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Thread: What Katie is reading 2012

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    Coney Island Queen Staff Abcinthia's Avatar
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    Default What Katie is reading 2012

    I have decided to review the books I am reading. I have been trying to do it on Goodreads but I thought it would be nice to put them here too. They won't be long reviews - I only ever write long reviews on books I despise and luckily, I usually read books I like It's probably hugely boring and self indulgent but meh, I don't care. It interests me

    Feel free to add any comments and to disagree with my assessment of books and to throw in recommendations. But as I usually buy my books second hand and I already have a box of over 100 books to-be-read, it might be a while before I get round to buying any recommendations.

    All the books I have read so far this year:

    1. The Sirens of Titan - Kurt Vonnegut
    2. Wedlock: How Georgian Britain's Worst Husband Met His Match - Wendy Moore
    3. The Talisman - Stephen King and Peter Straub
    4. The Time Machine - H. G. Wells
    5. First Love And Other Novellas - Samuel Beckett
    6. The Night Strangers - Chris Bohjalian
    7. The Invisible Man - H. G. Wells
    8. Kill Me Once - Jon Osborne
    9. A Closed Book - Gilbert Adair
    10. Popcorn - Ben Elton

    11. The Identity Man - Andrew Klavan
    12. The Hidden Child - Camilla Läckberg
    13. If Walls Could Talk: An Intimate History Of The Home - Lucy Worsley
    14. Jude The Obscure - Thomas Hardy
    15. The Boys From Brazil - Ira Levin
    16. Exposed - Liza Marklund
    17. 9th Judgement - James Patterson with Maxine Paetro
    18. Courtiers: The Secret History Of The Georgian Court - Lucy Worsley
    19. The Gunslinger - Stephen King
    20. High Windows - Philip Larkin

    21. State Of Fear - Michael Crichton
    22. A Vist From The Goon Squad - Jennifer Egan
    23. Cleopatra: Histories, Dreams and Distortions - Lucy Hughes-Hallett
    24. The Weaker Vessel: Woman's Lot In The Seventeenth-Century England - Antonia Fraser
    25. The Darkest Room - Johan Theorin
    26. The Memory Keeper's Daughter - Kim Edwards
    27. Rules Of Civility - Amor Towles
    28. The Paris Wife - Paula McLain
    29. The Sisters Brothers - Patrick DeWitt
    30. The Princes In The Tower - Alison Weir

    31. The Executioner - Chris Carter
    32. Hungry Hill - Daphne Du Maurier
    33. Call The Midwife - Jennifer Worth
    34. The Somnambulist - Essie Fox
    35. When God Was A Rabbit - Sarah Winman
    36. Started Early, Took My Dog - Kate Atkinson
    37. The Confessions of Katherine Howard - Suzannah Dunn
    38. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd - Agatha Christie
    39. The Family Fang - Kevin Wilson
    40. Eve - Anna Carey

    41. Destination Unknown - Agatha Christie
    42. Perdita: The Life Of Mary Robinson - Paula Byrne
    43. The Winter Ghosts - Kate Mosse
    44. The Drawing Of Three - Stephen King
    45. I Know This Much Is True - Wally Lamb
    46. The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
    47. Girl With A Pearl Earring - Tracy Chevalier
    48. Never Knowing - Chevy Stevens (abandoned)
    49. Lucky Break - Esther Freud
    50. The Waste Lands - Stephen King

    51. The Hound Of Death - Agatha Christie
    52. Doomed Love - Virgil
    53. The Man Who Was Thursday - G.K. Chesterton
    54. The Devotion Of Suspect X - Keigo Higashino
    55. Into The Darkest Corner - Elizabeth Haynes
    56. Shiver - Maggie Stiefvater
    57. Wizard And Glass - Stephen King
    58. Forbidden Fruit - From The Letters Of Abelard And Heloise
    59. Half Of The Human Race - Anthony Quinn
    60. Pure - Andrew Miller

    61. The Eaten Heart: Unlikely Tales Of Love - Giovanni Boccaccio
    62. Of Mistresses, Tigresses And Other Conquests - Giacomo Casanova
    63. The Road - Cormac McCarthy
    64. The Mysterious Affair At Styles - Agatha Christie
    65. Your Heart Belongs To Me - Dean Koontz
    66. Cures For Love - Stendhal
    67. The Seducer's Diary - Søren Kierkegaard
    68. First Love - Ivan Turgenev
    69. Wolves Of The Calla - Stephen King
    70. Courtesans - Katie Hickman

