August 2006 Weddings
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Need reading recommendations.

Any good books that you would like to recommend to me?  I have "under the banner of heavan" on my list, but I was hoping y'all could give me some suggestions.  Thank you.  Big Smile

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Re: Need reading recommendations.

  • What are you into? Just non-fiction?
    Team Basement Cat imageKnitting&Kitties
  • Im reading Beautiful Boy right now (autobiographical about a father dealing with sons addiction). So far (Im about 1/3 of the way in) it is VERY good
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  • Total brain candy - the Twilight series
    Slainte!
    my read shelf:
    Jenni (jenniloveselvis)'s book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)
  • Water for Elephants.

    My Sisters Keeper

    The Time Travelors Wife

    For chick lit:  Something borrowed/Something blue series.

     

  • Good nonfiction I've read recently: Ghost Wars (Steve Coll) and Generation Kill (Evan Wright). I have The Bin Ladens (Steve Coll) checked out from the library, but I haven't gotten around to it yet. If polygamy is a topic of interest to you, I also recently read Shattered Dreams (Irene Spencer). It's weird but good.

    Fiction: American Wife (Curtis Sittenfeld) is the book that is the fictionalized story of a first lady modeled after Laura Bush. It's really, really good. In fact, Curtis Sittenfeld's other two books, Prep and The Man of My Dreams, are also really good. Prep is a masterpiece. Pretty much anything by Jennifer Weiner is a good read. The Brooklyn Follies (Paul Auster) is really good. The Red Tent (Anita Diamant) is a fictional account of the life of the Biblical character Dinah. Up soon, I plan to read A Confederacy of Dunces (John Kennedy O'Toole) because a friend of mine swears by it. I also like pretty much anything by Larry Brown (gritty, southern writer) or Anne Tyler (contemplative Baltimore writer).

    Humor: I just read Are You There Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea (Chelsea Handler), and it was hilarious! I can't wait until My Horizontal Life (Handler) arrives at the library. Lewis Black's Nothing Sacred is really good, but it's better as an audio book because he reads it.

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  • imageLesliek0308:

    Water for Elephants.

    My Sisters Keeper

    The Time Travelors Wife

    For chick lit:  Something borrowed/Something blue series.

    these are all good - I highly recommend

    Slainte!
    my read shelf:
    Jenni (jenniloveselvis)'s book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)
  • imagebrideymcbriderson:

    Prep is a masterpiece.

    Prep I wasn't a big fan of. I just didn't get it when I read it for my book club.

    imagebrideymcbriderson:
    Pretty much anything by Jennifer Weiner is a good read. The Red Tent (Anita Diamant) is a fictional account of the life of the Biblical character Dinah.

    I agree, Red Tent is on of my favs. Also might try The Tender Bar bu JR Moehringer. It was my first memoir and I ate it up:

    "Long before it legally served me, the bar saved me," asserts J.R. Moehringer, and his compelling memoir The Tender Bar is the story of how and why. A Pulitzer-Prize winning writer for the Los Angeles Times, Moehringer grew up fatherless in pub-heavy Manhasset, New York, in a ramshackle house crammed with cousins and ruled by an eccentric, unkind grandfather. Desperate for a paternal figure, he turns first to his father, a DJ whom he can only access via the radio (Moehringer calls him The Voice and pictures him as "talking smoke"). When The Voice suddenly disappears from the airwaves, Moehringer turns to his hairless Uncle Charlie, and subsequently, Uncle Charlie's place of employment--a bar called Dickens that soon takes center stage. While Moehringer may occasionally resort to an overwrought metaphor (the footsteps of his family sound like "storm troopers on stilts"), his writing moves at a quick clip and his tale of a dysfunctional but tightly knit community is warmly told. "While I fear that we're drawn to what abandons us, and to what seems most likely to abandon us, in the end I believe we're defined by what embraces us," Moehringer says, and his story makes us believe it.

    Slainte!
    my read shelf:
    Jenni (jenniloveselvis)'s book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)
  • I'm kind of all over the place.  I just read Cormac McCarthy's "the road" and loved it.  I am reading "plainsong" by Kent Haruf right now.  I have "blindness" by jose saramago ready to go, but I haven't read it yet.  I really like Mitch Albom's books.  I can get into Stephen King, but I have read most of them.  I like Dean Koontz as well. 
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  • have you read Thousand Splendid Suns or Kite Runner yet? If not, highly recc.

     Also Glass Castle is a great memoir.

