Khadaji's Whatcha Readin' thread - December 2016 Edition

A charming, lovely book. I hope you continue to enjoy it.

Started today on The Last One by Alexandra Oliva. It’s a novel about a bunch of people competing on a reality show like Survivor, and during the course of the show a real-life calamity befalls the outside world. Liking it so far.

Just finished John Grisham’s The Appeal, and I mostly liked it, despite the downbeat ending (he fakes you out, making you think there’ll be a surprise happy ending, but it’s not that kind of book). An entertaining mix of mass-tort law and hardball politics.

I’m also reading Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet, which I haven’t read in many years. Good to see Holmes’s and Watson’s first meeting again.

Tonight I expect to start Sarah Vowell’s Lafayette in the Somewhat United States, about the French hero of the American Revolution and his decades-later visit to the young republic. I enjoyed her Assassination Vacation and this looks like it’ll be good, too.

Haven’t read that, but I’ve heard good things. I know a housing court judge who practically requires his staff to read it.

I had very mixed feelings about that book - interesting premise, but not written especially well - but I’d say it’s worth a read.

My wife already finished Evicted and says it’s very good, and very sad. No-cause evictions are allowed in Portland, and with the real estate market exploding beyond all reason here, landlords are cashing in on their neglected properties. Homes that should not bring over $150K are going for $600K.

“The Son” by Philipp Meyer. I picked this up at the college library (here in Texas), assuming that it was just a mandated acquisition of Texas writers. But there is an enormity to this man’s work, which I think remains to be recognized. Just a few chapters in, but he may be a legitimate claimant to carry the Cormac McCarthy tradition into a new generation. (Now that McCarthy has sold out to Hollywood.)

Got Miss Marple short stories at the liberry and picked up the latest Maggie Hope mystery at the bookstore. Author is Susan Elia MacNeal and the series takes place in England during WWII.

Finished Imprudence by Gail Carriger today. She is really NOT tapping into the fabulousness of the first series here at all. She really needs to decide if she wants to write another YA series or an adult series, there’s coy amounts of giggly type of adolescent pre sex and some off screen sex but c’mon, lady you’re embarrassing yourself here, expecially after the scenes in the first book involving a naked werewolf locked in a cage with Alexia.

Also her technology is getting on my nerves, steampunk so overblown Victoriana with unecessary embellishment but you have international air travel, tourism, international communications that don’t depend on wires but you can’t grasp refrigeration?

Other than that, I liked the book :smiley:

I’m onto the final Gentleman Bastards book, Republic of Thieves. Yep, this series will be one I reread.

I finished reading “The Jungle” by Upton Sinclair. The first half was fine misery porn, a la Emile Zola. But I was turned off by the racist tirade in the last half where lazy, banjo-pickin’, crap-shooting “buck Negroes” came north to take our jobs and our womenfolk. Oy. The socialist mumbo-jumbo at the end was just boring.

I was interested, however, to find out which are “the lowest foreigners”. For the record: Greeks, Roumanians, Sicilians, and Slovaks (not necessarily in that order).

Kind of amazing how they’re always “lazy” or on public assitance but they also steal all the jobs too…

They’re cunning that way, ain’t they?

Enjoying Sarah Vowell’s Lafayette in the Somewhat United States, good snarky historical fun, and have begun E.L. Doctorow’s The March, a novel about Gen. Sherman’s 1864 March to the Sea. It has an interesting cast of characters, including escaped slaves, cranky old Southern coots, two deserters from the Confederate Army, a Southern belle-turned-nurse, Sherman himself, and Coalhouse Walker, said to be 22 in 1864, which makes me think he’s the father or even the grandfather of the character of the same name in Doctorow’s Ragtime.

Just finished The Last One by Alexandra Oliva. If you like books about the end of the world, try this one. I really enjoyed it. Since it was a first novel, I rounded up a bit to five stars over at Goodreads. I’ll be looking out for this author in future.

On Tuesday I finished No Man’s Land, the newest book in the John Puller series (by David Baldacci). At first I was wary of the setup – Puller’s mother disappeared 30 years prior and suddenly his father, a retired 3-star and Army legend now suffering from advanced dementia, has been accused of her murder – but I wound up liking it just as much as the previous Puller stories.

