I often have a few books with bookmarks in them at once. I enjoy classics more than contemporary works of fiction, often read historical fiction, and love to get glimpses into other people's lives by reading memoirs and biographies.
What are you reading in your Reading Cave (http://www.sakurah.net/collections/cave.htm)? And what is your pet reading (http://www.sakurah.net/collections/pet_cave.htm)?
5 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Cannibal Galaxy, Cynthia Ozick.
Cynthia Ozick has a quick mind and a vast vocabulary (I'm a step or two behind her in both respects), and liberally sprinkles her work with Jewish references & Yiddish phrases (many of which require me to seek outside help). In this work, her goal is to examine the true nature of intellectualism.
The Plot:
Sorbonne-educated Holocaust survivor Joseph Brill starts a school in middle America after the war using his concept of a Dual curriculum (part yeshiva, part academic). He believes himself & his school to be far superior to everyone. He accepts the daughter of a true genius into his school, even though he believes the daughter is sorely lacking in mental ability.
Really enjoying the book for the library's book club, Cherie Priest's Boneshaker. The main character is quite interesting, and I hope it's going to be a good discussion. In the meantime, I'm packing up all my books for a move...why are libraries so darn heavy?
5 comments:
Cannibal Galaxy, Cynthia Ozick.
Cynthia Ozick has a quick mind and a vast vocabulary (I'm a step or two behind her in both respects), and liberally sprinkles her work with Jewish references & Yiddish phrases (many of which require me to seek outside help). In this work, her goal is to examine the true nature of intellectualism.
The Plot:
Sorbonne-educated Holocaust survivor Joseph Brill starts a school in middle America after the war using his concept of a Dual curriculum (part yeshiva, part academic). He believes himself & his school to be far superior to everyone. He accepts the daughter of a true genius into his school, even though he believes the daughter is sorely lacking in mental ability.
If that were nonfiction, I'd be all over it!
That reading cave is AWESOME! Sadly, I'm not reading much these days except for a poker strategy book.
@Lisa--It's just like Kenny Rogers says: You gotta know when to hold 'em, know when to fold 'em, know when to walk away, know when to run.
Really enjoying the book for the library's book club, Cherie Priest's Boneshaker. The main character is quite interesting, and I hope it's going to be a good discussion.
In the meantime, I'm packing up all my books for a move...why are libraries so darn heavy?
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