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  • not sure what you're into, but here are some goodies i'm reading or have read lately:

    nonfiction:

    The Political Brain by Drew Weston. a psychologist explains how voters ignore facts and act on emotions. fascinating.

    and, In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan, the Omnivore's Dilemma author who urges us to eat food. not a lot. mostly plants.

    fiction: Drown by Junot Diaz, collection of hilarious short stories by the same author who wrote the pulitzer-prize winning novel The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao, which i adored.

    i just started this because i desperately needed a laugh after reading Angela's Ashes by Frank McCourt for the first time.  i love me some McCort, but boy is his memoir depressing. still, it's a moving story and beautifully written.

  • imagePgh-CTBride:

    have you read Thousand Splendid Suns or Kite Runner yet? If not, highly recc.

     Also Glass Castle is a great memoir.

    I haven't read Kite Runner, but I will second the recommendation of Thousand Splendid Suns. Don't read the ending in public, though. I finished that book when I was down in my judge's chambers waiting on a jury to finish, and I was crying like a baby. Ridiculous.

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  • Have you watched the HBO series True Blood? It's based on a very entertaining series by Charlaine Harris, which I totally recommed. If you read King and Koontz, you might enjoy those. I'd also recommend anything by Neil Gaiman.

    The only nonfiction I've read lately that wasn't about knitting, is From Baghdad with Love and Sex, Love and Cocoa Puffs, both of which were pretty good.

    Team Basement Cat imageKnitting&Kitties
  • Lots of good recs in here!  Thank you!
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  • I thought the Kite Runner seemed... forced. I'm not sure if that's the right word, but I thought it was just alright. It had a lot of potential it didn't meet.

    That said, I LOVED A Thousand Splendid Suns.

     

  • Ooooh, you'll love Under the Banner of Heaven! So good!

    Animal, Vegetable, Miracle and the Omnivore's Dilemma are my top two recommended books these days. So good.

    I love Jodi Picoult for fiction.?

    BabyFruit Ticker
  • I've been reading Time Travelers Wife, but I wish I was finished with it b/c the characters drive me batty. Not really a winning rec. Sorry.
  • Oh, I'll also add A Thousand Splendid Suns (read it after the Kite Runner, though... I think it's better that way), and Time Traveler's Wife was FABULOUS!
    BabyFruit Ticker
  • If you like fiction and don't have anything against sci-fi, I recommend The Host by Stephenie Meyer.
  • Nonfiction:

    The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How it Has Undermined All Women. 

    Does Martha Stewart make you feel like you never do enough for your kids? Do "celebrity mom" profiles leave you feeling lumpen and inadequate? That's because they're supposed to, say Susan Douglas and Meredith Michaels, authors of The Mommy Myth and self-professed "mothers with an attitude." Both scathing and self-deprecating, their pop-culture critique takes on "the new momism," the media's obsession with motherhood and the impossible standards which that obsession promotes. Today's ideal mom makes June Cleaver seem like a layabout: she may work outside the home, but never too much, always looks at the world through her children's eyes, makes sure to buy only educational, age-appropriate toys, and includes a loving note with each hand-prepared lunch. Meanwhile, the news media hype stories about child abduction, politicians excoriate so-called "welfare queens," and parenting experts advocate wearing your child in a sling until he moves out on his own. Romanticized, commercialized, sensationalized, and demonized by turns, today's mothers are damned if they work and damned if they don't; what?s more, the idea that the government might do something to help their plight has come to seem almost quaint. As a history of motherhood in the media from 1970 to the present, The Mommy Myth makes a fun and thought-provoking read. Yet close readings of episodes of thirtysomething don't create quite the call to arms the authors seem to have in mind; no woman likes to think of herself as a media dupe, particularly the kind of woman who will be reading this book. Straightforward policy critiques like their chilling chapter on childcare fare much better, illuminating a culture that seems to have forgotten public institutions' power to correct social ills. --Mary Park (review from amazon.com)

     Fabulous book.

  • agree - read KR first (partly bc it IS a good read but TSS is better IMO... I read TSS first and was disappointed by KR. I think if I read in the opposite order I would have enjoyed KR more)

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  • I am reading The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath - a classic I had never gotten around to and it is great!

    I also recommend Erica Jong's Isadora Wing series. I just got done reading them and they are amazing. The 1st book in the series is Fear of Flying which is always one the top 100 book lists. My fav is the 2nd How to Save your own Life. The books are fiction but based on the author's own life. She has some hard core sex and cussing in there but she is amazing!!!!

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