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Whatcha readin now? (book, books, reading, read) (3 Viewers)

Finished King's Mercedes Man - it was ok, a little too clumsy and some of the characters were awkward. will probably read the next one (Finders Keepers) as I read a couple page preview in one of my wife's magazines on the plane home.

Am half way through another King book Revival - so far it has my attention, but is a bit slow.

Got distracted while on vacation and started The Dog Stars by Peter Heller and can't put it down. A little more than half way though and it is great.
Really liked The Dog Stars. Read it a while ago and quick and I'm trying to remember what I really liked, I think I liked the writing a lot.

 
Reading "The Crying of Lot 49." I'm not sure I completely get Pyncheon but he does come up with some good lines throughout. As I understand this is one of the more accessible Pyncheon novels but it's still pretty far out there and it takes a lot more critical analysis than I have time for at this point in my life.
I just thought it was ok. He is a smart writer and there's some really funny stuff in there, but in the end I didn't feel anything from it. I felt like I was the butt of the joke or something.
 
My daughter, between freshman and sophomore year in high school, has required reading this summer:

Fahrenheit 451

1984

The Power of One

Enjoyed the first two, but the third is one of my all time favorite novels. I really hope she likes it- whenever a novel is required, somehow it's never as good.
Read the first two, not the last. What's the premise, why do you like it so much? Interested.
Its about a South African boy of English descent who is trapped in a pro-Nazi Afrikaner boarding school as World War II breaks out. Later he becomes a boxer.
 
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Finished King's Mercedes Man - it was ok, a little too clumsy and some of the characters were awkward. will probably read the next one (Finders Keepers) as I read a couple page preview in one of my wife's magazines on the plane home.

Am half way through another King book Revival - so far it has my attention, but is a bit slow.

Got distracted while on vacation and started The Dog Stars by Peter Heller and can't put it down. A little more than half way though and it is great.
Really liked The Dog Stars. Read it a while ago and quick and I'm trying to remember what I really liked, I think I liked the writing a lot.
Prose was stream-of-consciousness, yet beautiful.

 
Finished King's Mercedes Man - it was ok, a little too clumsy and some of the characters were awkward. will probably read the next one (Finders Keepers) as I read a couple page preview in one of my wife's magazines on the plane home.

Am half way through another King book Revival - so far it has my attention, but is a bit slow.

Got distracted while on vacation and started The Dog Stars by Peter Heller and can't put it down. A little more than half way though and it is great.
Really liked The Dog Stars. Read it a while ago and quick and I'm trying to remember what I really liked, I think I liked the writing a lot.
Prose was stream-of-consciousness, yet beautiful.
Yes.

I don't fish or fly. I now want to do both.

 
My daughter, between freshman and sophomore year in high school, has required reading this summer:

Fahrenheit 451

1984

The Power of One

Enjoyed the first two, but the third is one of my all time favorite novels. I really hope she likes it- whenever a novel is required, somehow it's never as good.
Read the first two, not the last. What's the premise, why do you like it so much? Interested.
Its about a South African boy of English descent who is trapped in a pro-Nazi Afrikaner boarding school as World War II breaks out. Later he becomes a boxer.
I didn't realize it was a book. The movie was pretty good, Morgan Freeman and all...

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105159/

 
Finished 2 short health/nutrition type books. Interestingly enough, their theories and conclusions are very similar.

The first one: "THE MIRACULOUS RESULTS OF EXTREMELY HIGH DOSES OF THE SUNSHINE HORMONE VITAMIN D3" by Jeff Bowles.

Ok, its a lot of rambling and he repeats himself a lot but there are a ton of gold nuggets as well.

In very short: Most of us are deficient in the Hormone know as Vitamin D. Most of us are inside all day and when we go outside we slather on sunscreen. This D deficiency has many negative health-related consequences. And studies - many anecdotal - but some empirical as well have shown that supplementing Vitamin D has major health benefits.

