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hermetic

(8,636 posts)
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 10:29 AM Jun 2024

What Fiction are you reading this week, June 2, 2024



I just got Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver. "Many generations ago, Charles Dickens wrote David Copperfield from his experience as a survivor of institutional poverty and its damages to children in his society. Those problems have yet to be solved in ours. Dickens is not a prerequisite for readers of this novel, but he provided its inspiration."

Listening to Last Bus to Wisdom by Ivan Doig, the final novel from a great American storyteller. "Charming, wise, and slyly funny, this is a last sweet gift from a writer whose books have bestowed untold pleasure on countless readers." I'm loving it.

My internet was cut off for the past 2 days. So, I've got a lot to catch up on today. Thought I'd have to go to Mickey D's this morning for their wifi. Brutal experience, I tell ya.

What's your story this week?

42 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What Fiction are you reading this week, June 2, 2024 (Original Post) hermetic Jun 2024 OP
I've just been reading some British police things. Waiting for the next Jodi Taylor Time Police book on the 6th. Srkdqltr Jun 2024 #1
I read that, too hermetic Jun 2024 #2
The Gentleman in Moscow series NanaCat Jun 2024 #35
A Gentleman in Moscow is a good book. murielm99 Jun 2024 #3
Story this week was more lightning, rain, power blips and 6-hr power outage due to wind damage. txwhitedove Jun 2024 #4
Elliot's book sounds really good hermetic Jun 2024 #5
Our library is a ransomeware attack victim. Libraries cbabe Jun 2024 #6
OMG! How awful hermetic Jun 2024 #9
Sorry to tell you but cbabe Jun 2024 #11
Toronto's library site got attacked last fall NanaCat Jun 2024 #41
Last night, I dreamt I went to Manderley again NanaCat Jun 2024 #7
Glad you survived hermetic Jun 2024 #16
Books of 883 pages NanaCat Jun 2024 #27
Jonathan Kellerman "Killer" an Alex Delaware novel. brer cat Jun 2024 #8
a great series, with wonderful characters.... bahboo Jun 2024 #10
Yeah, hermetic Jun 2024 #17
Reading several at once Stardust Mirror Jun 2024 #12
Wow hermetic Jun 2024 #15
if you don't know them you need to check out: Stardust Mirror Jun 2024 #18
I've read all hermetic Jun 2024 #19
Westlake is cataloged as Mystery but Stardust Mirror Jun 2024 #20
One of my favourite book titles is by Westlake NanaCat Jun 2024 #42
Love Pratchett and Hiaasen. I just picked up "Wrecker" one of his YA but not really novels yellowdogintexas Jun 2024 #21
Good Omens was my gateway to Pratchett Stardust Mirror Jun 2024 #23
I think there is supposed to be a 3rd season of Good Omens. I hope so yellowdogintexas Jun 2024 #37
I may be in the minority of people who NanaCat Jun 2024 #29
thanks for the heads up Stardust Mirror Jun 2024 #31
I may be the only English major in the US who managed to avoid reading Moby DIck yellowdogintexas Jun 2024 #38
Bartleby is one of his best works NanaCat Jun 2024 #40
Just started a series by a fellow DUer. Birth of the Black Orchids by M. R. Dimond EverHopeful Jun 2024 #13
Oh Fun! hermetic Jun 2024 #14
I'm about 1/3 of the way into Lief Enger's latest (which you recently read) japple Jun 2024 #22
You are most welcome. hermetic Jun 2024 #24
Thanks for the spoiler hint. I will approach the book tonight with new awareness. It explains japple Jun 2024 #25
I didn't want to spoil that detail for you NanaCat Jun 2024 #30
"Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang" by Kate Wilhelm Jeebo Jun 2024 #26
Nice find hermetic Jun 2024 #28
Looks like I need to put this one on my TBR list, which I need to re-name "bucket list." japple Jun 2024 #39
In the middle of a weird one Jilly_in_VA Jun 2024 #32
The Lincoln Highway wendyb-NC Jun 2024 #33
Seems like everything by Towles is exceptional NanaCat Jun 2024 #34
Gentleman In Moscow is a wonderful, I'll even say epic read wendyb-NC Jun 2024 #36

Srkdqltr

(7,688 posts)
1. I've just been reading some British police things. Waiting for the next Jodi Taylor Time Police book on the 6th.
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 10:42 AM
Jun 2024

I read A Gentleman In Moscow a while ago about a man sentenced to live the rest of his life in a hotel in Moscow. It was sad but he made the best of it. Well there is a TV series about it. I watched part of the first episode. It looks beautiful but I couldn't watch it all for the deliberate abuse the government heeped on him.
I may try later episodes as some of the story in his later years was easier to read.
The book was really good. Somehow watching it acted made it more real.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
2. I read that, too
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 10:54 AM
Jun 2024

Quite enjoyed it. Is it on Brit Box or BBC? Does it have a different title? I'd like to see it some day.

