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Post by Arielflies on Sept 13, 2022 3:27:43 GMT
Katie Porter is NOW my congresswoman after the re-districting. She is so cool. Is she as interesting a speaker as I think she is?
I've been reading YA paranormal books from Freebooksy. I could edit them - I guess that makes it fun - how would a paragraph forward the plot if inactive verbs were exchanged for active. The book series I'm reading now is written from first person POV which can be tricky and almost certainly makes one want to slap the protagonist upside the head. Anyway, my reading activity is up and down, hit and miss.
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Post by Critical on Sept 13, 2022 9:08:57 GMT
Katie Porter is NOW my congresswoman after the re-districting. She is so cool. Is she as interesting a speaker as I think she is?
I've been reading YA paranormal books from Freebooksy. I could edit them - I guess that makes it fun - how would a paragraph forward the plot if inactive verbs were exchanged for active. The book series I'm reading now is written from first person POV which can be tricky and almost certainly makes one want to slap the protagonist upside the head. Anyway, my reading activity is up and down, hit and miss.
She was amazing! Even better than I thought she would be. When the moderator called for the last question from the audience, there was an audible, "Oh!" of disappointment. I think we all would have happily stayed there for at least another hour. She was so funny and open and really engaging AND very much did NOT talk like a politician. Her new book isn't coming out until April, I think, so I was sad we didn't get an advance copy. I definitely want to read it. FYI, it's titled I Swear: Politics is Messier Than My Minivan  She did talk about Washington and politics, but she also talked about being the only single mother in Congress and the challenges that brought, as well as what she likes to read and so much more, including that infamous white board moment with Jamie Dimon. I'm so happy that she's giving Congresspeople from Orange County a good name after some of the stinkers we've had!
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Post by Critical on Sept 16, 2022 23:17:05 GMT
I finished The Family Chao by Lan Samantha Chang last night. I thought it was just okay. I've read some great reviews of it, but it just didn't grab me. It was both a family drama and (to a lesser degree) a murder mystery. I mainly just finished it to find out who the killer was. I didn't find any of the characters very sympathetic.
Now I'm reading RF Kuang's Babel and it is fabulous! Within a few pages, I was hooked. The bags of books I brought home last weekend are still sitting in the living room, taunting me. I never know which book to pick first! I've vowed to dive in once I've finished Babel.
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Post by Kao on Sept 17, 2022 5:32:12 GMT
Currently reading A Phoenix First Must Burn which is an anthropology of 16 stories of Black Girl Magic, Afrofuturism, and Sci-fi. Some of the stories were too sci-fi for my taste but then it hit this sweet spot with what I like to call "urban fairytales" that were great. So far I love the stories about the dragon, the girl who needed a new heart, vampires trying to be friends with people, and a hairstylist out for revenge that might also be hexxing you.
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Post by redsoxgirl on Nov 5, 2022 22:50:11 GMT
I'm starting on Bonos autobiography, 'Surrender. I knew his childhood was fraught with continual tension with his father and older brother. Hus life was further marked by grief and a rage he still carries with him. But the details he fills in serve as that first person voice unraveling his life using a true writers voice. Reminding me of the centuries old saying Dublin is the home for letters, writers, readers, spinning of tails of every sort. -
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Post by Navybelle on Nov 10, 2022 4:02:28 GMT
A Facebook group I belong to had a recommendation for Stephen King's 11/22/63, and I hope I can finish it before it's due back to the library! It's long, but so far it's so good. I had never heard of it, but it's from 2014.
I haven't always had the best experiences with Stephen King books, but this one isn't scary or too weird. It's more time-travel weird, and I can handle that.
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Post by Critical on Nov 10, 2022 6:40:33 GMT
A Facebook group I belong to had a recommendation for Stephen King's 11/22/63, and I hope I can finish it before it's due back to the library! It's long, but so far it's so good. I had never heard of it, but it's from 2014. I haven't always had the best experiences with Stephen King books, but this one isn't scary or too weird. It's more time-travel weird, and I can handle that. My brother was a huge Stephen King fan and had almost every book in first edition hardcover. I've read a few of them over the years. After he died, I chose a few of them to take home and 11/22/63 is one of them. I've not read it yet, but I will eventually.
I'm currently reading Sunyi Dean's The Book Eaters, which is unlike anything I've ever read. I'm really enjoying it.
I have SO many new books I want to read right now, but this is my busy season with work, so I'm not getting much reading done at he moment. As soon as Christmas comes, I'll have my nose in a book or my Kindle again!