Most mammals have some sort of hibernation response to the changing seasons. Not all sleep for months like bears but virtually all have a response of fat storage and slower metabolism. Humans , he says (and I would agree) also have a hibernation response - although not as pronounced as some other mammals - we still slow our metabolism down and try and store fat for the harsh season ahead. Vitamin D is the signal to the changing seasons. When we have a lot of vitamin D (way back when we were outside for most of the day and getting it from the sun) our metabolism speeds up and doesn't store as much fat due to the abundance of the season. Conversely, when Vitamin D is low its a signal to our bodies that food is going to be scarce and we need to slow down and store fat.

Unfortunately, most of us lack enough Vitamin D so our bodies are in constant hibernation mode (storing fat and slowing metabolism).

Mainly, due to this book (and some other supporting literature I have read) I currently supplement vitamin D.

---------

The second related book is "The Queen of Fats" by Susan Allport. She has a very similar premise although her premise is that a lack of Omega 3 Fats and the over abundance of Omega 6 is causing major damage to our bodies - including fat storage and slower metabolism.

In contrast to the Vitamin D book, she is an excellent writer and actually makes reading about essential fatty acids interesting.

She brings down a huge amount of supporting evidence. Just massive. Its so clear cut that this is one of the causes of modern day diseases (heart disease, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, overweight) that the current USDA nutrition requirements will be looked back on as a crime against humanity

Among the explanations she states that Omega 3 is found in leaves and omega 6 is found in seeds. Way back when we were hunter gatherers we ate leafy greens (and the animals that ate leafy greens) during seasons of abundance and we stored and ate the seeds during the difficult winter months. Again Omega3=faster metabolism and Omega6=slower metabolism.

Unfortunately, the standard American (almost global) diet is heavy on processed foods and vegetable oils which are mainly based on omega 6 fats and contains almost no omega 3.

I have started making diet changes to incorporate more omega3 (and may supplement with fish oil) if I don't think I can get enough via diet alone.

 
I can't believe I did this but I was less than a 100 pages from finishing Seveneves and my library loaner date passed, it just deleted itself from my overdrive. GRRRR!!!

Unlike a couple people who commented, so far I was preferring the latter third of the book, pretty good pure sci fi that blended great with the first two thirds. Now I'm like 15th on the waiting list to finish it.

It's probably best anyway. I really need to spend the week reading up on Azure deployments and Visual Studio Online Team Foundation Server. Not exactly exciting reading but we have a huge server/environment upgrade coming and I need to get prepared.

I have the Bone Clocks (David Mitchell) lying next to my bed from Christmas that I still haven't read. It will be tempting but I need to hold off until after the server upgrade. I really enjoyed Cloud Atlas and the Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet.

 
Just finished Desert Places by Blake Crouch. My second novel of Crouch's, and I'd recommend him highly (he's also the author of the Wayward Pines trilogy). This one is creepy, hopeless, and somehow ultimately satisfying. Apparently the first in another trilogy. I'd say Crouch reminds me of early Koontz but with more of a thriller than horror bent.

Just started Golden Son, the follow up to Red Rising. Just as good and intriguing as the original so far.

 
Halfway through the new Kundera. He is one of my all time favorites. It's classic Kundera style, but doesn't seem like one of his classics. Likely the last thing he writes due to his age.

 
Got distracted while on vacation and started The Dog Stars by Peter Heller and can't put it down. A little more than half way though and it is great.
Really enjoyed this one as well, has anybody read anything else he's done?

 
Just finished Beat The Reaper. Fun read and actually more moving/touching than I thought it would be.

(Although there were some parts here and there that required a movie-like suspension of disbelief.)

 
Just finished Beat The Reaper. Fun read and actually more moving/touching than I thought it would be.

(Although there were some parts here and there that required a movie-like suspension of disbelief.)
I hear you on the bolded, really enjoyed that book tho. The sequel Wild Thing was awful, avoid

 
As a follow-up to beat the reaper:

1. To those in-the-know: How close to reality is his description of what goes on in a hospital?

2. Can anyone recommend a non-fictional account of an insiders view/tell-all of being a doctor in a hospital?

 
As a follow-up to beat the reaper:

1. To those in-the-know: How close to reality is his description of what goes on in a hospital?

2. Can anyone recommend a non-fictional account of an insiders view/tell-all of being a doctor in a hospital?
Michael Crichton actually wrote a book about his experience, he graduated from Med school. It was called Five Patients.