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
35. The Gentleman in Moscow series
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:46 PM
Jun 2024

Is on Showtime in the US, and Paramount+ for streaming and international viewing. Amazon has a 7 day free trial to watch all 8 episodes of the series, if you're not averse to binging.

txwhitedove

(4,013 posts)
4. Story this week was more lightning, rain, power blips and 6-hr power outage due to wind damage.
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:08 AM
Jun 2024

Grateful for eBooks on tablet when power out. Just finished The Last Sister, book 1 in Columbia River series by Kendra Elliot. Great atmosphere, characters and story made this a page turner for me. "Emily, Tara and Madison thought they had an idyllic childhood in Bartonville, Ore., until their house burned down and their father's body was found hanging in the backyard... The past is eerily repeated 20 years later...."

Also read Ursula LeGuin's The Word for World is Forrest, a classic.

Lost count, but another Chet and Bernie myster, Paw and Order. Then a stand alone also by Spencer Quinn, The Right Side, more serious and totally wonderful story.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
5. Elliot's book sounds really good
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:24 AM
Jun 2024

Three sisters' secrets collide in a shocking novel of suspense.

And, The Right Side: Enthralling, suspenseful, and psychologically nuanced, it introduces one of the most unforgettable protagonists in modern fiction: isolated, broken, disillusioned -- yet still seeking redemption and purpose -- LeAnne takes hold of you and never lets go.

Thanks!

cbabe

(4,199 posts)
6. Our library is a ransomeware attack victim. Libraries
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:36 AM
Jun 2024

don’t have piles of cash so don’t know what the criminals hope to accomplish.

Shut down two weeks and counting.

Back to my home shelves and Dick Francis comfort reading.

I had the good fortune to hear Ursula le Guin speak. Amazing.
Otherworldly. Just herself and nobody else. Clear. Smart. Did I mention she’s a hero of mine?

Recommend ‘Earthsea Trilogy’. YA but not really.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
9. OMG! How awful
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:44 AM
Jun 2024

Hope they catch the bastards.

Yeah, I love Ursula, too. Would love to see her sometime.

cbabe

(4,199 posts)
11. Sorry to tell you but
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:50 AM
Jun 2024
https://www.ursulakleguin.com › biography

Ursula K. Le Guin — Biography

Ursula Kroeber Le Guin (1929-2018) was a celebrated author whose body of work includes 23 novels, 12 volumes of short

(maybe find some taped interviews?)
 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
41. Toronto's library site got attacked last fall
Fri Jun 7, 2024, 04:48 AM
Jun 2024

It must have been a bad one, because they're still trying to clean up that mess, all these months later.

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
7. Last night, I dreamt I went to Manderley again
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:40 AM
Jun 2024

Last edited Wed Jun 12, 2024, 06:19 AM - Edit history (1)

Daphne du Maurier – Rebecca
Do I really need to spell out the plot for this renowned classic that of course became the inspiration for the Hitchcock film? It’s on literally every list for greatest mystery novel, either at the top or very close to it. Also has one of the most famous opening lines of all time, the title I used for this post. I’ve watched the film dozens of times, but I’d never gotten around to reading the book. Very much looking forward to this one.

Richard Flanagan – The Narrow Road to the Deep North
The title comes from a volume of haiku by the legendary Japanese poet, Bashou Matsuo. The poems center around Bashou traveling away from the material world, in pursuit of spiritual enlightenment. Flanagan’s work is about the experiences of an Australian POW in a Japanese camp. I’m curious how the twain shall meet. Booker Prize winner.

I had planned to read Demon Copperhead next year, but so many keep talking about it that I might move it ahead to this year, if I can squeeze it in. But maybe I'll save it after all, and pair it with a re-read of David Copperfield, something I haven't read since a dreary primary school winter when I was so ill that I couldn't attend classes from the winter holiday break until sometime around Easter. When I wasn't in hospital getting tested yet again to find out what was wrong with me, I was reading or working ahead with maths. I've blotted out so much of that in the intervening years to the point that most of that time is a generic haze now. But that's what one does with a traumatic experience, I suppose. Anyway, I only remember the Dickens because the book was like lead in my lap, and sometimes bruised my legs from digging in from its weight.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
16. Glad you survived
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 01:45 PM
Jun 2024

Sounds awful. The Demon story is a tale of survival. And talk about heavy: I got the large print edition and it's 883 pages. I have to keep it propped up on a pillow. Only 500+ for the normal size.