I knew that next up would be the new collection of P.D. James short stories, The Mistletoe Murder: And Other Stories. I just started the third story, and so far they do not disappoint. :slight_smile: The first story, in particular, I thought was very clever; that one will stay with me for a while. The author’s famous character Adam Dalgliesh finally makes an appearance in this third story, and it’s nice to see that name featured in a plot I’m not familiar with yet. I’ve missed reading new James since she died.

I expect to wrap up the short stories either tonight or tomorrow night…then it will be time to refamiliarize myself with all of the samples that are on my Kindle, and pick the next adventure!

Just finished the latest “Expanse” book, “Babylon’s Ashes”. Lots of fun, as usual.

Love me some Expanse!

I gave up on the Trees book in favor of the new Ken Liu book, The Wall of Storms. It’s set in an island nation with east Asia-ish culture, heavy on the courtly intrigue, great stuff for epic fantasy nerds like me.

Came in to mention this…just finished it about 5 minutes ago.

I will have to let it settle and read it again.

Prior to that I read “Between the World and Me,” by Ta-Nehisi Coates.

Interspersed those with a post-apocalyptic short story collection called “Wastelands” and a horror anthology.

Apparently I’m in quite the mood.

I’m on a grizzly bear true story binge. Almost through The Night of the Grizzlies by Jack Olsen … an oldie, but a riveting read. It’s about the two girls killed by grizzlies on the same night in Glacier Park in 1968 - the first bear deaths in the park in over sixty years. This was back when they would still dump garbage to draw the bears in in order to entertain the park visitors.

Next up is Mark of the Grizzly.

These are working very well to distract me from all of the politics that have absorbed me for so long. :slight_smile: Yay.

I had a cross-country flight earlier this week, so I got some reading in. First up was Gourmet Rhapsody, by Muriel Barbery, which is set in the same time and place as her earlier, wonderful book, The Elegance of the Hedgehog. Gourmet Rhapsody was a relatively quick and enjoyable read, especially if you like reading about French food and/or social class. The writing is lovely.

I also read Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly, a non-fiction book about black women who worked for NASA and it’s predecessor from approximately 1944 through 1970. I like stories of the Civil Rights movement, STEM-y women, and pretty much anything space related. Unfortunately, the book as a whole is a little bit less than the sum of it’s individual parts. I’m not sure exactly how I would improve it, but I think it could have been improved with a little restructuring. Still, the personal stories and the historical context were interesting.

I’ll need to hit the bookstore in the airport for the trip home!

Finished The Arm, which is about pro baseball pitchers and Tommy Johns surgery and contract negotiations. Surprisingly interesting to this non-baseball fan. That was on paper - also some boring thing about bullying that I dropped halfway thru and can’t even remember the name of.

On audio/dog walking, I finished R.L.Stevenson’s The Black Arrow, which started slowly, rambled on for a bit, and then ended. Meh. I guess you can’t always expect something as glorious as Treasure Island or Kidnapped with every time out. Also A Bullet for Cinderella, which was 50s pulp fiction by John D. McDonald and shows it. They used to say about some women “she’s no better than she should be”, and this is the same.

And I am about a third of the way thru one of my favorite authors, Murray Leinster, and his The Pirate of Ersatz. Huge fun, as always - this time it’s space travel with a cynic. Some of the philosophizing at the beginning reminds me of Heinlein.

Regards,
Shodan

Agree with this! I just finished this book, and it’s a fascinating story, but the book doesn’t quite rise to it. It felt jumbled to me, as if the author and editor couldn’t decide on whether to stick to straight chronology, or focus on one individual woman at a time, or group things by theme. There were also a few things that seemed sloppy, for example they referred to one of the astronauts sometimes by his given name and sometimes by his nickname (Virgil/Gus Grissom) in a way that didn’t make it clear it was the same person, if you didn’t already know. That seems really nitpicky, but whenever I come across things like that, it always makes me wonder what else I missed. I am still looking forward to seeing the movie!

I had read Between the World and Me a bit ago, and just reread it for a work seminar. There is so much in a relatively short book that I was glad to have a more structured opportunity to discuss many of the themes and issues.