I read it a LONG time ago and the info is probably dated but I remember it was really interesting.

 
I recently finished Dan Simmons' The Fifth Heart. As is usually the case when I read a Simmons book, I liked it quite a bit but it was too long with too many sidetracks that had nothing to do with the plot. If you like his recent work, you'll like this.

I'm now on Stephen King's Finders Keepers. It's a sequel of sorts to Mr Mercedes. I'm about 2/3 through it and like it. As with most of King's novels these days, there's nothing ground breaking going on here. I guess I'd describe it as "comfort reading" for me. He's got a short story collection coming out later this year which I'm really looking forward to. I think that's his wheelhouse, especially nowadays.

My Wishlist is loaded with stuff I want to read (some recommended here). A few at the top are:

Let The Old Dreams Die - John A Lindqvist. Short story collection from the guy who wrote Let The Right One In.

Paradise Sky - Joe R Landsdale

The Border - Robert McCammon

Dead Wake - Erik Larsen

Epitaph: A Novel Of The Ok Corral - Mary D Russell

Thoughts on these?

I know someone here has read the Russell book and liked it. I don't think I've read Landsdale before, but have 3 or 4 of his books on my list. McCammon's book is SciFi, which is out of the ordinary for him. Larsen's book - you know what you're getting with him and I'm sure it'll keep me interested. I love Lindqvist, but I really have to be in the right frame of mind to get into him.

 
Uruk-Hai said:
Paradise Sky - Joe R Landsdale
I read 3 or 4 Landsdale novels a few years ago. Really enjoyed the first one, but after a while it seemed like he was writing the same book over and over again. He may have branched out a bit since though.

 
I am 75% into Finders Keepers as well. I thought it was going to go in another direction early but I am happy with it so far.

I am a sucker for the way King tells a story. I too think shorties are his best bet these days.

PM me if you want to talk about FK. I'll be done by tomorrow/ Tuesday the latest.
I finished it yesterday. Fun read.

 
Haven't posted any book stuff in a long time, but here goes:

Finished Worthy by Catherine Ryan Hyde. Named for the dog who helps a damaged young man reconnect with the woman who loved his father 20 years ealier. Very character driven, nothing much actually happens, but really enjoyed it. I'll definitely read more by her.

Have almost finished "The Rise and Fall of the Second Largest Empire in History", a quick easy narrative history of the Mongol empire from the rise of Ghenghis Khan through to the breakup and fall of the splinter kingdoms a couple of hundred years later. Interesting read, and at times shocking in regard to the casual brutality with which they treated conquered people and how this period impacted history to the present day. I read a different, genetic history book a couple of years ago which said that around 8% of the current population of the central Asian steppe are directly descended from a single figure in the 13th century, being Yesugai, Genghis Khan's father, through the "actions" of Ghengis and his brothers and then sons who were his leading generals.

The Empty Quarter by David Robbins. Did not like this at all, but a lot due to incorrect expectations on my part. It's basically an action novel with pretty thin, cliched military characters involved in a rescue operation gone wrong. Based on a description or review I read, I was expecting something more character based, and centred on the Arab characters rather than the military team. Ended up skimming the last quarter just to see how it ended and then didn't particularly like that either. :shrug:

Crow Hollow by Michael Wallace. Liked this one quite a bit. Told from the POV of a British spy in pre Revolutionary America sent to investigate the death of another British agent. Without getting into spoilers he uncovers some underhand scheming by some of the locals and follows that through to it's conclusion. Solid balance in this one between the investigation side of the plot and relationship between the two main characters. Nothing spectacular but an enjoyable read.

