Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
Sun May 24, 2015, 10:10 PM May 2015

What are you reading the week of Sunday, May 24, 2015?

Another late evening start this week. Hopefully, you've all been out enjoying the weekend!

Well, after finishing the extraordinary Sweetland (my review is elsewhere on this page), I looked over my pile of books and had a hard time deciding on what to read next. Having just read such a moving story, I knew there was nothing I had on hand that could possibly come anywhere close to comparing with it.

I went with the latest entry in one of my longtime favorite detective fiction series, Falling in Love, by Donna Leon, #24 in her long-running Commissario Guido Brunetti series which are centered on the city of Venice. I've read the entire series in order as they've been published, and opening up the newest book was like revisiting an old familiar neighborhood, and an old familiar cast of characters - basically an indulgence in a sort of literary comfort food after the stunning impact of the Michael Crummey book.

Donna Leon is actually an American, so her novels are all written in English - no translation needed - however she's lived in Venice for over 30 years, and her passionate love for her adopted home shines through in all her books. The Brunetti series is a lovely, genteel series, with very little violence (aside from the usually single murder per book that Commissario Brunetti sets out to solve), with exquisite descriptions of the art, architecture, and food of Venice.

And, oh my goodness, the food! Do not read these books while you are hungry, or you will be dripping saliva on the pages! In every book of the series, you find yourself sitting at the dinner table with the Brunetti family, witnessing course after course of the most marvelous culinary delicacies being served up, along with the intelligent and always gently humorous banter between husband and wife and their two children. They are a lovely and loving family, Brunetti himself is a dignified, old world gentleman of impeccible integrity, even as he must do daily battle with a corrupt and incompetent bureaucracy.

These are entertaining and endearing stories - nothing heavy or grim, no Scandinavian angst here. And learning so much about the city of Venice has been a pure delight.

However, speaking of Scandinavian angst - I've moved on to northern Sweden with my next selection, an older novel from 1995 by Kerstin Ekman: Blackwater. I've barely started it, since I've been out and about for the past 2 days with no time for reading. I have 4 Ekman novels in my stack - her books caught my eye as recommendations on GoodReads, so in keeping with my determination to read as many Scandinavian crime novels as are available in translation, I had ordered the only four that were available in my library system - and they all came in at once.

So, I'm back to dark and cold and grim for a while...

What are you reading this week?

19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
What are you reading the week of Sunday, May 24, 2015? (Original Post) scarletwoman May 2015 OP
"Letter to a Corpse," Alan Etheridge, plus "Wire in the Blood," Val McDermid shenmue May 2015 #1
Ah, Val McDermid. scarletwoman May 2015 #2
That's okay shenmue May 2015 #3
Yes, we all like what we like. :D scarletwoman May 2015 #7
Hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, scarletwoman. Enthusiast May 2015 #4
Lin Enger has been on my radar for some time, since he's a Minnesotan. scarletwoman May 2015 #9
I have an interest in Native American culture from back in the day. The High Divide seems Enthusiast May 2015 #11
No, I did not go to the U. I went to Macalester College, a private Liberal Arts college. scarletwoman May 2015 #12
Amazing adventures sound fun. Enthusiast May 2015 #13
LOL! I was rather a wild child back in the 60s... nt scarletwoman May 2015 #14
I like it! Enthusiast May 2015 #15
Mrs. Enthusiast is going to order a copy of Sweetland from the library. Enthusiast May 2015 #5
Oh, cool! scarletwoman May 2015 #8
Swordspoint, a fanatasy by Ellen Kushner hermetic May 2015 #6
I definitely understand the attraction of that sort of fantasy novel, having indulged heavily scarletwoman May 2015 #10
I started reading Lance Weller's book, Wilderness several months ago and couldn't japple May 2015 #16
Thank you for the recommendation! scarletwoman May 2015 #17
Warning: there is a lot of hawking and spitting in this book!!! japple May 2015 #18
As long as I don't have to be around it IRL... scarletwoman May 2015 #19

shenmue

(38,506 posts)
1. "Letter to a Corpse," Alan Etheridge, plus "Wire in the Blood," Val McDermid
Sun May 24, 2015, 10:12 PM
May 2015

Dermid has her creepy murders down pat. Yipes.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
2. Ah, Val McDermid.
Sun May 24, 2015, 10:44 PM
May 2015

I'd like to read her, just because I really admire her as a person, but every time I look over her titles and read the synopses for them, I just can't do it. Too much serial killer stuff, too much - as you say - "creepy". I just don't like that sort of thing at this point in my reading life. I wish I had come across her earlier, before I got so persnickety.

Anyway, I'd love to hear your own take on Val McDermid's books. I that know Ian Rankin, an author I like a lot, praises her highly. You are welcome to tell me I'm wrong and silly to avoid reading her!

shenmue

(38,506 posts)
3. That's okay
Sun May 24, 2015, 11:28 PM
May 2015

You can like whomever you want.

