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hermetic

(8,310 posts)
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 06:40 PM Nov 2015

What are you reading this week of November 22, 2015?

Hi, book people. I'm still reading Dragonfly in Amber, the second in the Outlander series. I'm about halfway through so this one is going faster than the first. Which is good because I've got a LONG way to go yet.

With the holiday this week I'd guess some of us will have less time for reading while some have more. Whichever it is, I wish you all a pleasant holiday. I'm looking at the first significant snowfall here this year and looking forward to it. I'll have plenty of time to shovel.

12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What are you reading this week of November 22, 2015? (Original Post) hermetic Nov 2015 OP
"Jupiter's Bone" by Faye Kellerman TexasProgresive Nov 2015 #1
Hey, TexasProgresive. I have read several books by Jonathan Kellerman but none by Faye Kellerman. Enthusiast Nov 2015 #5
I can't remember. TexasProgresive Nov 2015 #6
"Bitter Fruit," Alice Clark-Platts shenmue Nov 2015 #2
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez applegrove Nov 2015 #3
Well hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, hermetic. Enthusiast Nov 2015 #4
no snow here but we had a light frost this morning TexasProgresive Nov 2015 #7
Hi, hermetic! Thanks as always for doing this thread! scarletwoman Nov 2015 #8
Thank you for all that! Enthusiast Nov 2015 #9
Hi, Enthusiast! scarletwoman Nov 2015 #10
Have a nice Thanksgiving week, scarletwoman. Enthusiast Nov 2015 #11
Same to you! scarletwoman Nov 2015 #12

TexasProgresive

(12,157 posts)
1. "Jupiter's Bone" by Faye Kellerman
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 07:50 PM
Nov 2015

Father Jupiter the leader of a New Age pseudo-physics, metaphysical commune is found dead of an apparent deadly drug and alcohol cocktail. His estranged daughter who has not seen him in 14 years calls the police that there is a suspicious death of her father at the Order of the Rings of God.

The John Rebus book Strip Jack was a lot of fun. I like really well done puns and there were quite a lot in this book as well as the inevitable twist at the end. some samples:
Rebus musing at a house of ill repute bust, "I'm not my brothel's keeper."

Rebus to his Det. Sgt Brian, "You're like a son to me."
Brian replies, You're like a father to me, sir. The fa-ther I get from you the better."

And there are are more that just tickled me.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
5. Hey, TexasProgresive. I have read several books by Jonathan Kellerman but none by Faye Kellerman.
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 10:15 PM
Nov 2015

Do you prefer Faye's books to Jonathan's?

We enjoy the subtle humor in the Rebus books too. Strip Jack was a good one.

TexasProgresive

(12,157 posts)
6. I can't remember.
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 10:52 PM
Nov 2015

I was desperate for something to read as I had finished Strip Jack and saw her name. A long time ago I read books by each and knew it would be good. I just can't make a real comparison. This one caught my attention with this mystical sort of sci-fi aura.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
4. Well hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, hermetic.
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 10:06 PM
Nov 2015

I am still reading The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver. Sorry to be so slow. I'll probably still be on The Lacuna next report. Battling the forces of evil takes up all my time.

Mrs. Enthusiast finished Mortal Causes by Ian Rankin. We both enjoy the Rebus books. Now she is reading Avenue of Mysteries by John Irving. We are both big fans of John Irving.

I'm sorry to hear about the snow, hermetic. It's pretty. I can no longer shovel snow. But back when I did shovel snow I found it to be an enjoyable thing, to a point.

Have a nice Thanksgiving, everyone! We will be having a turkey!

TexasProgresive

(12,157 posts)
7. no snow here but we had a light frost this morning
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 10:56 PM
Nov 2015

and are expecting a hard one tonight. May the ragweed DIE. That's the trouble with milder winters and then there are the not so mild summers.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
8. Hi, hermetic! Thanks as always for doing this thread!
Sun Nov 22, 2015, 11:30 PM
Nov 2015

Well, I've got about 3 weeks of book reports to catch up on...

When I last posted my upcoming reading list, I was about to start reading Minnesota author Allen Eskin's second book, The Guise of Another. I had just finished it and had written a somewhat detailed critique in my November 1st OP which got lost in the ether. So, it's not as fresh in my mind at this point. The short version is, I did not enjoy it anywhere near as much as his first book. It turned out to be mainly a cop-centered crime thriller - which is a genre I simply do not particularly care for. Still, it was involving and interesting, and the ending was particularly poignant and more reminiscent of the quality of The Life We Bury. I'll definitely watch for his next book, and hope it's less of a shoot-em-up.