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
27. Books of 883 pages
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 05:42 PM
Jun 2024

Is why I'm now a fan of ebooks and digital audiobooks. I can carry a whole library of door stoppers, and they never weigh more than my Kindle. I also like how I can adjust the font to what suits my needs. And then the white on black... No more eye strain for me!

bahboo

(16,953 posts)
10. a great series, with wonderful characters....
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:46 AM
Jun 2024

love Milo Sturgis. Just finished the latest one, Ghost Orchid...

Stardust Mirror

(611 posts)
12. Reading several at once
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 11:54 AM
Jun 2024

"The Occasionally Disgusting Adventures of Brian and Sprig" by Myriad Sprite
Loving this book. I would describe the humor as exuberant and surprising. I am hoping this author has other books. I would rush thru this book (45% done) but I don't want it to be over.

"Burr: A Novel" by Gore Vidal. Finding this much easier to get into then the later books in his series, which I plan to revisit after finishing this one.

"Blood Meridian" by Cormac McCarthy. People keep putting this in their lists of the greatest American novels. The violence and bloodshed is not so shocking as I expected it to be, probably because I've read so much history of what Europeans did in North, Central and South America since their invasions. Some of the prose seems hallucinogenic to me and he definitely makes up words (on my Kindle I can underline the word but dictionary.com and wikipedia return no results). This book offers nothing to me, except perhaps a lesson that writers need not be limited to real words or coherent descriptions, ie., that impressions are enough. To someone unfamiliar with American history it might have an impact. I'm halfway thru it and don't plan to finish any time soon.

"Moby Dick" by Herman Melville. My third attempt to read what is often hailed as one of the greatest pieces of American literature, I am not finding it hard going at all, like in my previous attempts. Having fun discovering his sly humor. 14% of the way in so far.

"Ask The Dust" by John Frante. Writers, and Amazon, hold this novel in high regard ("is a virtuoso performance by an influential master of the twentieth-century American novel&quot . I can see why writers like it, he has an interesting, direct, plain-spoken writing style. We'll see if the subject matter ends up engaging my interest. So far (8% in ), no.

"American Psycho" by Bret Easton Ellis. Another novel claimed to be among the greatest. I'm gonna have to give it more time, only %5 in so far, but at this point all it is is a constant stream of designer name brand name dropping. I'm hoping there is more to this novel so I'll persist.

"You Dreamed Of Empires" by Alvaro Enrique. I am enjoying this book so far, although the prevalence of Aztec (?) names has made it a little hard to keep track. Reviewers have much praise for this book, most of which I join.

"The Judge Hunter" by Christopher Buckley. I absolutely love all his books. How such a politically insightful author could be the offspring of the thoroughly repulsive William F. Buckley, Jr. is beyond me. This book takes place in colonial America. If you haven't read any of his books, "Thank You For Smoking" is even better that the movie is was made into, and "Florence Of Arabia" is great fun, but you can't go wrong with any of his books.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
15. Wow
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 01:38 PM
Jun 2024

Thanks for all that info. Some new things to look for. I really liked Thank You For Smoking. Quite funny.

Stardust Mirror

(611 posts)
18. if you don't know them you need to check out:
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 01:51 PM
Jun 2024

I'm serious, read all of Christopher Buckley's books if you like to laugh.
Donald E. Westlake so funny love his books most of all comedic writers I've ever found (sorry Voltaire not to worry you're an also-ran)
Terry Pratchett series of books known as Discworld series. Cataloged as science fictions but of course he's talking about us humans.
Carl Hiaasen, again, all his books. "Razor Girl" might be a good jump start

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
19. I've read all
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 02:03 PM
Jun 2024

Pratchett and Hiaasen. Great reading. Will be looking for more of the other two. I'm a mystery and thriller fan but must have a good laugh out loud every month.

Stardust Mirror

(611 posts)
20. Westlake is cataloged as Mystery but
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 02:23 PM
Jun 2024

it's the funniest writing I've ever found
he has a character named Dortmunder, a very pessimistic fellow for whom everything goes wrong, then gets worse from there. Don't worry, that's not a spoiler.

He was very successful in his writing career starting in the 1950s and several of his books were made into movies with mainstream actors (please don't judge Westlake by those movies, they're OK but not nearly as good as his books). Though seeing financial success he continued to write about a book a year for decades to come. I would get kinda pissed when I finished a new book of his because that meant I had to wait a whole year for another one! And then when he died I was really upset there would be no more.