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Post by waywyrd on Nov 10, 2022 15:22:07 GMT
A Facebook group I belong to had a recommendation for Stephen King's 11/22/63, and I hope I can finish it before it's due back to the library! It's long, but so far it's so good. I had never heard of it, but it's from 2014. I haven't always had the best experiences with Stephen King books, but this one isn't scary or too weird. It's more time-travel weird, and I can handle that. That's a monster of a book, but it's one of my favorites by King. I hope you like it!
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Post by AZChristian on Dec 20, 2022 17:16:02 GMT
A Facebook group I belong to had a recommendation for Stephen King's 11/22/63, and I hope I can finish it before it's due back to the library! It's long, but so far it's so good. I had never heard of it, but it's from 2014. I haven't always had the best experiences with Stephen King books, but this one isn't scary or too weird. It's more time-travel weird, and I can handle that. I had boycotted Stephen King after totally HATING the end of one of his books. But I gave in because I wanted to read "11/22/63" so badly. I enjoyed it. The book was better than the movie that was made a few years ago. It definitely was a mind-bender! ETA: I'm current reading "Where the Crawdads Sing." I enjoyed the movie very much and was told that the book is better. Having seen the movie first, I can visualize the book in a way that my mind might not have been able to accomplish on its own. So far, my favorite part is when Mya finds a copy of "Rebecca" that her mother had brought with her when she married and moved to the cabin. Mya's reaction to the book was much like my own when I first read it at about the same age. Nice to have a connection like that to the protagonist.
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Post by AZChristian on Jan 1, 2023 0:34:45 GMT
Just read the newest Harry Bosch book, "Desert Star," in two days. It is EXCELLENT, if you're a Bosch lover. Not sure how long it will take for my blood pressure to return to normal. Don't care.
LOVED IT!!!!
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Post by Eastcoastmom on Jan 27, 2023 18:48:27 GMT
Yesterday I read a short story by Alice Hoffman called The Bookstore Sisters, and a novel by Rebecca Serle titled In Five Years. I loved the twist at the end of Serle's book.
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Post by Kao on Jan 30, 2023 20:00:24 GMT
In the middle of reading The City We Became by N.K. Jemison and it's absolutely delightful in all of its urban fantasy glory. All 5 boroughs in New York City have someone that is an "avatar" for the "soul" of that area along with a 6th whose function is to "unite" all of them and defend the city as a whole in the event of an otherworld threat. The problem is the avatars don't realize they are avatars until a threat presents itself; otherwise they are just regular people just living life. Well, that day has arrived as a destroyer of cities is stalking all of the avatars, the avatars don't know who the others are so they can try to pool their powers, the "Uniter" is missing, and for some reason the avatar from Sao Paulo is in New York but no one knows what he's up to or why he is there.  I'm really enjoying it and I think some of you would too!
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Post by Critical on Feb 8, 2023 3:44:24 GMT
I listened to about half of Michelle Obama's The Light We Carry on my drive back from SoCal yesterday and now I'm reading the hardcover my folks got me for Christmas. I sort of felt bad listening to so much of it (borrowed from the library) when they got me the actual book, but it was easier to listen to that than keep picking a new podcast episode every few hours. It was like having a particularly wise friend on the ride with me.
I was reading Lapvona by Ottessa Moshfegh. I was a bit wary about reading it to begin with, after reading a really scathing review. I decided to give it a go anyway, because I'd also read a lot of buzz about it. I got around 8% in and just was d-o-n-e. Violence against animals, a brutal and graphic assault on a child and, based on a few reviews on Goodreads, it only got worse. SO, that's my first DNF of the year.
I've moved on to Leigh Bardugo's Hell Bent, the sequel to Ninth House. I loved the first book, so I have high hopes for this one.
While I was visiting my folks, my mom and I went to a few book related events. We got to see Amy Tan "in conversation," which was great fun. She's so open and honest and so well-spoken - she speaks like a person who's rehearsed, but she hasn't. The venue had some very pricey seats (@$99/each), but we got seats in the nosebleed section. We couldn't reach back and knock on the back wall, but we were pretty close! Still, it was lovely to hear her, if not really get to see her very well. There's a terrific doc on Netflix.
Last week, we went to a community center near one of the OC library branches to hear Marie Benedict speak. We got there early, as they'd advised early arrival AND were giving out a limited number of books. We only had about 6 or 7 people ahead of us, so we got great seats and free books! She was on tour for her latest novel The Mitford Affair, about the famous sisters. She was wonderful and I now want to read ALL of her books, which are generally about incredible women that are largely not well-known. I loved The Other Einstein, about Albert Einstein's first wife, who was also a physicist, and The Personal Librarian, about the woman JP Morgan hired to be the first librarian (and so much more) as he established his now-famous library.
