Downloaded my free Amazon Prime book for the month. I am continuing the read the Pines Trilogy, now a major TV event, Wayward Pines. Book Two is "Wayward" by Blake Crouch. There are strange goings-on in this little town in Idaho, where the FBI is trying to figure out why people disappear when they travel there.
Here is the TV promo: http://www.fox.com/wayward-pines/
Finished What She Left Behind a few days ago... what a depressing book... about mental hospitals in the early 1920's when anyone could be committed on a relative's whim, in this case a daughter who refused to marry the man dad had picked out for her... ice baths, electric shock, involuntary sterilization... not recommended.
Then I read A Man Called Ove and loved it... I cried 1/2 way through and I cried at the end... and I laughed a lot in between... great book altho it starts out slow.
I just picked up The Nightingale today so it's too early to comment on it.
rapa, Ove reminded me of a sleeper movie starring Dustin Hoffman, HERO, from 1992. It's tag line is "one selfless act of courage can really mess up your whole day".
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0104412/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_40
A cynical con man (Dustin) reluctantly saves a planefull of passengers after a crash and a reporter tries to find the 'Hero' in the aftermath. One of my top 10 favorite movies of all time!
When you watch the Wild movie, when she hitches a ride in the pick up, the woman driving the pick up is the real Cheryl.
I just finished Neal Stephenson's SEVENEVES. Proving once again that the only thing better than a good book is a good long book. It's just under 900 pages and I enjoyed every page. If you are a Sci-Fi fan don't miss this book. Something hit the moon and it broke into 7 parts which collide with each other and continue to hit each other and break into more and more pieces. Scientists realize that in two years all these pieces will start coming down on the Earth and scorch the planet and make it inhabitable for 5000 years. The first part of the book is how they save mankind. The second part takes place 5000 years later when the seven races that survived in space return to the New Earth and what they discover there. Neal Stephenson is becoming my favorite author. Check out Seveneves or any of his novels.
Not much time for reading these days - just finished Iles book- 24 hours - noted this was also a movie - with Kevin Bacon and Charlize Theron. He sure can write - this is 4th book I have read and all are different but very good. Finished -The Last Great Detective by Crais today. This one I have been carrying to doctor, dentist and physical therapy to read. Also read on the Kindle - new writer - Dixie Burns - her first and even though not a cheerful book was well written. Title - Spit of a Minute:An irreconcilable life. Follows a family over several decades. Lots more to read. Thanks for sending your reads have more to add to my list. There is always a diverse listing of books in this group - a lot to learn.
If anyone reads in the Young Adult Genre, may I recommend "All The Bright Places". It traverses some of today's problems facing teens; bullying, mental problems (bi-polar), loss of family member. It is not the happiest of books, but is very well written, and tugs at your heartstrings. There is a lot of good writing showing up in this Young Adult genre.
The author of Bright Places is Jennifer Niven.
With the sale of my house of 33 years, moving myself into a senior apartment complex, a daughter and grand daughter into another apartment, and myself trying to become accustomed to living with a bunch of other old geezers, it has been a rather stressful time. But I have continued to read, at a somewhat slower pace, while settling in, but that is picking up, too. And, best of all, I am within a short walk from my library.
I did finish Plainsong, which I discovered several years after its publication, thanks to rapa. I’ll rate it as perhaps my favorite book of the year so far and one of my favorites of the past three or four years. The remarkable, amazing characters Haruf creates with his simple, yet complex, prose is remarkable; I will long remember the McPheron brothers, Harold and Raymond, two of the most lovable old farts I have found. If they could come to life, they would, I think, have much in common with Ove of A Man Called Ove,
Now it will be on to Eventide, which I understand is a sequel featuring the same and new characters a few years later.
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