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RABBIT! RABBIT! RABBIT!...Yea, I remembered again!
I'll be leaving on a Western Caribbean cruise next week and have Kate Atkinson's "A God in Ruins," PS Duffy's" "The Cartographer of No Man's Land", Mitch Albom's "The First Call from Heaven," Anita Diamont's "The Last Days of Dogtown" to name a few. I am taking my fully loaded Kindle Fire, which was an invaluable communications tool on the three week cruise I took last year. Of course, I'll check the ship's library for any top sellers available for a loan. Last time around the library was nearly depleted as the Princess cruise ship was not staffing it any more and put the book borrowing on a trust or swap system. The preponderance of guests were reading E-books. This may be a change throughout the industry, so anyone going on a cruise might check to see if the ship they are taking is maintaining a staffed library.
Just finished Purity by Jonathan Franzen. Someone here, can't remember who said they started it but didn't like it and didn't finish it. I thought it was wonderful. Reminded me of early John Irving books like Garp and Owen Meany. One of he best constructed novels I've read in a long time. If you don't like swearing or lewd scenes this book might not be for you though.
As I mentioned in a late February post, I was reading and enjoying The Guilty by David Baldacci. I did finish it, and continued to enjoy it, except for the ending. Baldacci seemed to twist himself into contortions to make the story end the way it did. It seemed contrived, at least to me.
This morning I finished Playing with Fire by Tess Gerritsen This was not a Rizzoli & Isles novel, but a stand alone. While, on the surface, it was a thriller, it also touched on the history of how the holocaust dealt with the Jews in Italy. Although the numbers were far fewer than in the other countries of Europe, the Jewish population there also suffered significant losses. I can highly recommend Playing with Fire on both levels.
I finished Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter this morning. Although I initially had some doubts, it quickly got better and then better yet. At first the Mississippi-speak, the language of rural Mississippi, got to me. But soon the rhythm of the language that Franklin uses so beautifully negates what initially seemed so foreign, at least to me. And you can’t help falling in love with the characters of Larry and Silas. For a while in the story I was worried about what the ending would bring. It looked so hopeless. But in the end, Tom Franklin made it all well.
Has anyone read Franklin's other books?
After returning Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter at the library, I didn't have anything special on my mind that I wanted to read. After browsing for a while, I decided to do something different. So I checked out paperbacks by three popular authors whose names I have seen on library shelves for years but never got around to reading their books. The three authors I grabbed (grabbed is about right, too) were C. J. Box, Clive Cussler and J. A. Jance. I started with Open Season by Box, his first Joe Picket novel. It hasn't done a lot for me yet, but I haven't gotten very far into it either.
Do any of you have any thoughts or suggestions about any of these three?
I just finished a JA Jance novel, "Cold Betrayal" and liked it. I have read others that take place in Arizona with a security agency that is the basis for her novel characters. There are a few to choose from.
When I downloaded Crooked Letter another book was recommended,A Land More Kind Than Home, by Wiley Cash:
In his phenomenal debut novel—a mesmerizing literary thriller about the bond between two brothers and the evil they face in a small North Carolina town—author Wiley Cash displays a remarkable talent for lyrical, powerfully emotional storytelling. A Land More Kind than Home is a modern masterwork of Southern fiction, reminiscent of the writings of John Hart (Down River), Tom Franklin (Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter), Ron Rash (Serena), and Pete Dexter (Paris Trout)—one that is likely to be held in the same enduring esteem as such American classics as To Kill a Mockingbird, Of Mice and Men, and A Separate Peace. A brilliant evocation of a place, a heart-rending family story, a gripping and suspenseful mystery—with A Land More Kind than Home, a major American novelist enthusiastically announces his arrival.
It was well written and a 4 star on Amazon. I did read the entire book but it was the most depressing book I've read in a while, although it did remind me somewhat of To Kill A Mockingbird. After finishing the book, I had to find something light to purge the depression. I'm reading, Big Maria, by Johnny Shaw( $1.99 kindle). It started out a little gross but has gotten better, reminds me of Elmore Leonard:
Imagine Chuck Palahniuk and Don Winslow’s love child – and that would be ribald author Johnny Shaw. His novel Big Maria is a unfiltered, wild romp in which three men get one chance to find a lost gold mine; the only problem is the Big Maria Mine is right in the middle of a US Army artillery range.
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