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
42. One of my favourite book titles is by Westlake
Fri Jun 7, 2024, 04:58 AM
Jun 2024

Somebody Owes Me Money

You just know that the book will be crazy, from that title alone.

I read his God Save the Mark...last year? I think it was last year. The protagonist is the most gullible person ever. Then he inherits a fortune. Every creepazoid in NYC is now gunning for him. It's all nuts from there.

yellowdogintexas

(22,753 posts)
21. Love Pratchett and Hiaasen. I just picked up "Wrecker" one of his YA but not really novels
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 03:46 PM
Jun 2024

It is going to be good.

I am jumping back and forth between two books:
Still working with The One Hundred Years of Ellie and Margot - it's not that I don't like it I just haven't been reading much.
My other read is an Ebook version of "Neverwhere" by Neil Gaiman. This is my reading in bed book; I am really enjoying it. Side note: I read somewhere that the second season of "Sandman" is going to drop soon.

Published in 1997, Neil Gaiman’s darkly hypnotic first novel, Neverwhere, heralded the arrival of a major talent and became a touchstone of urban fantasy.

It is the story of Richard Mayhew, a young London businessman with a good heart and an ordinary life, which is changed forever when he discovers a girl bleeding on the sidewalk. He stops to help her—an act of kindness that plunges him into a world he never dreamed existed. Slipping through the cracks of reality, Richard lands in Neverwhere—a London of shadows and darkness, monsters and saints, murderers and angels that exists entirely in a subterranean labyrinth. Neverwhere is home to Door, the mysterious girl Richard helped in the London Above. Here in Neverwhere, Door is a powerful noblewoman who has vowed to find the evil agent of her family’s slaughter and thwart the destruction of this strange underworld kingdom. If Richard is ever to return to his former life and home, he must join Lady Door’s quest to save her world—and may well die trying.

I was reading some of the reviews on Goodreads and one reader said she was going to have to read it twice because she kept stopping to chastise herself for not reading Gaiman before!!! "Why did no one ever tell me about this author!!!? "

Stardust Mirror

(611 posts)
23. Good Omens was my gateway to Pratchett
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 03:58 PM
Jun 2024

Just happened to notice it on the end row display in a bookstore one day.

I'm now enjoying Season 2 of Good Omens on Amazon.

Gaiman and Pratchett seem very different to me, although obviously they got along.

yellowdogintexas

(22,753 posts)
37. I think there is supposed to be a 3rd season of Good Omens. I hope so
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 10:50 PM
Jun 2024

I have not read all of Sir Terry's books but have read enough to be a good fan. Mr YD has read them all more than once. He just finished a marathon binge read of our entire collection.

As for Gaiman, I have enjoyed every one of his books

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
29. I may be in the minority of people who
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:00 PM
Jun 2024

Don't like Moby Dick. The first 14% is quite good. After that, Melville makes a fatal mistake: He spends too much time telling not showing, and it takes the reader away from the rich characterizations, and the theme of the book itself.

The fix would have been easy enough: Melville needed to fold all of the data about whales and ships into Ishmael's training as a newcomer to whaling. Show him getting first hand experience with the different kinds of ropes and their purposes, rather than telling us about it. Complete amateur hour mistake.

That's why I found it a dreary and annoying read, because it not only feels like the most boring non-fiction book ever, but also because much of the so-called science is flat-out wrong. I'm not even a marine biologist, and I knew a bunch of what he was claiming as fact was utter tosh.

I was mad when I finally finished it--from the long hours of drudge reading that laid waste to a fantastic story of obsession gone mad and the unlikely but lovely (and near-homoerotic) friendship with Queequeg. Those parts make a classic of the book, while the constant tangents into arcane and wrongheaded details almost destroy it all.

Stardust Mirror

(611 posts)
31. thanks for the heads up
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:18 PM
Jun 2024

now I'll speed read thru those passages guiltlessly

might explain why I found it a slog on previous attempts

yellowdogintexas

(22,753 posts)
38. I may be the only English major in the US who managed to avoid reading Moby DIck
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 10:57 PM
Jun 2024

I just refuse to even consider it. I think the reading of "Bartleby the Scrivener" in freshman Lit class ruined me.

I would rather read the Yellow Pages; at least I could make up silly stories about the various weird business ads

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
40. Bartleby is one of his best works
Mon Jun 3, 2024, 11:07 AM
Jun 2024

I find it quite amusing and playful, especially given its era. Victorians often annoy me with their fussiness and dour outlook, but you can feel how much fun Melville had with writing it.

