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Thread: Book Rec

  1. #46
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    Catrin, thanks! That's definitely on my reading list.

    My grandmother was in Germany during Hitler and had to escape to America. She wasn't Jewish or any other minority - she just wasn't one of Hitler's chosen people. But, she still secretly believed that Hitler was right and carried many prejudices to her grave. Different times.
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  2. #47
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dogmama View Post
    Catrin, thanks! That's definitely on my reading list.

    My grandmother was in Germany during Hitler and had to escape to America. She wasn't Jewish or any other minority - she just wasn't one of Hitler's chosen people. But, she still secretly believed that Hitler was right and carried many prejudices to her grave. Different times.
    They were indeed very different times, and that is another thing that becomes clear in this book. We "know" that there was more antisemitism in this country at that point in the 20th century, but reading this really brings that home. The focus is on Germany, but of course there were his interactions with the "folks back home", and even Dobb himself was on the anti-Jewish side of things - but he didn't agree with the methods the Germans used. Different times indeed.

  3. #48
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dogmama View Post
    Catrin, thanks! That's definitely on my reading list.

    My grandmother was in Germany during Hitler and had to escape to America. She wasn't Jewish or any other minority - she just wasn't one of Hitler's chosen people. But, she still secretly believed that Hitler was right and carried many prejudices to her grave. Different times.
    That does sound like a good book. As usual my reading list is stacked to the rafters and I've only got motivation for light fantasy (really enjoying Martha Wells' Raksura books right now, BTW) - but I'll keep an eye out for it.

    My grandmother was in Germany during Hitler's ascendancy also. She had the right bloodlines (she used to tell a story about Mussolini hitting on her at an embassy party! ) but the wrong beliefs. She entered an interracial marriage and followed a circuitous international route to wind up in the US with her children. It's one of the reasons I cut my mom a lot of slack for a lot of things. I can't imagine growing up on three continents speaking four languages, in wildly different social and economic circumstances each time, before she was 12.
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  4. #49
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    Sounds interesting. I am still on a "no Nazis diet" for all media.


    Tana French has a new one Broken Harbor.
    Who knew there'd be so many creepy murders in Dublin?!
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  5. #50
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    Quote Originally Posted by malkin View Post
    Sounds interesting. I am still on a "no Nazis diet" for all media.


    Tana French has a new one Broken Harbor.
    Who knew there'd be so many creepy murders in Dublin?!
    I've never read any of her books. Are they good? They've caught my eye recently because I'm in one of my periodic mystery/thriller phases.
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  6. #51
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    Highest recommendation for Tana French's books!!!

    All the normal procedural crime stuff, with fleshed out characters and rich language.
    Each day is a gift, that's why it is called the present.

  7. #52
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    Quote Originally Posted by indysteel View Post
    I've never read any of her books. Are they good? They've caught my eye recently because I'm in one of my periodic mystery/thriller phases.
    She's great! Tana French and Denise Mina are my suspense discoveries of the year for sure.
    "My predominant feeling is one of gratitude. I have loved and been loved;I have been given much and I have given something in return...Above all, I have been a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself has been an enormous privilege and an adventure." O. Sacks

  8. #53
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    I'm reading "Enemies: A History of the FBI" by Tim Weiner. I picked it up for a research paper for school and keep renewing it because I can't put it down.

    I'm also reading in rotations on the bus commute:
    Chi Marathon by Danny Dreyer
    The Thrive Diet by Brendan Brazier
    Eat & Run by Scott Jurek.

    And I listened to "Daughter of Smoke and Bone" by Laini Taylor, a young adult novel that was really excellent for a long trip with my artist daughter down to North Carolina and back. We really, really enjoyed it.
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  9. #54
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    I'm on an end of the world as we know it binge, just finished the Wool Omnibus, now I'm reading First Shift, which is like a prequel to Wool. If you are a science fiction lover, I highly recommend it.

    My Goodreads bookshelf is an assortment of earth in the future stories..

    Radioduranz
    2184
    Alice in Deadland (Zombies!!)
    The Windup Girl

    I also spent about a week reading the Hunger Games trilogy.

  10. #55
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    Quote Originally Posted by snapdragen View Post
    I'm on an end of the world as we know it binge, just finished the Wool Omnibus, now I'm reading First Shift, which is like a prequel to Wool. If you are a science fiction lover, I highly recommend it.

    My Goodreads bookshelf is an assortment of earth in the future stories..

    Radioduranz
    2184
    Alice in Deadland (Zombies!!)
    The Windup Girl

    I also spent about a week reading the Hunger Games trilogy.

    Have you read any of the Nantucket/Lady of the Sword stuff by S M Stirling?
    Or, the trilogy that begins with 40 Signs of Rain by Kim Stanley Robinson?
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  11. #56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irulan View Post
    Have you read any of the Nantucket/Lady of the Sword stuff by S M Stirling?
    Or, the trilogy that begins with 40 Signs of Rain by Kim Stanley Robinson?
    I haven't, I'll check them out.

  12. #57
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    warning, for SM Stirling you must set your plausibility meter to zero as he's very tongue in cheek.
    Last edited by Irulan; 08-10-2012 at 03:19 PM.
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  13. #58
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    Another vote for Gone Girl by Flynn -- a real page turner

    Liked Canada by Ford too but I didn't stay up late reading it (my standard for good vs very good).
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  14. #59
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    Quote Originally Posted by malkin View Post
    Highest recommendation for Tana French's books!!!

    All the normal procedural crime stuff, with fleshed out characters and rich language.
    Quote Originally Posted by salsabike View Post
    Tana French and Denise Mina are my suspense discoveries of the year for sure.

    I was able to check out the Kindle edition of Tana French's Faithful Place from my public library and I devoured it this weekend. I really enjoyed it, thanks for the recommendation!

    I have Broken Harbor on reserve (no Kindle edition yet so no instant gratification, ratz).

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  15. #60
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    Quote Originally Posted by snapdragen View Post
    I'm on an end of the world as we know it binge, just finished the Wool Omnibus, now I'm reading First Shift, which is like a prequel to Wool. If you are a science fiction lover, I highly recommend it.
    So I'm not the only one stuck in the world of Post-Apocalyptic fiction?

    I really liked Wool. I don't know how it ended up on my reading list, but I found them to be real page-turners (Ok, it was on my Kindle, so that would be a "real button presser"?)

    Geek Feminism had a posting a while back for Dystopian/SciFi with strong female leads ( http://geekfeminism.org/2012/02/15/d...le-characters/ ). Found some entertaining reads there, but nothing that I'd scream, "Read This" from that I hadn't already read.

    Nicola Griffith's blog (she who wrote _Ammonite_) occasionally has reading lists and I've found interesting reads there, as well.
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