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Post by Critical on Feb 14, 2023 3:11:23 GMT
I spent a lovely Sunday reading Michael Connelly's Desert Star, a Christmas gift from my folks (signed = yay!). This was a Renee Ballard/Hieronymus Bosch book, so it's like visiting with old friends.
I'm trying to get back into the habit of always having a paper book that I read during the day and a Kindle book that I read in bed. I have SO many books sitting around that need to be read. I have to get on it!
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Post by Cootie on Feb 14, 2023 4:33:43 GMT
I spent a lovely Sunday reading Michael Connelly's Desert Star, a Christmas gift from my folks (signed = yay!). This was a Renee Ballard/Hieronymus Bosch book, so it's like visiting with old friends.
I'm trying to get back into the habit of always having a paper book that I read during the day and a Kindle book that I read in bed. I have SO many books sitting around that need to be read. I have to get on it!
I listened to Desert Star and thought it was a good next book in the series!
I understand about getting into the reading of paper books on a regular basis - I listen to lots of books now because I can't quite sit still long enough to read. Or if I do sit, I am knitting so listening to books is a great way to go. Reading paper and ebooks are great ways to absorb books and somehow I need to resume those habits. Luckily I use a library to get most of my books so I don't have piles around here but still have enough I should get to!
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Post by Critical on Feb 16, 2023 5:29:26 GMT
I spent a lovely Sunday reading Michael Connelly's Desert Star, a Christmas gift from my folks (signed = yay!). This was a Renee Ballard/Hieronymus Bosch book, so it's like visiting with old friends.
I'm trying to get back into the habit of always having a paper book that I read during the day and a Kindle book that I read in bed. I have SO many books sitting around that need to be read. I have to get on it!
I listened to Desert Star and thought it was a good next book in the series!
I understand about getting into the reading of paper books on a regular basis - I listen to lots of books now because I can't quite sit still long enough to read. Or if I do sit, I am knitting so listening to books is a great way to go. Reading paper and ebooks are great ways to absorb books and somehow I need to resume those habits. Luckily I use a library to get most of my books so I don't have piles around here but still have enough I should get to!
I get A LOT of free egalleys and a fair number of paper galleys as well. I also borrow ebooks from the library, so I have some that are on a countdown before they go back to the library. I've been known to put my Kindle into airplane mode so they can't take back the book until I'm finished, but I generally want to finish them quickly so I can start another one!
I wish I could do audio books, but I just have always had trouble focusing. I do have the full, unabridged Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit on CD (IIRC, it's around 60 discs), but that's the exception. I did enjoy the Michelle Obama book, mainly because it felt like her just talking. I didn't have to follow a narrative. I generally prefer podcasts if I need to listen to something while working or driving.
I go through periods where I can't seem to settle down and get into any book. Frankly, if it wasn't for Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache series last year, I wouldn't have read nearly as many books as I did. I signed up for a reading challenge through a library in my home county - the challenge is to read 100 books in 2023. I'd set my Goodreads reading challenge at 100 books this year before I'd heard about the library challenge, which my mom and I are both doing. I'm hopeful that it will inspire me to read more this year.
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Post by Critical on Feb 24, 2023 5:46:28 GMT
I'm totally smitten with Stephen King's new book Fairy Tale! I borrowed it from the library and, since it's 600 pages and I'm busy with work, I was worried I might not be able to finish it. I started it yesterday and I'm already 175 pages in.
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Post by waywyrd on Feb 24, 2023 12:38:33 GMT
I'm totally smitten with Stephen King's new book Fairy Tale! I borrowed it from the library and, since it's 600 pages and I'm busy with work, I was worried I might not be able to finish it. I started it yesterday and I'm already 175 pages in. This is on my "to get" list! I'm happy to see another good review.
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Post by Cootie on Feb 24, 2023 14:17:58 GMT
I'm totally smitten with Stephen King's new book Fairy Tale! I borrowed it from the library and, since it's 600 pages and I'm busy with work, I was worried I might not be able to finish it. I started it yesterday and I'm already 175 pages in. I listened to it last month and loved it! The audio was well done and I was able finish it in a few days. His fantasy writing is much more appealing to me than his horror. He's such a good storyteller.
