Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, December 31, 2023?
Goodbye, adios, adieu, sayonara 2023
So long, and thanks for all the books
Reading With No One As Witness by Elizabeth George.
"The police never suspected a serial killer was at large until they found the fourth murdered boy--the first white victim--his body draped over a tomb in a London graveyard. Suddenly a series of crimes and a potential public relations disaster have Scotland Yard on the defensive, scrambling to apprehend a maniac while avoiding accusations of racism." Good story. At 630 pages this will see me well on the way into 2024.
I just read Sleeping Beauties Part 1 of the graphic novel. This is certainly an intriguing tale, and pretty gruesome. The art work is odd at times but adds to the story's weirdness. The pictures of animals, though, can be quite stunning. I'm glad I decided to read this instead of King's 720-page novel.
Listening to The Last Devil to Die By Richard Osman, #4 in the Thursday Murder Club series.
"It's rarely a quiet day for the Thursday Murder Club. Shocking news reaches them -- an old friend has been killed, and a dangerous package he was protecting has gone missing."
What books will you be reading on your trek into 2024?
Happy New Year!! Stay safe out there.
niyad
(119,931 posts)and her friend Tabitha Knight solve several brutal murders. .one of which was done by one of Julia's own knives! A wonderful look at post-war Paris, and Julia before she became the French Chef.
The cover of the book is basically the same as Julia's landmark book.
Enchanting
Cambridge captures Child's distinct voice and energy so perfectly. Expect to leave this vacation hoping for a return trip. �"Publishers Weekly
albacore
(2,599 posts)a very long waiting list for the Connelly book.
cbabe
(4,163 posts)I found it thin and predictable. As if publishers were hurrying the book into print. Couldve used a few more draft rewrites.
A let down from The Lincoln Lawyer.
Easterncedar
(3,524 posts)Eric Gansworth, native author from Niagara Falls. Brilliant
hermetic
(8,622 posts)A literary tour-de-force sure to turn the coming-of-age genre on its head.
Lots of awards and 5-star reviews for several of his books.
Easterncedar
(3,524 posts)Its a great place. The owner. Jeff, will find and ship your books if you cant visit in person. The store is enormous. Lots of used books as well as new. Jeff introduced me to Gansworths writing. Hes quietly a force for good in the world.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Last year. I don't read much YA, but that one stood out for how well he develops his characters and the world they live in. I could 'see' everyone and where they were, quite clearly.
Easterncedar
(3,524 posts)How did you happen by it?
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)For a Native American YA book. The title got my attention because it made the John Lennon song spring into my head, instantly. Had to read it, then, LOL.
rsdsharp
(10,121 posts)Hunter is the former Pulitzer Prize winning film critic for the Washington Post. Although he has written some freestanding novels, most of his novels involve the Swaggers.
His best known character is Bob Lee Swagger, a former US Marine sniper in Vietnam. Other members of the family are his father Earl, an ex-marine who won the Medal of Honor on Iwo Jima, and spent the last ten years of his life as a highway patrolman in Arkansas, and his grandfather Charles, a sheriff in Arkansas. A couple of books revolve around Ray Cruz, Bob Lees son.
Time to Hunt is the third Bob Lee Swagger novel, and is largely the origin story of Bob the Nailer. Next month Front Sight will be released a collection of three novellas; one for each of the Swaggers.
hermetic
(8,622 posts)I found 28. Popular.
viva la
(3,775 posts)I'm really just reading it to fill in my education. Not super-enjoying him.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Everything is so bloody dreary with him, plus he's super-heavy on description, and light on the number of words he'll devote to plot.
When a professor said he was considering a Hardy book for a British lit class I took, I told him not to bother, I could sum up every Hardy book in less than 50 words. He laughed and told me to back that up.
'Some rural people meet, don't act like proper Victorians, fate yanks them around, and everyone ends up miserable or dead at the end--while buried amongst 250,000 words of description and about 5000 of plot.'
And that is essentially every Hardy book ever written, in a nutshell.
viva la
(3,775 posts)Trollope's mother was a powerful person (a best-selling author herself!), and I wonder if that's why he has so many women characters who are strong and also interesting (not just victims!).