    71. The Marriage Plot - Jeffery Eugenides
    72. The Report - Jessica Francis Kane
    73. One Day - David Nicholls
    74. Hell Gate - Linda Fairstein
    75. The Slap - Christos Tsiolkas
    76. A Mere Interlude - Thomas Hardy
    77. Prey - Michael Crichton
    78. How To Lose Friends & Alienate People - Toby Young
    79. You Deserve Nothing - Alexander Maksik
    80. Song of Susannah - Stephen King

    81. The ABC Murders - Agatha Christie
    82. The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins
    83. Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins
    84. Mockingjay - Suzanne Collins
    85. The Kreutzer Sonata - Leo Tolstoy
    86. Night Waking - Sarah Moss
    87. Long Lankin - Lindsey Barraclough
    88. Blood Harvest - S. J. Bolton
    89. The Playdate - Louise Millar
    90. The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood

    91. A Russian Affair - Anton Chekhov
    92. Eleanor Of Aquitaine - Marion Meade
    93. The Dark Tower - Stephen King
    94. Deviant Love - Sigmund Frued
    95. A Visitor's Companion To Tudor England - Suzannah Lipscomb
    96. No Time For Goodbye - Linwood Barclay
    97. Magnetism - F. Scott Fitzgerald
    98. A Perfectly Good Man - Patrick Gale
    99. The Silence Of The Lambs - Thomas Harris
    100. The Queen's Confession - Victoria Holt

    101. The Time Traveller's Wife - Audrey Niffenegger
    102. The Stepford Wives - Ira Levin
    103. Something Childish But Very Natural - Katherine Mansfield
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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    Coney Island Queen Staff Abcinthia's Avatar
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    Default Re: What Katie is reading 2012

    103. Something Childish But Very Natural - Katherine Mansfield

    Pages: 110

    A collection of short stories: Something Childish But Very Natural, Feuille d'Album, Mr And Mrs Dove, Marriage á la Mode, Bliss, Honeymoon, A Dill Pickle, Widow.

    The stories were nice but overall I just felt something was lacking. They all had a samey feel about them and there was not really anything that will stick in my mind. Out of all the stories, my favourite was probably Something Childish But Very Natural. It's a sweet story about Henry who is very naive, inexperienced and falls in love with Edna. Despite their feelings, Edna doesn't want to move on and to leave her childhood behind. I thought it was a nice tale of first love and that Mansfield captured the intensity of feelings well.

    Random Quote (from the story Honeymoon): It was too much for George. Know his Fanny? He gave a broad, childish grin. "I should jolly well think I do," he said emphatically.
    (I just couldn't resist it. One of the main characters is called Fanny and I was sniggering at a few lines in this story. I'm not very grown up lol )

    Rating: 3/5
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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    Coney Island Queen Staff Abcinthia's Avatar
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    Default Re: What Katie is reading 2012

    I've finally gotten round to finishing another book. I have barely read anything lately because I've been busy doing a cross stitch instead.

    104. Mary Anne - Daphne Du Maurier

    Pages: 385

    I am a massive Du Maurier fan, so this is going to be very biased and no surprise that I really enjoyed it.

    Mary Anne is a historical novel based on Du Maurier's great-great-grandmother, who was the mistress of Fredrick, Duke of York. Later on when the relationship fizzled out, she testified against him in the House of Commons that she had sold army commissions and that he knew all about it. This is the main focus of the story although it charts both her life before the Duke and touches on her being prosecuted for libel (which she was imprisoned for) and her time in France.

    There's no doubt about it, Mary Anne Clarke is a fascinating woman and makes for a wonderful main character. Du Maurier brings her to life and makes her into a feisty, independent woman and portrays all her bad attributes as well as her good. She is probably the most feminist of all the Du Maurier characters I've read. She doesn't need a man and is determined to make it herself. Her precarious position as mistresses meant that she could be cast off at any time, a fate which not only happened to her but many many mistresses of the nobility.

    The only downside is that after part 3, the writing style changes and it starts to read more like a newspaper. Du Maurier herself criticized the book for this very reason (Mary Anne was one of her least favourite novels). It really gives the novel a disjointed feel and it's a pity because we start to lose Mary Anne's character and the well written pace of the previous two parts. It never fully recovers although the ending comes close.

    Random Quote (from page 13): Words fascinated her, the shape of the curling letters, how some, by repeating themselves more often had importance. The had difference of sex too. The a's, the e's and u's were women: the hard g's, the b's and the q's were all men and seemed to depend on the others.