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Post by Critical on Mar 10, 2023 1:05:25 GMT
I'm about two thirds of the way through Pamela Anderson's memoir, Love, Pamela and it's very good. I think if I hadn't heard her on Armchair Expert a few weeks ago, I would have been more surprised by this memoir....heck, I might not have even wanted to read it. It feels like she's been objectified and sexualized by men her entire life, from childhood on, when she's really quite intelligent and sensitive. I think because she looks the way she looks (and sounds the way she sounds), people believe the press and seem to always think the worst.
waywyrd - you might want to put this one on your TBR pile 
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Post by waywyrd on Mar 10, 2023 13:19:53 GMT
Critical I just added it to my wish list. I've got some Kindle credits to use so I'll probably just buy it this weekend, I still need to pick my free book for the month too. I did recently waste time reading Jessica Simpson's very short story Movie Star: They Always Say They're Single. It's more of a diary entry than a story, and she never tells who the guy is. Boo.
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Post by Critical on Mar 11, 2023 6:33:53 GMT
Critical I just added it to my wish list. I've got some Kindle credits to use so I'll probably just buy it this weekend, I still need to pick my free book for the month too. I did recently waste time reading Jessica Simpson's very short story Movie Star: They Always Say They're Single. It's more of a diary entry than a story, and she never tells who the guy is. Boo. I wouldn't spend a bunch of money on it, but if you've got Kindle credits and can get a discount....
I finished it last night and really enjoyed it. She's doesn't shy away from relationship stuff, but it's also not gratuitous, nor is it the main focus of the book. She talks more about her family and her charity work/causes, which I'm more interested in. I don't really care who she slept with.
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Post by Arielflies on Mar 24, 2023 18:41:07 GMT
I've been re-reading the Belial series. So far 14 books in the original series then I fnally caved and joined Kindle Unlimited and I'm plowing through the next 10 books. This is a series by R.D.Brady set in the religious supernatural. This person knows how to write action, but doesn't know how to edit repetitious interior monologues. The action keeps me going.
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Post by Navybelle on Mar 27, 2023 2:24:02 GMT
I've had "Remarkably Bright Creatures" recommended to me over and over, and I finally got my turn for the book through my library app. Originally, I wasn't too sure about it, since an octopus helps tell the story and that sounds weird to me, but since people loved it so much, I'm giving it a chance. So far, it's very good! It's written by Shelby Van Pelt, apparently her debut novel, which seems to be a great start. Has anyone else read this one?
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Post by Cootie on Mar 27, 2023 3:57:49 GMT
I've had "Remarkably Bright Creatures" recommended to me over and over, and I finally got my turn for the book through my library app. Originally, I wasn't too sure about it, since an octopus helps tell the story and that sounds weird to me, but since people loved it so much, I'm giving it a chance. So far, it's very good! It's written by Shelby Van Pelt, apparently her debut novel, which seems to be a great start. Has anyone else read this one? Yes! I read this one a few months ago and found it very enjoyable and surprising! I haven't read much "magical realism" but am finding that genre to be very intriguing. It was quite the feel good story!
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Post by Critical on Mar 27, 2023 6:42:48 GMT
Navybelle - my mom just read it for her book club and loved it. She's holding onto it for me. Octopi are VERY smart. When I was in college, I was the student manager of my college's public aquarium. For a time, we had an octopus. We spent far too much time and energy keeping that little octopus in his/her aquarium. We kept losing fish and crustaceans and couldn't figure out what was happening. Then, one night, we had a stakeout. Turned off the lights, closed the door to the pump room (where we accessed the aquariums), sat down and waited. What we discovered was that that little octopus was squeezing out of its tank and basically going hunting in the other aquariums! We tried everything, but they're capable of squeezing through very small gaps. It didn't matter how much we fed it. It wanted live food. We finally took it back and released it to the ocean again before it ate every other animal we had! Luckily, we didn't have it at the same time as the mantis shrimp or that story would have turned out very differently.
I've got two books going now. First is Lisa See's upcoming Lady Tan's Circle of Women. I'm a Lisa See fan and this one is wonderful! I just started Nina Totenberg's Dinners With Ruth about her long friendship with Ruth Bader Ginsberg.
I recently finished Taylor Jenkins Reid's latest, Carrie Soto is Back. It was terrific. I love tennis and the main character is a tennis star, so I was onboard before I even started it. It did not disappoint. Carrie Soto is also a character in Reid's Malibu Rising, which I haven't read, but want to. Not having read the earlier book didn't affect my enjoyment of this book at all.