So far Hardy seems sympathetic to his women characters while he as you say, yanks them around and kicks them.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Because he married one--a genuine suffragist, even though the marriage was not a happy one. After she died, he blamed himself for how unhappy he made her, even though she was often cruel to him about how she felt that she had married beneath her station--which she said aloud to anyone who cared to hear. And yet he still felt so much remorse that it resulted in some of his most memorable poetry.
But all of Hardy's life was on the difficult side. Despite being quite intelligent, he came from a family of limited means, so his education would be equally limited. Like the protagonist in Jude the Obscure, he worked on architecture projects, not writing, after leaving school. Some of his unhappiness with that found its way into the novel. And then his infelicitous marriage provided the bulk of material for his later work, both in novels, but especially his poetry.
I've always considered Hardy a better poet than novelist, because the strictures of poetry reined in his tendency in longer works to get carried away. A good deal of his poetry is sad, even heartbreaking, but nearly all of it is quite insightful and beautifully phrased.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)Hardy couldn't catch a break.
viva la
(3,775 posts)He really couldn't catch a break!
COL Mustard
(6,888 posts)hermetic
(8,622 posts)But for that one I would make an exception.
cbabe
(4,163 posts)Super book. Dense. Plot, characters, prose. One of her best.
Reread Stanford/Dark Angel, a Letty Davenport novel.
Enjoyed small details and nuances second time around. Letty not as annoying but still two dimensional unlike say Virgil or even Frankie.
A good evenings entertainment.
mentalsolstice
(4,512 posts)Ive had a busy reading week. Its just my husband and I, so our holidays are quiet
.football games and books.
This week I finished The Midwife of Auschwitz by Anna Stuart. I had no idea so many babies were born in the camps! It was a sad, horrifying and joyful book all in one.
Next up was Maame by Jessica George. A pretty good debut novel about coming of age.
Now Im reading Absolution by Alice McDermott. Ill read or watch anything about Vietnam that I can get my hands on.
Happy New Year to all and wishing yall good reading in 2024!
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)Normally I get through one of these in a couple of days, but baking and Christmas movies have cut into my reading time.
I am having an early New Year's Eve dinner with some friends, so may finish it up tonight. I will definitely be home before 9 since our restaurant will close at 9.
Tomorrow I will set up my reading challenge with Goodreads.
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)I just realized I have the first of these on my TBR list. Had a summer prompt for 'Indian author' and that seemed like a departure from the usual type of book about India. Plenty of brilliant writers and great books about it, but most tend to be on the heavy side. Summer isn't really the time for that, so a mystery seemed like just the thing to tick the box.
japple
(10,326 posts)thread for us.
I'm still reading Paulette Jiles's latest, Chenneville and it is proving to be one of her best, I think. What an adventure!
mentalsolstice
(4,512 posts)Japple, you always have great recommendations! And like you, I clap on Sundays when hermetic asks what were reading!
ExWhoDoesntCare
(4,741 posts)The book that has been on my TBR pile the longest: The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins. Victorian novels and I don't tend to mix well, so I expect it to be a long grind. That's why I'll read a bit of it day-to-day and at the same time tackle other books on my TBR list:
I set a goal for myself this year to read all 30+ Roderick Alleyn books by Ngaio Marsh. The first is A Man Lay Dead. My mum was a huge fan of the Marsh books, so we'll have something to talk about rather than what a disappointment I've been to her. That'll be a refreshing change.
My other series to read is the Lord Peter Wimsey series by Dorothy Sayers. The first is the novella Whose Body? I watched the BBC versions of the series ages ago, and can't wait to see how the novels compare.
Both of those books are fairly short, so I should be able to get to the latest Pentecost and Parker mystery, Murder Crosses Her Mind, by Stephen Spotswood. I have an online event to attend with the author next week. I'm hoping I'll extract enough from reading the book to ask something intelligent at the event.
If I have time, I"ll get to Paul Yoon's Run Me to Earth. This is my diversity literary fic pick of the week, a saga about three orphaned children who get separated after being motorcycle couriers during the civil war in Laos.