    Rating: 4/5
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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    Default Re: What Katie is reading 2012

    105. The Submission - Amy Waldman

    Pages:
    385

    The Submission starts with a jury selecting a memorial for the victims of 9/11, two years after the attacks. All the designs are anonymous and after fierce deliberations, they decide that a garden would be the best memorial, the designer's name learnt: Mohammad Khan (Mo to his friends). This opens debate into Islam, what art is and grief.

    The story focuses on the aftermath of Mohammad Khan's win and tells the story in 3rd person, focusing on different characters. The 3 main characters are Claire, a widow who was the biggest supporter of the garden design until it starts to throw up opposition from other people who lost loved ones in the attack and is hounded by journalists. Asma, a Bangladeshi illegal immigrant who is also a widow but also the mother of a child born on American soil. Lastly, Mo, the winner who is isolated and caught up in the debate despite no strong feelings towards Islam and being a born and bred American. I found these three characters the best developed. The raw emotions of both widows was very well captured and I really felt for Mo.

    The other characters whose stories we learn, just do not feel so well developed and feel quite flat at times. But they all had important parts to play in the story and I suppose Waldman felt she could not write the story without giving us their backgrounds, thoughts and fears.

    I liked the book. It was thought-provoking, well written and very easy to get into. Waldman captured a tragedy bringing America together but also bringing out the best and worst in people. It is written quite well and the subject area handled with care.

    4/5
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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    Default Re: What Katie is reading 2012

    106. Shakespeare's Landlord - Charlaine Harris

    Pages: 218

    Lily Bard has a secret past. So she settles in the small American town of Shakespeare, Arkansas, working as a cleaner. But her peaceful existence is shattered when she stumbles onto the body of her landlord and into the suspicion of the local cop.

    This book was enjoyable, light reading. The plot is engaging and you just want to find out who the murderer is. Harris is never going to win awards for her writing style, which is simplistic and at at times a bit annoying with her explaining long words (fans of Sookie Stackhouse: think of her explaining that word of the day thing at least once a book. I cannot be the only one who found it frustrating!), but she spins a good yarn and her books are an enjoyable way to spend a couple of hours reading.

    Random Quote (page 43): I recognized the tone, the words. I had to fight panic hard for a second.

    4/5
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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    Default Re: What Katie is reading 2012

    I haven't been reading much lately - I just have not been in the mood. So today I made up for it by finishing not one but two books.

    107. Shakespeare's Champion - Charlaine Harris

    Pages:
    232

    Lily Bard has been trying and failing to have a quiet life. Her workouts at the local gym are a great release of all the anger and hurt in her life; a safe haven from the daily grind. Until one morning she stumbles onto the body of a local body builder. There is also racial tensions in area and Lily Bard has either stay in Shakespeare and fight or start her life all over again.

    I didn't enjoy this book as much as the previous one. There was a massive jump between the events of both books, which let it down. Firstly, the relationship with Claude, a local cop, has changed in dynamic. Secondly, there were multiple references to massive brawl that happened inbetween the books and resulted in some people not wanting to hire Lily as a cleaner. The brawl was finally explained about halfway through the book but it was frustrating that it took so long to understand what was going on and spoiled my enjoyment.

    The main plots were interesting enough and a new love interest is introduced: Jack. He's perfectly suited to Lily and has a past as murky as hers. I found the story really started to pick up after Jack was introduced and it was definitely more action packed.

    Rating: 3/5


    108. The Blind Assassin - Margaret Atwood

    Pages:
    637

    I don't really know how to sum up this plot. I don't think I could ever quite do it justice. It starts with Iris Chase remembering her sister Laura's mysterious death 50 years ago. She was the author of a book, The Blind Assassin, which was published posthumously and gained notoriety. So Iris starts to write her autobiography and chronicles the life of two sisters against the backdrop of the 30s and 40s.

    The Blind Assassin is actually a novel within a novel. It jumps between Iris' autobiography; Laura's novel, The Blind Assassin; and newspaper articles about various things essential to the plot. It took me a while to actually enjoy it because of the jumps but I found the plot captivating and mysterious. My favourite parts were probably the extracts of The Blind Assassin. It was a sci-fi/love story and I really enjoyed it.

    The ending was predictable, I figured out what the twist would be some time before hand. Despite that I really enjoyed it. Atwood is a wonderful writer and just brings the novel to life.

    Rating: 5/5
    She laughs like god, her mind's like a diamond

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