River of Stars by Guy Gavriel Kay. I've been a massive GGK fanboy, but for some reason both the plot and the characters in this one just didn't grab hold of me the way his other novels have. Was consistent style wise with his other work, but this one just didn't pull me in. Found myself quite often putting this down after a half hour and not coming back to it for a week. Still highly recommend all his other historical novels though.

One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.

 
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i really liked Fives And Twenty-Fives, a debut novel from Michael Pitre.

Pitre weaves three narrators (a Marine lieutenant, a Marine corpsman, and an Iraqi translator - all part of a engineering unit that removes booby-trap bombs from road potholes in Iraq) as they recount episodes from their tours in Iraq and from their time trying to move on afterwards.

 
Let The Old Dreams Die - John A Lindqvist. Short story collection from the guy who wrote Let The Right One In.

Paradise Sky - Joe R Landsdale

The Border - Robert McCammon

Dead Wake - Erik Larsen

Epitaph: A Novel Of The Ok Corral - Mary D Russell

Thoughts on these?
Just finished Dead Wake and actually didn't like it that much. In Devil in the White City, the stories centered around 3 people and you wanted to know what would happen next to these people. It read like a fiction book almost. In Dead Wake, he gives you back stories on dozens of people on the Lusitania and a lot of it was tedious minutia. I have enjoyed other historical books like this that give you some insight on what it was like in year XXXX, but this one wasn't one of these. I found myself not really interested in any one of the passenger story lines. I did like the story line on the German sub captain.

Looking at Amazon's reviews, seems like I'm in the minority, but I preferred Seabiscuit for a non-fiction book on early 1900's and I preferred In Harm's Way for a shipwreck/survival book.

 
I chose the McCammon book. It starts out full-throttle and doesn't let up for the first 1/4 of the book. Then there's a shift in location with different characters that takes some of the wind out of it (though it's as bat #### crazy as the first part). I'm maybe 1/3 of the way in now and have no idea where it's going.

 
Just finished reading (from my local library here in NJ)

How Music Got Free: The End of an Industry, the Turn of the Century, and the Patient Zero of Piracy by Stephen Witt

Book just came out last month and was a fairly quick read, but really interesting. Takes you through the period from the development of the MP2/MP3 to today, from the perspective of the developers (big part of first 3rd of book) and then a music executive and one of the key participants in leaks to illegal sites for music.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0525426612

 
Finished A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini a few days ago. Covers a period of Afghanistan's history starting before the Russian invasion and mujahideen wars through to just post the removal of the Taliban government. Tells the story of two women who's lives are brought together by events of the war. Even though the protagonists are women, it's not one of those books which is intended more for that audience, it's fantastic storytelling and one of those books that leaves a lot with you after you've finished.

As you'd probably expect from the setting, it's mostly not happy events that propel the story and there was a point about 3/4 through where the relentless bleakness and tragedy really started to wear me down. Didn't make it easier to know that exactly these kind of things happened to tens or hundreds of thousands of people during this period.

Without getting spoilery it does change direction somewhat after that so there is some light at the end of the tunnel.

If you're put off by books described as "literary fiction" I think that's kind of an overused label these days, I'd highly recommend this.

 
Has anybody picked up Tower Lord yet? I really liked Blood Song, but the reviews of Tower Lord that I have read are not very favorable.
Finished it a few days ago. It was OK, but nowhere near the standard of the first book. Rather than follow a single PoV character as in the first book, there are 4 threads going here, only only two of them (just barely) come together by the end of the book. The other two PoV characters are just left kind of hanging. Some of the negative reviews are based on this change, I thought the idea was OK, just not executed very well. Some of the character development seems poorly done, there's one character that abruptly moves from one extreme to the other in the space of a few weeks. Plot wise not that much actually happens either.

The first book was initially self published, this one smacks a bit of being rushed so the publisher can make some money. As I said above the plot here seems to lack a bit of direction, the story threads aren't tied together by the end of the book (yes it's a trilogy but this still seems sloppy to me) and it just lacks the dark edge of the first one. Good guys just always good, bad guys one dimensionally bad.

