certainly not surprised. 2019. Sounds great.

Arne

(3,608 posts)
2. Ekam The One
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 10:17 AM
Sep 2024

Starts with time travel, becomes epic futuristic tale
exposing climate change and AI struggles.
This writing is up there with the masters of science fiction.
It's 580 pages but I devoured it nonstop.

Arne

(3,608 posts)
20. My friend wrote this just now and offered it on Kindle.
Sun Sep 22, 2024, 09:13 AM
Sep 2024

He is John S. Ryan.
I may be biased but I flew thru 589 pages nonstop.
There are some typos that you may ignore and I told him he
needs a second print for corrections.

rsdsharp

(10,287 posts)
5. I'm almost done with The Pagan Lord, the seventh book in Bernard Cornwell's Saxon Tales series.
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 11:59 AM
Sep 2024

Only six more to go!

cbabe

(4,308 posts)
7. Little library finds:
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 01:22 PM
Sep 2024

Dead Watch/John Sandford

Stand alone. Politics and murder. Twisted and tangled plot.

Not one of his best but ok read.

A Darkness More Than Night/Michael Connelly

Bosch is second to McCaleb. They’re adversaries trying to stop a serial killer and another bizarre killing staged like a Bosch painting.

Interesting to see Bosch through another’s eyes.

cbabe

(4,308 posts)
10. Thanks for adding the most important point I left out: Bosch as suspect.
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 02:05 PM
Sep 2024

Off to big library to pick up new Craig Johnson ‘First Frost’.

hermetic

(8,663 posts)
11. I just posted in the Writing Group
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 02:07 PM
Sep 2024

an interview with Michael Connelly, Laurie King and Walter Mosley. It's quite interesting and rather funny. Especially Mosley.

japple

(10,388 posts)
12. Thank you for the weekly thread, hermetic! Still reading Attica Locke's 1st in
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 02:23 PM
Sep 2024

the Hwy 59 series, Bluebird, Bluebird and boy howdy this woman can write!

hermetic

(8,663 posts)
13. I see the 3rd
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 02:40 PM
Sep 2024

and final one in the series has just been released. Rave reviews. Sounds like a great series to invest one's time in.

pscot

(21,040 posts)
14. I just finished Missionary Stew by Ross Thomas
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 04:02 PM
Sep 2024

Ah, Treachery is next. Thomas wrote Political thrillers in the mold of Eric Ambler and Graham Greene. He had a wonderfully engaging style and a light touch, cynical and slyly humorous. He created a cast of memorable characters from an African dictator with unspeakable tastes to a Romanian dwarf who women found irresistable and while violence sometimes threatens, his heroes tend to be urbane, 40ish, slightly jaded operatives rather than pistol packing tough guys. Settings range from 1940s Europe to '80s LA. His books have been out of print for a while but they've being re-issued by St Martin's in a nicely done trade paperback edition. Highly recommended if you think you may have run out of things to read.

hermetic

(8,663 posts)
15. Caught my interest
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 05:01 PM
Sep 2024

Sounds great, albeit a bit old. Originally 1983. Put it on my list, though. Thanks, pal.

pscot

(21,040 posts)
16. I'm a bit old
Sun Sep 15, 2024, 06:55 PM
Sep 2024

More than a bit, actually. These are a little dated but Thomas was a first rate writer and they hold up quite well. But I remember Harry Truman and $0.25 a gallon gasoline so they don't seem as anomolously historical as they might to a child of Gen-Z.

hermetic

(8,663 posts)
17. Me, too
Mon Sep 16, 2024, 12:15 PM
Sep 2024

I don't remember Truman but I do recall one time I was going out with friends before I was old enough to drive. The car was running low on gas. So all four of us managed to scrounge $1.00 in change from purses and pockets and got 4 gallons of gas. We were then able to cruise around all night. Which is what we used to do for fun.

pscot

(21,040 posts)
18. In my teens
Wed Sep 18, 2024, 11:57 AM
Sep 2024

driving around aimlessly for hours at time was a major form of recreation. The Sunday drive; fun for the whole family. Then the '70s came along.

I used to think that i was cool
runnin 'round on fossile fuel
But now I see what I was doin'
Was drivin' down the road to ruin



LearnedHand

(4,221 posts)
21. "I Was a Teenage Slasher," by Stephen Graham Jones
Sun Sep 22, 2024, 09:14 AM
Sep 2024

It's a clever premise: An infection causes a person to become a slasher, which in this novel is a dark superhero archetype. Also, there are rules and roles for slashers and victims, as "documented" in every slasher film ever. Jones is a gifted, lyrical writer and shapes his novels around or to include Native American themes and tropes (he is Native American). This book is heavy on the lyrical and slasher-film absurd on the relatively light violence.

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