The Dry by Jane Harper will be next, also chosen because it fits plum's March reading theme.
I LOVE Jane Harper. I've read all three of her novels. I hope you enjoy "The Dry"!
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Working my way through Hugh Howey's Wool saga. It's a hefty read I haven't had time for until now.
Here in NZ we're just hours away from a 4 week lockdown so I'll admit reading hasn't been on my mind. Once my parents manage to get back to their home (they have a special extension to get back to our island, flight leaving tomorrow), I will feel a little more at ease though I know I won't be able to see them (hard in itself as we usually have a meal with them once a week).
A few days ago I was two thirds of the way through 'The Best of Adam Sharp' by Graeme Simsion: https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/15620476/ , a wishlist tag of last year from mattandmandy75. When I get back into it, I will go on to Spotify and listen to the soundtrack that goes with the book, while I read. Unless my wife picks up extra work before then, hopefully she'll enjoy the music too while I read.
Then comes the choosing of the next book. Anyone up for a Non-Facebook 24 hour read-a-thon set on a WEEK DAY?
My alternative is The White Family by Maggie Gee which I chose because it fits plum's March reading theme.
The Dry by Jane Harper will be next, also chosen because it fits plum's March reading theme.
I LOVE Jane Harper. I've read all three of her novels. I hope you enjoy "The Dry"!
Yes, it's disappearing fast as I keep turning pages . . .
I love this series. Inspector Singh always brings a smile to my face :-)
And now they've all been turned! Didn't last long, I couldn't put it down!
https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/15894007
And now they've all been turned! Didn't last long, I couldn't put it down!
https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/15894007
So glad you enjoyed it, Nu-Knees!
The Familiars by Stacey Halls
The Familiars by Stacey Halls
Love the sound of this....I have just been online to purchase a copy for my Mum who lives in Lancashire, England.
https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/5895595
Thank you for highlighting this one to me Nu-Knees!
I hope you enjoy The Dry by Jane Harper, it was one of my favorite reads of 2017.
https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/5244173
I hope you enjoy The Dry by Jane Harper, it was one of my favorite reads of 2017.
Thank you again. Yes, I bought this copy when I saw it because I remembered seeing positive comments on BookTalk. Will be starting it tomorrow . . .
I'm also starting a lighter novel to run alongside it: Bird Cottage by Eva Meijer, also chosen because it fits plum's March reading theme.
In Florence, at 6:00 p.m. (noon my time), everyone will go out on their balconies or open their windows and read the opening verse:
Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra via
mi ritrovai per una selva oscura,
che la diritta via era smarrita
In the middle of our life's journey
I found myself in a dark wood,
The straight way was lost.
Most of these I really enjoyed and found that reading short stories helps with keeping your concentration.
https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/14583882/
This is a delightful old book (1940) by Charles Lee; I found a copy of it, signed by the author, in a used bookstore in Quebec (I think it was) a few years ago. It has a chapter for each month, full of delightfully old-fashioned book trivia, lists and occasionally quotes, somehow related to that month. I've read January's a few times :) but this year decided to work through it - and as with everything going on I hadn't read March yet, I have been today. It references Walden: 'it was during the month of "stormy March" ' when Thoreau started cutting wood for his cabin. I thought I had a copy of Walden - turns out I don't, or I can't find it, but I did find one of his other books on my shelves, The Maine Woods, a hardback published in 1950 that's a compilation of several of his travels in that area, and began in on that.
Replying to ReallyBookish: From my understanding of the introduction, the book combines accounts of three of his voyages that had been published, often serialized and one posthumously, in magazines. They have been arranged into some form of chronology and sort of blended into one narrative arc for this book from 1950. It's very possible the same pieces have been published in other forms, too.
The free ebook idea is a good one, though probably not for me - I don't enjoy reading digitally, perhaps because I work on the computer a lot and associate it more with that? Nevertheless, good to know if I get desperate :)
I chose them, because all the physical books are VERY old ones on my (M)TBR, the Lawrence book because it's a 1001-book and Rode sneeuw because it's a thriller and I like to read those to relax, how strange that may sound to you.
I’m now 1/2 way into “My Sister, the Serial Killer” by Oyinkan Braithwaite https://www.bookcrossing.com/---/5659360
Enjoying the short snappy chapters of this one.
It is still such a slog. But I gave it another go because it gets such solid reviews. I don't know. I just don't get it. I do liek the Raven King footnotes.
Just started "Lab Girl" memoir by Hope Jarhenhttps://www.bookcrossing.com/---/15913822
This one is on my TBR and I have a copy. What do you think of it so far?
It's short and easy book to read. However, it's not what I expected, but then I wasn't sure what I was expecting? I'm about 60pages in. So far I enjoy her writing about having favorite trees in her life, about tree seeds and their fight for survival from pre-historic times to now. The botany/paleobiology stuff is interning so far and on a good level to understand.
As part of a local book club I'm reading "Who Has Seen the Wind" by W. O. Mitchell, a Canadian classic.
"...still puffs of cloud were high in the sky, retaining their shapes for hours on end, one of them near the horizon, presenting a profile view of blown cheeks and extended lips like the wind personification upon an old map."
Doesn't that paint an exact description? Love his way with words!
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