Recently read a really different book MY LOVELY WIFE. If you enjoy stories about serial murders you’ll be startled at this story. Can’t remember the author but please Goggle it. Today picked up a right off the press book THE WIVES by Tarryn…Continue
Started by rapa. Last reply by rapa Aug 9, 2022.
An article from the New Yorker magazinehttps://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/can-reading-make-you-happierAfter WW1 traumatized soldiers were…Continue
Started by Lip Service. Last reply by rapa Jun 16, 2021.
Just finished Alice Hoffman’s THE MARRIAGE OF OPPOSITE’S!The publisher describes this as “A forbidden love story set on the tropical island of St. Thomas about the extraordinary woman who gave birth to painter Camille Pissarro, the Father of…Continue
Started by rapa. Last reply by rapa Mar 7, 2021.
In these trying times do you find yourself wanting to read fiction books about pandemics?I came across two such recently published books written before COVID-19:Wanderers by Chuck Wendig written before the pandemic but has eerie flashes of some…Continue
Started by Lip Service Sep 11, 2020.
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backwards_to_Britain
Yes, Apposite, you pegged him!
Apposite, I so enjoy following your adventures! Will you continue teaching in Brevig Mission? Hope someday you publish your memoirs!
Any book you can recommend that includes the tragic life of Gen. George Edward Pickett during the Civil War? He is a distant relative and I've visited his grave in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va. Many of his slain troops are buried near by.
I did something this summer that I should have done a long time ago. Thanks to some of the comments here (and other places,) I have been re-evaluating some of my old favorite authors including Michener. I think one of the things that drew me to his work in the first place was my love of history. He had a way of building an entire world around certain historical places, people, and events. The reader had to keep in mind though, that his books weren't truly historical works but works of fiction. First and foremost, they are novels built around history. He thus provided me with many years of wonderful reading. That being said, it has been several years since I had the luxury of sitting for hours burying my nose in one of his generational stories. This past week, I decided to change that. I dusted off three of my favorites and decided to re-read them over the summer. Well, I barely got through the first few pages of the first one, The Source, when it dawned on me that he had a terminal case of had-itis, and-itis, and run on sentences. Why had I never realized that before? The only explanation that comes to mind is that before, I read merely for pleasure and such things didn't stand out to me then. My reading habit has changed. Since becoming a writer myself (and editing my own work,) I see books through the eyes of an editor not just someone that reads for the pleasure of it. I wish I could turn it on and off at will, but alas, it doesn't work that way. I am still going to finish what I started and read all three, but sad to say, it won't be quite as enjoyable as I anticipated. Here’s hoping his writing (or editing?) improves with the later ones I have chosen, Alaska, and Space.
Apposite, are you still in Alaska? Hope your move went well!
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