I also had a weird "Return of the Jedi" like vibe, that no matter how bad things looked, everything was going to be OK. Just didn't have that sense of "anything might happen" I think Blood Song did. Seemed a bit like the author might just like his characters a bit too much for anything bad to happen to them.

I'll probably still read the third, but I'll wait for the reviews this time before I buy.
Reviews on the 3rd book in this series are brutal so I'm going to pass. Such a shame after a smashing first book in the series. For me this has been a test case in ignoring sunk costs in decision making. I have about 50 books on my Amazon wish list, too many options to spend time on something which I seem certain not to enjoy.

Hopefully Anthony Ryan gets back on track in the future.

 
Finished HW Brands' new bio on Reagan. Pretty good read and thorough, though relies on his diaries maybe a bit more than needed. Favorable of Reagan, but not too hagiographic.

Just picked up Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See.

 
One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.
I read tons of dystopian, post-apocalyptic fiction. This was one of my favorites, seemed so realistic.

 
Finished A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini a few days ago. Covers a period of Afghanistan's history starting before the Russian invasion and mujahideen wars through to just post the removal of the Taliban government. Tells the story of two women who's lives are brought together by events of the war. Even though the protagonists are women, it's not one of those books which is intended more for that audience, it's fantastic storytelling and one of those books that leaves a lot with you after you've finished.

As you'd probably expect from the setting, it's mostly not happy events that propel the story and there was a point about 3/4 through where the relentless bleakness and tragedy really started to wear me down. Didn't make it easier to know that exactly these kind of things happened to tens or hundreds of thousands of people during this period.

Without getting spoilery it does change direction somewhat after that so there is some light at the end of the tunnel.

If you're put off by books described as "literary fiction" I think that's kind of an overused label these days, I'd highly recommend this.
I read And the Mountains Echoed and really liked it, I have this one but haven't read it yet.

If you ever want to read a novel that is amazing but gut ravaging depressed, I mean no mercy despair, try A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry. A really great novel but it was exhausting and I couldn't wait for it to be over.

 
Anyone read Harper Lee "Wattchman" yet ?

Mixed thoughts on it (an no didn't read but plan on it) - mixed thoughts based on reviews only
I'm have it on hold at the library. I don't expect much since it was a rejected draft, but it's more of a curiosity than anything.
 
Best recent books:

Dud Avocado

Saint Mazie

Remains of the Day

Currently reading:

A Girl on a Train

Portnoy's Complaint

Cat's Cradle

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

 
A Girl on a Train
How is it so far? It's been sitting on my wish list for a while, but I haven't pulled the trigger yet.

I just finished McCammon's The Border. I saw it described somewhere as a cross between his early works Swan Song & Stinger, and that's about right. The set up was great, but he went off the rails a bit towards the end - there were a couple of philosophy lessons that brought the action to a screeching halt and the conclusion was kind of silly. Still, an enjoyable read if you like scifi/PA.

I think I'm going with Epitaph (about the OK Corral) next.

 
One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.
I read tons of dystopian, post-apocalyptic fiction. This was one of my favorites, seemed so realistic.
Just bought this and I'm really looking forward to it based on what you guys have said.

I've never been one for the "classics" but I'm really digging The Count of Monte Cristo

I can't believe I've waited this long to read it

 
If you liked Doc you will also like Epitaph; I enjoyed both greatly.
I did like Doc. There were a couple of things that took me out of it periodically - a few direct (or almost so) quotes from the movie Tombstone, and I thought she was channeling McMurtry a little too hard sometimes. But overall she's tells a good story and is a talented writer. I'm maybe 10% into Epitaph and am enjoying it so far.

 
One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.
I read tons of dystopian, post-apocalyptic fiction. This was one of my favorites, seemed so realistic.
Just bought this and I'm really looking forward to it based on what you guys have said.

I've never been one for the "classics" but I'm really digging The Count of Monte Cristo

I can't believe I've waited this long to read it
I tried this novel a couple of years ago and gave up 1/3 of the way thru. Could not get past the appearance that it was edited by a third grader.

