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hermetic

(8,301 posts)
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 12:39 PM Aug 2022

What Fiction are you reading this week, August 7, 2022?



The Glass Room by Ann Cleeves. A guest lecturer is murdered at the Writer's House, a country retreat where aspiring authors gather to workshop and work through their novels. So, along with the police procedures we also learn a great deal about novel-writing and the publishing industry. It's quite intriguing. I'm almost at the end and still don't know whodunnit.

Listening to One By One by Ruth Ware. This one is not really holding my interest.

What books are you finding interesting this week.
19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What Fiction are you reading this week, August 7, 2022? (Original Post) hermetic Aug 2022 OP
"The School of Essential Ingredients" bif Aug 2022 #1
A Model Childhood thucythucy Aug 2022 #2
This sounds like it's right up my alley. Going on my list. japple Aug 2022 #8
Still inhaling Fern Michaels' exceptional books SheltieLover Aug 2022 #3
So many Fern Michaels, so little time! Sisterhood? Godmothers? yellowdogintexas Aug 2022 #14
All of the above, interspersed with some of Diane Kelly's works SheltieLover Aug 2022 #15
Hi! I was visiting my daughter that week and yes I did some reading yellowdogintexas Aug 2022 #17
Nice you got to visit! SheltieLover Aug 2022 #18
Darn! Library doesn't have any of these either. SheltieLover Aug 2022 #19
Just started The Investigator. Mme. Defarge Aug 2022 #4
looking forward to this one.... bahboo Aug 2022 #5
I just started reading Britt-Marie Was Here by Fredrik Bachman. sueh Aug 2022 #6
Hi, all hermetic Aug 2022 #7
Big hugs to ((((((hermetic)))))) for kitteh duty. This is an japple Aug 2022 #9
Yes, a mom hermetic Aug 2022 #11
Big hugs to you & kitties! SheltieLover Aug 2022 #16
Finished The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave, hippywife Aug 2022 #10
Ooh, another Hertopian novel hermetic Aug 2022 #12
I'm almost half way through it hippywife Aug 2022 #13

bif

(22,685 posts)
1. "The School of Essential Ingredients"
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 12:48 PM
Aug 2022

By Erica Bauermeister. About 1/2 way through t. Not bad, not great.

thucythucy

(8,038 posts)
2. A Model Childhood
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 12:49 PM
Aug 2022

by Christa Wolf.

A German woman revisits her childhood under the Nazi regime, including the time of her family's flight as refugees as the Soviet army draws close to their home in east Prussia. Years later she travels to her childhood home--now a part of Poland--and tries to separate reality from fantasy and to understand the actions of the adults around her, including her parents, during this time.

This is my quick take for now. I'm only sixty pages into it, another 350 some odd to go.

The writing is dense, and the writer does an incredible job taking us into the internal life of this intelligent and deeply thoughtful little girl as she tries to make sense of a world filled with monstrous acts and horrible secrets.

SheltieLover

(57,073 posts)
3. Still inhaling Fern Michaels' exceptional books
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 12:50 PM
Aug 2022

Library has over 150 of her ebooks!

Each is so unique & very special in its own way.

Interspersing Jana DeLeon's Miss Fortune series, some of Diane Kelly's works, & a few others.

The Glass Room sounds delightful! Going to check availability. Thx for sharing & ty for the thread.

yellowdogintexas

(22,231 posts)
14. So many Fern Michaels, so little time! Sisterhood? Godmothers?
Wed Aug 10, 2022, 04:23 AM
Aug 2022

or others?
I spent weeks buried in the Sisterhood and the offshoot series Men of the Sisterhood.

Fern is a great writer !

SheltieLover

(57,073 posts)
15. All of the above, interspersed with some of Diane Kelly's works
Wed Aug 10, 2022, 01:27 PM
Aug 2022

Loved the Godmothers series. Still working through the Sisterhood books. Just finished 19 Yellow Moon Road. Excellent, as are all her works, imo.

What are you reading?

yellowdogintexas

(22,231 posts)
17. Hi! I was visiting my daughter that week and yes I did some reading
Sun Aug 21, 2022, 01:53 PM
Aug 2022

both on the flights there and back and while visiting.