If it's any consolation, "A Place of Execution" and "The Mermaids Singing" are two of her better books. They both have very shocking endings. Also, they were made into TV specials by the BBC.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
7. Yes, we all like what we like. :D
Mon May 25, 2015, 06:48 PM
May 2015

My "thing" about Val McDermid is I feel that I ought to read something by her, just so I can "get" why she's so well-regarded. Maybe that's silly, but still...

Anyway, thanks for mentioning those two titles. I may just go ahead and give The Mermaids Singing a try. Then I'll at least no longer be a McDermid virgin.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
4. Hello, everyone! Thank you for the thread, scarletwoman.
Mon May 25, 2015, 05:00 AM
May 2015

This morning at 4:00 AM I finished The High Divide by Lin Enger. This was highly recommended by japple. I agree. I love historical fiction too. But The High Divide wasn't just a good yarn, it is a thing of beauty. I can't wait for Mrs. Enthusiast to read it.

Earlier I read Open Season by C.J. Box, his first of the Joe Pickett series. The problem with Open Season is I don't see how the rest of the series can live up to the first one. We shall see. I hope to read them all. My thanks to Paladin and Little Star for the recommendation.

Now I have to decide on a new book, probably one by Ian Rankin.

Yesterday Afternoon Mrs. Enthusiast finished Open Season by C.J. Box. Once you reach a certain point in Open Season you must finish it and she did.

Mrs. Enthusiast has started Strip Jack by Ian Rankin.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
9. Lin Enger has been on my radar for some time, since he's a Minnesotan.
Mon May 25, 2015, 07:23 PM
May 2015

His brother is Leif Enger, who is also an author.

I think I will probably read his first novel first, Undiscovered Country, when I finally get around to checking him out. I'm glad to hear that you enjoyed The High Divide.

I know I've looked up C.J. Box a couple of times already, and I keep him in the back of my mind in case I ever tire of reading books set in countries other than the U.S. Although I probably ought to concede that Wyoming might just as well be another country to this born and bred Minnesota girl.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
11. I have an interest in Native American culture from back in the day. The High Divide seems
Mon May 25, 2015, 08:01 PM
May 2015

very authentic to me. You are so right about Wyoming being different than Minnesota. Hell, Dick Cheney lives in Wyoming.

You are lucky to have grown up in Minnesota. Did you go to the U? The U looks like fun to a Buckeye.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
12. No, I did not go to the U. I went to Macalester College, a private Liberal Arts college.
Mon May 25, 2015, 08:30 PM
May 2015

Alma Mater to Walter Mondale and Kofi Annan, among others. However, I dropped out in the middle of my junior year - which I only semi-regret, because I embarked upon some fairly amazing adventures afterward.

You probably won't be surprised to hear that I was majoring in English.

I definitely agree with you that I was lucky to have grown up in Minnesota. That's why I'm back here, after years of living in other places. It's my home.

hermetic

(8,308 posts)
6. Swordspoint, a fanatasy by Ellen Kushner
Mon May 25, 2015, 11:52 AM
May 2015

This was a GoodReads rec because I'm an avid LOTR fan. There's no elves or dragons in this tale but ooh la la. There is intrigue and passion and humor, and sword fights. Not usually my sort of thing but I am enjoying this story and the characters.

I see Leon and McDermid both have books at my library so they are now on my list. Thanks, ladies.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
10. I definitely understand the attraction of that sort of fantasy novel, having indulged heavily
Mon May 25, 2015, 07:38 PM
May 2015

in that genre in my younger years. And it's always fun to take a chance on a GoodReads recommendation - so far I've found a number of wonderful books that way.

I do hope you'll enjoy Donna Leon.

japple

(9,824 posts)
16. I started reading Lance Weller's book, Wilderness several months ago and couldn't
Wed May 27, 2015, 09:53 AM
May 2015

get into it. After reading Lin Enger's The High Divide I was in the mood for another good yarn, so I started Wilderness again and OMG, I am blown away by the writing. It is beautiful. It is sad, brutal, and hard to read at times, but this writer has a way of sucking you right into the story. When I look up from the book, I am surprised to find myself safe and warm in my own bedroom instead of immersed in the mud with the Army of Northern Virginia during the Civil War, or (many years later) on the coast of the Pacific Northwest.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
17. Thank you for the recommendation!
Wed May 27, 2015, 07:53 PM
May 2015
Wilderness definitely sounded intriguing, so I looked it up on GoodReads and read some reviews. I'm convinced - it's going on my to-read list!

I won't ask you to post a spoiler (really, don't tell me!), but I have to say that I truly hope the dog survives! I can't stand it when a dog dies.

Anyway, it sounds like a wonderful book. Many thanks again!

P.S. - it will be a while until I can get to this one, since I still have 4 & 1/2 unread books in my earlier stack, and just picked up 3 more books from the library today that I had put on order weeks ago. Plus I have promised DFW to read his novel at the earliest opportunity! (I should just quit my job...)

japple

(9,824 posts)
18. Warning: there is a lot of hawking and spitting in this book!!!
Thu May 28, 2015, 09:19 PM
May 2015

Just thought I'd warn anyone with a weak stomach.

Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Fiction»What are you reading the ...