 
Ok, so I started It again. I think I read it in H.S., but I am not 100%. I got through most of Kings work up until the point of It. No surprises- still like Pet Semetary, Dead Zone, and The Shining the best. I think I asked before, but is there a consensus top 3-4 books of his from the 90s on? I thnk I have only read a couple- Liseys Story and The time traveling Kennedy one.
1. The Stand

 
Ok, so I started It again. I think I read it in H.S., but I am not 100%. I got through most of Kings work up until the point of It. No surprises- still like Pet Semetary, Dead Zone, and The Shining the best. I think I asked before, but is there a consensus top 3-4 books of his from the 90s on? I thnk I have only read a couple- Liseys Story and The time traveling Kennedy one.
1. The Stand
Yep, The Stand

Green Mile

Bag of Bones

Needful Things

Desperation

I would say Dark tower as a series, and Needful, Desparation, Insomnia, and Hearts in Atlantis with it as a "world". But if you are talking individual novels the above. Drawing Of The Three might stand above all those but is part of the DT series.

 
facook said:
E Street Brat said:
One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.
I read tons of dystopian, post-apocalyptic fiction. This was one of my favorites, seemed so realistic.
Just bought this and I'm really looking forward to it based on what you guys have said.

I've never been one for the "classics" but I'm really digging The Count of Monte Cristo

I can't believe I've waited this long to read it
I tried this novel a couple of years ago and gave up 1/3 of the way thru. Could not get past the appearance that it was edited by a third grader.
One Second After: The author is not a good writer, but the story is well thought out.

Stephen King: for late period stuff, Duma Key is an underrated book. Also try his most recent short story collections - Full Dark, No Stars and (the name of the other is escaping me).

 
facook said:
E Street Brat said:
One Second After by William R Forstchen. I'm always fascinated by end of the world type stories and this is one of the best I've read. Very hard to read at times, with some really heart breaking moments but also people rising to the occasion, pulling together etc. The most outstanding aspect to me was how realistic it seemed, there wasn't any times where you suspend disbelief and call BS. No really evil "Randall Flag" type supervillain, but certainly plenty of those who take advantage of the breakdown of law and order etc. Highly recommend this one.
I read tons of dystopian, post-apocalyptic fiction. This was one of my favorites, seemed so realistic.
Just bought this and I'm really looking forward to it based on what you guys have said.

I've never been one for the "classics" but I'm really digging The Count of Monte Cristo

I can't believe I've waited this long to read it
I tried this novel a couple of years ago and gave up 1/3 of the way thru. Could not get past the appearance that it was edited by a third grader.
One Second After: The author is not a good writer, but the story is well thought out.Stephen King: for late period stuff, Duma Key is an underrated book. Also try his most recent short story collections - Full Dark, No Stars and (the name of the other is escaping me).
Yes I should have included Duma Key. That was a good book.

 
A Girl on a Train
How is it so far? It's been sitting on my wish list for a while, but I haven't pulled the trigger yet.
just read this yesterday. it's skippable, imo.

written by a woman who doesn't seem to like men very much (just basing that on the characters in the book) and doesn't really know how to write male dialogue (i was reminded of the Seinfeld where Jerry/George initially leave Elaine out of their pilot because they don't know what a woman would say). though really, none of the characters here - male or female - will elicit your sympathy.

 
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Just finished reading five incredible books. Not sure where to go from here.

First Fifteen Lives of Harry August - I'm a time travel nut, and I loved Groundhog day, so this book was a fave

The Martian -- One of the few books that had me glued to the pages. I couldn't put it down

All the light We Cannot See - My least favorite of this group, but I still really liked it.

Seven Eves -- Huge Stephenson fan. Hit a home run with this book.

The Bone Tree -- 2nd part to a trilogy from Greg Iles. It was quite good.

I love Stephenson, but couldn't push through Anathem. Maybe I'll give try and tackle that, or move on to Snow Crash, which I've never read.

 

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