But the British in me enjoys stories that brim over with snarky humour.

EverHopeful

(370 posts)
13. Just started a series by a fellow DUer. Birth of the Black Orchids by M. R. Dimond
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 12:16 PM
Jun 2024

Seems like fun so far and I'm liking the characters.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
14. Oh Fun!
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 01:29 PM
Jun 2024

2021 This "quirky first book in the Black Orchid Enterprises Mystery series contains two complete crime stories. If you like big-hearted heroes, diverse casts, and endearing animals, then you'll love M. R. Dimond's double-fun page-turner."

Sounds delightful. Will definitely be looking for this. There are three others, as well. Newer.

japple

(10,354 posts)
22. I'm about 1/3 of the way into Lief Enger's latest (which you recently read)
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 03:48 PM
Jun 2024
I Cheerfully Refuse. I must admit that every time I pick it up, I have to re-read the last few pages I read the night before, because places/names aren't staying with me for some odd reason. It's an unusual story, but I feel like I've been plopped down in some near-distant future and haven't yet figured out what happened to our country. Hope that I will have all the answers by the time the book ends.

I loved Demon Copperhead and will probably read it again in a couple years. I also loved Last Bus to Wisdom as Doig was a favorite of mine and a couple of other folks around here. So many good writers, so little time.

Thanks for the weekly thread, hermetic.

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
24. You are most welcome.
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 04:25 PM
Jun 2024

Bit of a spoiler alert: your question will not actually be answered, as such. You'll just come to realize that what happened is the Democrats did not win. The bad guys did. And this is obviously what it will be like. Scary. So, this book is a warning. But it is also a tale of bravery and perseverance. Which we're gonna need.

Did you know that Lief used to be a reporter for NPR? That might make his political sensibilities more clear. Our future is really on the line these days. And he knows it.

japple

(10,354 posts)
25. Thanks for the spoiler hint. I will approach the book tonight with new awareness. It explains
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 04:59 PM
Jun 2024

a lot, though, the turn of civilization towards the dark side, which has already been hinted. I didn't know that Lief Enger was a reporter for NPR. As a boomer, I'm one of those who still supports public radio & PBS news. It's the only way we get good political news coverage in GA.

 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
30. I didn't want to spoil that detail for you
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:11 PM
Jun 2024

So I'm glad Hermit did. No, you never get a firm idea of what happened for the world to wind up as it does in ICR. It just is. Science fiction and magical realism sometimes require a bit more suspension of disbelief, for their worlds to make sense. Sometimes you never get the backstory, just roll with it. Sometimes you have to put the book aside and let the implications of what went wrong roll over you. ICR is the latter type of sci-fi, as Hermit makes clear.

I thought it had a great deal to say about the enduring power of human connection and our ability to band together to help one another in the face of a world gone mad.

Jeebo

(2,292 posts)
26. "Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang" by Kate Wilhelm
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 05:22 PM
Jun 2024

It's one of the books the Easton Press sent to me thirty-plus years ago as one of their Masterpieces of Science Fiction series. I didn't read it then, but I found it in a box of old books recently when I was looking for something new to read. I just started it and it has grabbed me already. It won a Hugo or a Nebula award, I forget which.

-- Ron

hermetic

(8,636 posts)
28. Nice find
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 05:46 PM
Jun 2024

The spellbinding story of an isolated post holocaust community determined to preserve itself, and civilization, through a perilous experiment in cloning. Sweeping, dramatic, rich with humanity, and rigorous in its science, Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang is widely regarded as a high point of both humanistic and “hard” SF and won SF's Hugo Award and Locus Award on its first publication. It is as compelling today as it was then.

Enjoy.

Jilly_in_VA

(10,938 posts)
32. In the middle of a weird one
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:23 PM
Jun 2024
In the Country of the Great King by Ardythe Ashley. So far I can't make heads or tails of it. It seems to be about a bunch of middle aged people who are somehow connected but I don't know how yet, and I'm getting whiplash from the change in points of view of the characters. It's not that long so I'll probably finish it, but damn, I wish she'd have made chapter breaks or headers with the character's name or something.
 

NanaCat

(2,332 posts)
34. Seems like everything by Towles is exceptional
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:31 PM
Jun 2024

I'll be reading Gentlemen in Moscow later in the year.

wendyb-NC

(3,842 posts)
36. Gentleman In Moscow is a wonderful, I'll even say epic read
Sun Jun 2, 2024, 06:52 PM
Jun 2024

The Lincoln Highway, has me hooked so far.

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