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I just finished reading Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes. I picked it up for 50 cents this past spring at our local library sale. The movie, touted a “chick flick,” is no comparison to this fascinating book.
I will forever be reading a book in the Malazan world.
“The Other Woman”, new from Daniel Silva in his thriller series starring Gabriel Allon.
“An Irish Country Practice”, by Patrick Taylor, latest in his series of Irish Country novels about a rural GP in Northern Ireland. These are not well-known, just absolutely delightful.
Both are set to be released this summer, so until they arrive I’ll be finishing Joseph Cox’s “City on the Heights” which I had @susanquinn buy for me at his book-signing, and getting into “The Perfectionists” by Simon Winchester.
@rushbabe49
You may find my review of Winchester’s book of interest.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/RYT8V9Z4ZG30N/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_ttl?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B07B6GCRZ6
I am reading a novel of St. Benedict by Louis de Wohl, Citadel of God right now. Although set in the 4th century, it feels very topical. Pope Benedict XVI spoke of the need for renewal in the Benedictine model.
I have promised to catch up on my Brandon Sanderson books after I am done with school, but he writes seemingly faster than I can read…
I also hope to read some good biographies or maybe some re-read some Churchill over the summer.
That is a fascinating review Richard which goes to show, you better have the facts straight!
Can you elaborate LC? I’m not familiar..
@richardeaston, I did read your review, and that’s one reason I bought the book. I also loved Krakatoa, which is pretty topical right now!
Most of the time I cringe when I read articles or books about GPS. They get so much wrong; I worry how much nonsense I’m reading and accepting because I don’t know better. Winchester’s book covers a lot of ground and mistakes are inevitable. But it does seem like even books published by the big five have had little fact checking done.
I’m working on an article showing that GPS has always been a dual military-civilian system and hope to get it published in the next month. Quite a few articles have been published recently asserting that Reagan opened GPS to civilian use after KAL007 was shot down. It’s not true, but they don’t know better. Steven Johnson gave a ridiculous TED talk on the subject. My book has sold its thousand and his book has sold its hundred thousand plus. But I’m not bitter. 😀
Well it’s not summer yet, but I’ve been bingeing on John Sandford’s “…Prey” series featuring Minneapolis detective Lucas Davenport. I’m pretty much a history/biography reader, but I started the series and just can’t stop.
On a recommendation from a Ricochet member, I am reading the Royal Cinnabar Navy series. Great adventures with two very likable (and different) characters: Lt. Daniel Leary and Adele Mundy. Highly recommend!
{Edit} Star ships, not ocean ships.
Sandford is one author whose writing has not deteriorated over the years. He still tells a good story. Be sure to read his other character also – Virgil Flowers. They do not have “prey” in the title.
Flowers is in some of the Prey books. He’s always referred to by the other characters as “that ******’ Flowers.”
I’m going with the never-before-read Sue Grafton, in alphabetical order of course. RIP.
I will provide a summer read in serial on these pages: “Acadia.” It is about a white bear loose in Acadia National Park. A newlywed couple, camping in the park, stumble upon this animal. It charges. The woman escapes but the man? A thunderstorm washes away any evidence and a search for the “missing man” begins. The story of the bear and the missing man soon attracts the 24 hour media and within days becomes a national obsession. Local politicians hate the bad publicity and the partial closing of the park; they lobby the feds to have the bear hunted down and destroyed. Soon environmental groups and local Indians come to the defense of the bear. The head ranger and local sheriff team up to manage the chaos. Hilarity ensues.
I’m in the third book of Tolkein’s Lord of the Rings. My first go ’round with the books and loving it after taking a class from Professor Pearson on the “fundamentally religious and Catholic” nature of the epic. And, btw, the movies hew very close to the story. Hat tip to Peter Jackson and crew.
Also, PBXVI’s Jesus of Nazareth and, with our family book club, The Picture of Dorian Gray. Beautiful writing in both cases.
My backlog is ridiculous and I keep adding to it. Recent additions: Jordan Peterson’s 12 Rules, Andrew Klavan’s The Great Good Thing, and Dennis Prager’s exegesis on Exodus in his (forthcoming) Rational Bible series.
I have to cover my eyes as I walk by the bookshelves, or I impulsively grab another book “I’ve been meaning to read.” Sad. I don’t think this is a summer project.
Tolkien was VERY popular when I was in college in the early 70s, so I never read any. About three years ago, after having seen the first movie, I started reading the books, and now I have read everything he wrote. They are just wonderful, and once you start you can’t stop. I totally agree about how faithful the movies were to the books, and I thought they were cast very well. You know, I got into Harry Potter that way, too. Saw the first movie, then devoured the books.
Oh…that Tuscan sun! As an Italophile friend of mine said so well: ‘I miss Italy like it’s a person’. I love all of Italy but Toscana….Toscana!!—it’s absolutely a tactile sense when I’m there. Even though my family roots are in Bologna and Sicily, when I’m in Tuscany I know I belong…I know I’m where I’m supposed to be! From La Pergola in Radicondoli watching the sun settle into the western hills to Siena and Monteriggioni and Poggibonsi and over to Panzano and up to Firenze and Fiesole—- it makes me stop complaining. I cannot be lost in any normal sense of the word when I’m there because one cannot be lost where one must be….It simply smells and tastes and feels better than anywhere else I’ve ever been.
(And, the book is a 10+ and the movie is a 2-2.5 at best and a near zero if you exclude the photography and Diane Lane.)
I cannot remain silent.
Peter Jackson utterly undermined Aragorn by making him fear his crown.
No way. Since he was 20, Aragorn has been aiming at his seemingly hopeless goal, but never does he lose hope.
And never is Arwen leaving Middle Earth!
I could forgive Jackson these crimes if he did not enjoy shattering Gandalf’s staff so much. Yes, the scenes with the Balrog rock, but when the Nazgul appears Jackson has him cringe and be shattered. In fact, there is no fear from Gandalf and his staff never stinking breaks. Never.
Instead there are horns, horns, horns. Rohan had come at last!
I’m in the middle of A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles. Beautifully written, it takes place just after the October Revolution. Even though I’m a couple hundred pages in, I hesitate to make any attempt at a review. Has anyone else read it?
Currently reading:
The River War: An Historical Account of the Reconquest of the Soudan(1899), by Winston Churchill, concerning his experiences as a young British Army officer, during the Mahdist War (1881–99) in the Sudan. Its the story of the West’s first attempt to deal with an ISIS-like opponent. Churchill was an amazing writer!
It’s a high fantasy world written by Steven Erikson and Ian Esslemont. They have written many books and they are very productive writers. I’ve spent the past several years trying to read all of them. I’m in the middle of a trilogy right now.
Yes. Yes yes yes. Loved this book. I wept several times as I read it, and laughed many times as well. Simply beautiful.
I usually have a couple going. Right now its Suicide of the West (serious reading) and Seveneves (sci-fi novel on the tablet)
Absolutely loved A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles.
I’m currently reading Mohammad and Charlemagne by Henri Pirenne with a chaser of the Revisited of the same.
I just finished reading two really great fiction books. The first was The Nightengale, a fictional composite based on multiple first hand accounts of women during WWII. It took place during German occupied France and follows two sisters through their means of “fighting” the Germans.
The other was The Timekeeper, Father Time who has been punished for his invention of the clock until he understands time. To redeem himself, he is sent to help two people and teach them what he has learned.
Really great books.
I have a huge back leg and a competition to read the most books with my son. I’m currently losing.