lol about censoring Moby Male Member!
I didn't like it either when I read it for school ages ago.
lol about censoring Moby Male Member!
I didn't like it either when I read it for school ages ago.
Each day is a gift, that's why it is called the present.
Withm, I have read the 2 Hemingway books you noted, though long, long ago. I do like his books, even though I'm not much of a classics person. I think most people here would think what I read is fluff, but at least it's not 50 Shades of Gray!
My intellectual reading is getting through the New Yorker every week, religiously, no matter how much work I have. I learn a lot from the non-fiction articles, but I do admit some of the fiction is hard for me to get through and I regularly skip the longer story if I don't get into it fairly quickly. I always told my students it was OK to "abandon" a book that you are reading for pleasure, so that's my mantra, now that I don't "have" to read anything.
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I finally caught up last night on the last few New Yorkers. I especially enjoyed the article on Ruth Bader Ginsberg.
Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.
--Mary Anne Radmacher
Hugh Howey's Wool series. I got hooked with the 99cent special for one of the early books and now wait impatiently for the next one. The fact that it started its life as self-published eBook is amazing as it is probably one of the best speculative fictions I've read in a long time.
And, because we were in Bisbee recently, several JAJance's mysteries set in Bisbee.
2009 Waterford RS-14 S&S Couplers - Brooks B68-Anatomica - Traveller
2008 Waterford RS-33 - Brooks B68-Anatomica - Go Fast
2012 Waterford Commuter - Brooks B68-Anatomica - 3.5-Season/Commuter
2011 Surly Troll - Brooks B68 Imperial - Snow Beast
Almost all of my reading is consists of children's lit. My recent reading has been this year's Newbery Winner and Honor books.
All 4 were really good reads.
Veronica
I'm nearly done with Lavinia by Ursula K Leguin. I was a classics major, and she's one of my all-time favorite authors, so I'm loving her take on a minor character in the Aeneid. With Chinue Achebe's death, I've put Things Fall Apart on my to-read list; had to read it in college and don't really remember it at all as it was spring when it was assigned!
I love Ursula, hadn't heard about Lavina, thanks! I am enjoying reading about the varied literary tastes of TE members. I do love classics, but for some reason have never really gotten into American classics. I LOVE Dostoyevsky and wish I could read Russian so I could read all of his works in the original. While I've my favorite translators of his works (Peavear and Volokhonsky - usually as a team), it would be wonderful if I didn't have to read it in translation. I also love Gogol, Bulgakov, Checkov, Dickens, Shakespeare (especially his history plays) and so many others. Of course some of those are more recent than othersI've also been reading a fair amount of non-fiction in recent months related to health and nutrition.
For some reason I've not been able to really enjoy American classic writers such as Hemingway and others. Some of our poets I have loved though, such as Longfellow. Now when it comes to speculative fiction, science fiction and mysteries that is a different story - though it seems that many of my favorite mystery authors are not American. I've never read Moby D**k, though it doesn't sound like I've missed much. I have something by Hawthorne on my Nook whenever I am brave enough to delve into it.
I've long been curious about Hemingway however. I've never read any of his works, somehow, what would be a good first reading choice? Your posts about the New Yorker has me curious, and as I can access the Nook version free for 14 days I've subscribed to it.
Last edited by Catrin; 03-23-2013 at 11:20 AM.