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30 July 2009

What's everyone reading lately? [More:]I just finished Crazy for God, Frank Schaeffer's memoir, which I found really interesting, and Kristin Chenowith's book A Little Bit Wicked, which I found fake, name drippy, and annoying.
I'm reading Not Just a Pretty Face and it's making me extra vigilant about what I'll use around the house and on my skin (and I was already pretty vigilant so it's fair to say I'm in paranoid obsessive territory now).

I also got a tattered copy of Dear Sisters at Powell's and have been reading that. So far it's a really well-written and elegantly stated read.
posted by birdie 30 July | 13:51
I am reading The Town That Forgot How to Breathe. I am more than halfway into it and I still can't figure out what the heck is going on.
posted by amro 30 July | 13:59
I just finished Let the Right One In (entertaining and creepy), The Inhabited World (just beautiful) and The Right Stuff (less thrilling than I wanted it to be). I have the Lost City of Z in my bag and Descartes' Bones at home.
posted by crush-onastick 30 July | 14:00
Anathem, by you know who
and
Warrior Queens by Antonio Frasier.
They make a suprisingly good pair.
posted by msali 30 July | 14:04
Catch-22! Because, shamefully, it's been sitting on my shelf for years, and I've never read it. Now that I've started, I can't imagine why I put it off so long.
posted by unsurprising 30 July | 14:04
I'm reading 'Losing You' by Nicci French (which is actually a husband and wife writing team). Like the other Nicci French novels, it has a female protagonist, and is a great read, really gripping.
posted by essexjan 30 July | 14:09
Totally bogged down and considering abandoning The Last Wrestlers: the wrestling stuff is interesting, but not his self-pity and quack therapies.

Interesting recent stuff. Shambling Towards Hiroshima, tragi-comedy about an actor playing a monster in WW2. The Damned Utd was damned good: psychological breakdown/football novel.

Shelfari.
posted by TheophileEscargot 30 July | 14:13
I've been reading The Lady and the Monk, continuing with my recent interest in Japan. In mangaland, I've just finished Elfen Lied. Not really recommended for the weak of heart or if you demand a sensible plot line, or well, for other unnamed reasons too.
posted by DarkForest 30 July | 14:28
The Cold 6000 by James Ellroy. A great book if you like conspiracy theories, and a well written novel to boot. I'd recommend reading American Tabloid first, or it can be a bit confusing.
posted by doctor_negative 30 July | 14:28
I just got knocked flat on my ass by Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Wow.
posted by mdonley 30 July | 14:34
Just picked up at the library today:
Balanchine Variations
The Gardner Heist

posted by JanetLand 30 July | 14:34
Just finished Allan Guthrie's Savage Night, reading How the Beatles Destroyed Rock & Roll and Roseanna (Sjowall/Wahloo), soon to start Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture.
posted by box 30 July | 14:42
Ken Follet, Pillars of The Earth. Surprisingly involving. Never thought I'd like a book by Ken Follett. Who knew that he wrote historical fiction (an oxymoron, but convenient)?
posted by Susurration 30 July | 14:49
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, by Allen Bradley, was a cute little detective story.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson, is pretty good, but I found it distasteful in several spots.
The Automatic Detective by A. Lee Martinez is a nice take on the hardbitten detective and the wacky sci fi future genres.
Currently I'm rereading Shadows Linger, by Glen Cook, a gritty fantasy war series (debatably -the- gritty fantasy war series).
posted by VeritableSaintOfBrevity 30 July | 14:50
Michael Patrick MacDonald's Easter Rising.
posted by brujita 30 July | 14:52
Delicate Edible Birds - short stories by Lauren Groff
posted by rainbaby 30 July | 15:05
Very slowly reading Valley of Decision, a family saga novel from the thirties about a Pittsburgh steel family. Not really what I'd normally read but it's set right in my neighborhood so it's cool to read the characters walk through streets that I know (although a lot of them have been erased by urban re-development). The author did a lot of research and got most of it right, even a lot of pretty nerdy details about steel mills. It was made into a very melodramatic movie in the forties with Gregory Peck and Greer Garson.
posted by octothorpe 30 July | 15:09
Lady Chatterley's Lover, by D.H. Lawrence which is very interesting from an "OMG, they really thought this was so controversial?" point of view. I'm also trying to figure out what the theme and the point of it is... so far, I'm totally lost. It must be because I'm not British, or of the upper class.
posted by TrishaLynn 30 July | 15:23
Reading a biography of Tamerlane, just started the first Harry Potter book, too.
posted by Hugh Janus 30 July | 15:26
I just finished Six Moon Dance by Sheri S. Tepper (someone recommended her at Mefi, I've read several of her books now and also recommend her) and I'm reading various books about local history (Fraser Valley, Abbotsford, etc.).

I'm also considering re-reading the HP books and the Little House series. I re-read the LH series every couple years.
posted by deborah 30 July | 16:08
I just finished Crazy for God, Frank Schaeffer's memoir,


I just got the email from the library yesterday that my hold for this book had come in. I put the hold on it months ago, and forgot about it.

ysy!
posted by danf 30 July | 16:35
(I mean yay!)
posted by danf 30 July | 16:47
The Road to Reality (by Penrose)

yay pop-mathematical-physics!
posted by qvantamon 30 July | 17:18
A Is For Alien, more eco-creepiness by Caitlin Kiernan
posted by Ardiril 30 July | 18:16
Me Talk Pretty One Day
posted by plinth 30 July | 19:48
Road Signs.
posted by jonmc 30 July | 19:56
A Temple of Texts by William Gass.

Finished that one on the train.
posted by jason's_planet 30 July | 22:58
Care of the Soul, when I'm feeling deep and philosophical.

The Devil Wears Prada, when I'm not.

Immortality by Kundera, when I want to fall asleep while wondering why on earth I used to like Kundera so much
posted by occhiblu 30 July | 23:03
Oh yes, I'm also jumping through Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy; there were some parts that interested me more than others, so I read those first, and now I'm getting back to others. Lots of helpful tips for managing moods!
posted by ThePinkSuperhero 30 July | 23:09
Well, Feeling Good is not really meant to be read front to back like a novel. You can totally pick and choose which sections are relevant to your current needs.

Hope you're feeling better.
posted by jason's_planet 30 July | 23:39
The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing.
posted by Daniel Charms 30 July | 23:47
Alabaster by Caitlin R Kiernan. Although the protagonist is a 16 year old gutter tramp who fights demons with a rusty, dull kitchen knife and is guided by an angel of questionable benevolence, her actions have consequences.that stretch far beyond our collective space-times.
posted by Ardiril 31 July | 02:21
Oracle Bones by Peter Hessler as preparation for my three week trip to China, leaving tomorrow (eeep!). Book's excellent so far.
posted by AwkwardPause 31 July | 08:22
I'm reading Infinite Jest, and I probably will be next time anyone asks, too for about the next year or so.
posted by rmless2 31 July | 09:24
Moonseed, by Stephen Baxter.
posted by Wolfdog 31 July | 11:11
House of Leaves. I started it on the train to DC for the failedmeetup and I read it in little chunks before my dance classes now. It's a nice 'me time' book.
posted by sperose 31 July | 11:15
Recently finished: Poltergeist by Kat Richardson, and Too Many Curses by A. Lee Martinez, which is a bit better, and subtler, than the cheesy cover might suggest.
posted by Wolfdog 31 July | 11:16
I just finished The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. Pretty entertaining, and a couple of very well-drawn characters. I'm still casting around for my next novel to read.
posted by peggynature 01 August | 09:36
The eternal question. || Enviro-Bear 2000: Operation: Hibernation

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