After that I delved into Martin Edwards' Lake District Mysteries series:

1. The Coffin Trail (2004)
2. The Cipher Garden (2005)
3. The Arsenic Labyrinth (2007)
4. The Serpent Pool (2010)
5. The Hanging Wood (2011)
6. The Frozen Shroud (2013)
7. The Dungeon House (2015)


These are your classic British Village Mysteries, nicely done with characters you come to care about, interesting winding plots, and a fascinating setting. Sprinkled throughout are bits of history going back to Roman times and earlier, and lots of literary references - the Lake District is famously home to such notable writers as William Wordsworth, Samuel Coleridge, Thomas de Quincey, John Ruskin, Beatrix Potter, and Arthur Ransome. All in all, diverting and civilized entertainment. I finished the lot in about 10 days, and then I was out of books again...

So, on a quick dash into the library and a quick skim of the "New Arrivals" shelf, I ended up with Swedish author, Liza Marklund's Borderline, #9 of her Annika Bengtzon series. I have a longstanding love/hate relationship with this series - I really do not like the character of Annika Bengtzon, she pretty much drives me up a wall. But Marklund does write good stories - and since she's a bestseller, it's easy to get her books in translation. There are lots of Scandinavian authors I'd rather read, but she'll do in a pinch. There was an awful lot of creepy, icky stuff in this story, but I have to grant that it was a page-turner. Still don't like Annika, though.

And, speaking of creepy and icky, my next book was John Sandford's Gathering Prey, which is #25 in his long-running Lucas Davenport "Prey" series. I'd been putting off reading this one, because the description really didn't appeal to me at all. But I'd read every other book in the series, and nothing else that I had on order was available yet, so I finally gave in. It was bloody, it was nasty, it wasn't anything I really wanted to read - but Sandford is still a damn good writer, and after following the series from the very beginning, I sort of had to find out what was going to happen with Lucas next. So, I got through it. I'll probably read the next one, too - although I'm much more looking forward to his next Virgil Flowers book, which tend to be less grim and bloody than his Lucas Davenport series.

And now for something completely different... My next book was a debut by a new author, Sarah Ward: In Bitter Chill. And what an impressive debut it is! Back to Britain, to the Peaks District of Derbyshire this time; the story goes back and forth in time from the unsolved 1978 kidnapping of two 8-year old schoolgirls to the present. One of the girls was found unharmed but without any clear memory of what happened, and the other girl was never seen again. A present day suicide, and a murder a few days later, lead police detectives into a complicated investigation that eventually unravels the old secrets that led to the original kidnapping. It's all very exquisitely done, and I will be adding this one to my "Best Books of 2015" thread. I very much recommend it.

Right now I'm reading something else completely different: Where the Devil Can't Go by Anya Lipska, a British writer of Polish ancestry. It's a very different milleau from my usual fare - featuring the Polish immigrant community in London's East End. It's pretty dark and gritty, but very fascinating. Published in 2013, it's the first of series - with three books out so far. Sadly, this is the only one of the series that's available in my library system at this point. I like this book, it's a very interesting read with lots of references to the history of Poland's struggles for independence from the Nazi Occupation through the Solidarity movement and the collapse of the Soviet Union, up to the present day European Union and the rule of Multi-National Corporations. I really hope the other two books in this series become available.

I'll be crossing my fingers as I hit "post" - and hope that not only does it not get lost, but that someone here will enjoy reading my very long book list!

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
9. Thank you for all that!
Mon Nov 23, 2015, 12:08 AM
Nov 2015

I really like the sound of In Bitter Chill.

We read Gathering Prey. I had to look it up on Fantastic Fiction as I could not remember what it was about. I mean specifically about. I knew nothing of Juggalos or Travelers so that was something new to me.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
10. Hi, Enthusiast!
Mon Nov 23, 2015, 12:33 AM
Nov 2015

Oh yes, I must say, In Bitter Chill was a very good read! I was very glad I came across it!

Like you, I'd never heard of Juggalos - and my feeling after reading Gathering Prey is that I would have happily remained ignorant of that scene. Totally not my thing! Ugh!

I'm glad you and Mrs. E have been enjoying the Rebus books - I've got the latest, Even Dogs in the Wild, on my library request list, I'm hoping I don't have to wait too long!

I'm also tickled that Mrs. E likes the Dr. Siri books - they are really fun, and it's so interesting to read about that part of the world.

Thanks for replying to my post!

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