Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Tell Me Tuesday

Please tell us what you're reading. Or at least what's stacked on your bedside table.

8 comments:

DRD said...

I just started Sodom on the Thames for class, and am enjoying it a great deal more than Public and Private Lives, of which I have another 104 pages to read before tonight's class. I miss reading fiction.

marysuemcginn said...

Finished Julie & Julia (Powell). Loved the idea of the book, reminded me of Year of Living Biblically (A. J. Jacobs). Big difference: I had a hard time getting past the 20-something, whiny, quarterlife crises this woman faced on a daily basis. It must be my age.

marysuemcginn said...

On another note: I have to recommend FLU (Kolata, 1999). Seasonally appropriate. One of the best non-fiction books I have read in a long time. Details how an epidemiologist found the 1918 virus many years after the epidemic (dug up eskimos buried in permafrost, clever!); explains the HN classification system started in the 1950s and still used today (the 1918 is H5N1); uses historical pictures & personalities by way of illustration. This book has everything. Danika, if you love the Black Plague, you'll also love the flu!

Unknown said...

Mary, I warned you about Julie & Julia! The movie is better.

Nice death and destruction book with Flu. Good times!

Erin said...

Just read The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls. It reminded me a whole heck of a lot of Mary Karr's The Liars' Club, except with twice the dysfunction.

Christine said...

Whoops! I signed in as my daughter (olivia) up there! It's me.

Christine said...

Hi Erin! Glass Castle tore its way through the staff at B&N a couple years ago. I never got around to reading it, but I gave it to my mom, and she read it.

Lisa here is a fan of Liar's Club.

Anonymous said...

^^Yeah, and apparently I'm the *only* one here who's a fan of The Liar's Club. I do still think it's one of the books that made the whole memoir genre explode (whether that's a good or a bad thing is up for debate), but I have to admit that when we all tried to read it for book club, I didn't get through it either (although I've never been a big book re-reader). Maybe I actually liked Cherry (her memoir about her adolescence, which I actually read first) better, and that's what made Liar's Club appeal to me so much? I don't know.

Anyway, I liked Julie and Julia (the book--I still have yet to see the movie but I want to), and maybe it's *my* age, but I didn't really find her too terribly whiny although I can see it.

I don't know if anyone saw in the previous thread, but I tracked down that book I was thinking of (the character's name was Flip, not Pip; once I googled that I found it). The book is And Both Were Young (bad title, good book from what I remember), by Madeleine L'Engle if you can believe that.

I loved Outliers, and I'm now reading Kathy Griffin's "Official Book Club Selection." Don is reading it too and therefore cannot make fun of me for it.

~Lisa