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Post by Cootie on Mar 27, 2023 13:54:24 GMT
I recently finished Taylor Jenkins Reid's latest, Carrie Soto is Back. It was terrific. I love tennis and the main character is a tennis star, so I was onboard before I even started it. It did not disappoint. Carrie Soto is also a character in Reid's Malibu Rising, which I haven't read, but want to. Not having read the earlier book didn't affect my enjoyment of this book at all.
I read this one also and agree that it was terrific! I played tennis briefly in my childhood so had some experience with it but wasn't expecting to enjoy this book as much as I did. Like you, I hadn't read Malibu Rising, but am curious to read it after finishing Carrie Soto is Back. It was fun to root for Carrie, her dad, her training partner and the other athletes. I am not a very competitive person so it was interesting to be in the head of characters who have such a driving desire to always be the best and to beat anyone and everyone at such a great cost.
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Post by Navybelle on Mar 28, 2023 0:24:53 GMT
Navybelle - my mom just read it for her book club and loved it. She's holding onto it for me. Octopi are VERY smart. When I was in college, I was the student manager of my college's public aquarium. For a time, we had an octopus. We spent far too much time and energy keeping that little octopus in his/her aquarium. We kept losing fish and crustaceans and couldn't figure out what was happening. Then, one night, we had a stakeout. Turned off the lights, closed the door to the pump room (where we accessed the aquariums), sat down and waited. What we discovered was that that little octopus was squeezing out of its tank and basically going hunting in the other aquariums! We tried everything, but they're capable of squeezing through very small gaps. It didn't matter how much we fed it. It wanted live food. We finally took it back and released it to the ocean again before it ate every other animal we had! Luckily, we didn't have it at the same time as the mantis shrimp or that story would have turned out very differently.
That's what happens in the book! What a coincidence, that you experienced the exact same thing. I read elsewhere they can do puzzles, locks, etc. too, which is very cool. I think you'll enjoy reading the book, since you're so familiar with that setting (it's not the only setting in the story though). Those mantis shrimp are creepy! Wow! Sucker punching an octopus would be quite the sight! LOL! Thanks for the link.
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Post by Critical on Mar 28, 2023 0:33:48 GMT
Navybelle - my mom just read it for her book club and loved it. She's holding onto it for me. Octopi are VERY smart. When I was in college, I was the student manager of my college's public aquarium. For a time, we had an octopus. We spent far too much time and energy keeping that little octopus in his/her aquarium. We kept losing fish and crustaceans and couldn't figure out what was happening. Then, one night, we had a stakeout. Turned off the lights, closed the door to the pump room (where we accessed the aquariums), sat down and waited. What we discovered was that that little octopus was squeezing out of its tank and basically going hunting in the other aquariums! We tried everything, but they're capable of squeezing through very small gaps. It didn't matter how much we fed it. It wanted live food. We finally took it back and released it to the ocean again before it ate every other animal we had! Luckily, we didn't have it at the same time as the mantis shrimp or that story would have turned out very differently.
That's what happens in the book! What a coincidence, that you experienced the exact same thing. I read elsewhere they can do puzzles, locks, etc. too, which is very cool. I think you'll enjoy reading the book, since you're so familiar with that setting (it's not the only setting in the story though). Those mantis shrimp are creepy! Wow! Sucker punching an octopus would be quite the sight! LOL! Thanks for the link. We finally had to release our mantis shrimp because, in spite of warning signs on the glass of their tank, some jackasses came along and started tapping on the glass and taunting it. We came in the next morning to find the water VERY low and the glass shattered. It was very thick. That's how powerful the mantis shrimp's strike is. Sadly, this was before security cameras were a thing, so we never did catch the idiots who did it. All of the tanks were on the same filtration and circulation, so it could have killed off the entire population in all of the tanks, but we got lucky.
I had more than a healthy respect for that shrimp. I wanted to get out of that situation with all of my fingers!
There's a guy on sm (IG and FB, maybe TikTok) who has an octopus named Birdie. He does fun little videos about her and what she can do. She's pretty little - smaller than the one I cared for - but very smart.
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mina
FORT Regular

Posts: 300
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Post by mina on Apr 18, 2023 1:24:47 GMT
I'm reading Caging Skies by Christine Leunen. It's very sad and darkly funny. I'm almost to the end and I have no idea how it will be resolved. The film JoJo Rabbit is based on this book. I wanted to see that when it came out but never did; they must have changed the movie quite a bit from the book. I'll have to track down the film after I finish the novel.
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