I have not yet pulled together the list of the things I read between July 26 and August 12.

I do know I read the Lives of Lilly Parrish. This is a fun series which involves magic, witchcraft, a bit of time travel and has interesting characters.

Best read in order; book 1 is Salem Burning. So far there are 6 books -
the settings are
Salem Witch trials
French Revolution
Russian Revolution
French Resistance
Restoration England
London, 1880s (Jack the Ripper timeline)

SheltieLover

(57,073 posts)
19. Darn! Library doesn't have any of these either.
Sun Aug 21, 2022, 02:01 PM
Aug 2022

But ty for sharing about this series. Sounds like they are great reads!

Mme. Defarge

(8,012 posts)
4. Just started The Investigator.
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 01:10 PM
Aug 2022

It’s the first in John Sandford’s Letty Davenport series and is set in post 1/6/21 times. It involves a militia group in Texas that’s stealing crude oil from major oil companies to finance its plans. 🙀

bahboo

(16,314 posts)
5. looking forward to this one....
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 02:55 PM
Aug 2022

love his writing. Dialogue is always very real, and the characters, well, just so interesting and complex...

sueh

(1,824 posts)
6. I just started reading Britt-Marie Was Here by Fredrik Bachman.
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 03:06 PM
Aug 2022

So far so good. I've never been disappointed in any of his books I've read so far.

hermetic

(8,301 posts)
7. Hi, all
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 05:58 PM
Aug 2022

Just wanted to say thanks for posting. As always you've provided great suggestions.

Sorry I didn't have time to chat but things are kind of crazy around the Hermetic household these days. I've got 2 cats who need medication several times a day plus a bathroom closet-full of week old kittens. So, things like sleeping and getting regular chores done are being put aside until time allows. We're all okay, though, just super busy. Until calmer days then,

japple

(9,808 posts)
9. Big hugs to ((((((hermetic)))))) for kitteh duty. This is an
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 06:40 PM
Aug 2022

especially stressful kitten season. Are you bottle feeding or do the week-old kittens have a mama?

hermetic

(8,301 posts)
11. Yes, a mom
Mon Aug 8, 2022, 11:58 AM
Aug 2022

She was a member of the feral bunch, maybe only 6 months old herself when she got preggers. Along with being fed and petted, she was gradually lured into the house where she chose that nice dark closet for her nursery. They all seem to be doing fine and once they are walking they will all go to the shelter after which I hope to heaven they will all find homes. I sure have no more room in here.

They look like they're going to be adorable. One all black, one like your image, and two greys. Their mom, Minnie, I think is a Thai cat, korat, and she is an absolute love. She needs to come back here and live with her brother, Odin, who adores her. He's already been caught and neutered and he has one messed up eye from getting a sticker in it. Vet doesn't think it needs removing, which is good.
https://cattime.com/cat-breeds/korat-cats#/slide/1

Just another day in Kitty Paradise. A great book and I highly recommend it. (That's my story and I'm sticking with it. )

hippywife

(22,767 posts)
10. Finished The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave,
Sun Aug 7, 2022, 11:52 PM
Aug 2022

and started Ghost Story by Peter Straub. So far, so weird.

hermetic

(8,301 posts)
12. Ooh, another Hertopian novel
Mon Aug 8, 2022, 12:07 PM
Aug 2022

There was just a little discussion about this genre, a few posts down.

"After the men in an Arctic Norwegian town are wiped out, the women must survive a sinister threat in this 1600s parable...Inspired by the real events of the Vardø storm and the 1621 witch trials, The Mercies is a story of love, evil, and obsession, set at the edge of civilization." Sounds great.

And, like any good ghost story, Straub's "stands the test of time -- and conjures our darkest fears and nightmares."

hippywife

(22,767 posts)
13. I'm almost half way through it
Mon Aug 8, 2022, 02:09 PM
Aug 2022

and it took some mental gymnastics at first (and several more pages of the novel) to figure out what's going on. I'm still not entirely getting it as his writing tends to be a little odd to me, but I'm sure I'll have it figured out by the end. At least I hope so.

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