gkaplan wrote:I currently am reading Heads You Lose by Lisa Lutz and David Hayward. Lutz is the author of the hysterically dysfunctional Spellman family series. Hayward is a poet and winner of the Pushcart Prize. Lutz wrote the first chapter, then emailed Hayward, with whom she had a previous personal involvement, and suggested they collaborate on the rest of the novel. Lutz would write the odd-numbered chapters, and Hayward would write the even-numbered chapters. They would not outline or discuss what they were working on. Each would read "blind" the chapter of the other. Neither author was allowed to undue a plot development established by the other.
Within each chapter are footnotes of comments made by the reading author to the text of the writing author. The authors also exchanged brief messages when a chapter was completed. These comments appear at the end of each chapter.
The result of this arrangement is that often the narrative of the novel is secondary to, and less interesting than, the biting comments and messages the authors make to each other. The novel is interesting. The interchange is more interesting.
bengal22 wrote:Enjoying the 2nd book of John LeCarre's Karla Trilogy - The Honourable Schoolboy. Great book about realistic spies(I assume).
Valuethinker wrote:bengal22 wrote:Enjoying the 2nd book of John LeCarre's Karla Trilogy - The Honourable Schoolboy. Great book about realistic spies(I assume).
And then you have the magnificent Sir Alec Guinness as Smiley to look forward to in 'Tinker tailor Soldier Spy' and 'Smiley's People'.
The Jeremy Irons movie of TTSP was not supposed to be too bad either, but Guinness defined the role.
bengal22 wrote:Valuethinker wrote:bengal22 wrote:Enjoying the 2nd book of John LeCarre's Karla Trilogy - The Honourable Schoolboy. Great book about realistic spies(I assume).
And then you have the magnificent Sir Alec Guinness as Smiley to look forward to in 'Tinker tailor Soldier Spy' and 'Smiley's People'.
The Jeremy Irons movie of TTSP was not supposed to be too bad either, but Guinness defined the role.
I thought the Gary Oldham TTSS was pretty good as well.
LocalHero wrote:"The Lonely Silver Rain" by John D. MacDonald, the 21st and last Travis McGee novel. I have read the previous 20.
I recently finished "How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe" by Charles Yu. It has an interesting premise, the protagonist lives in a "time capsule" and gets other time travelers out of jams for a living. And then of course gets himself into a jam. The story never really grabbed me so not much of a recommendation.
It's on my To Read list, but if you wouldn't mind... does she ever reveal whether she actually lives in a tiny but meticulously-designed, efficient, well-organized, nautically-themed apartment?gkaplan wrote:I just finished Kinsey and Me. This a compilation of short stories by Sue Grafton. The stories in the first half of the volume, some of which have been published in crime novel anthologies or in periodicals, feature the Kinsey Milhone character of her alphabet mysteries. The second half stories are not mysteries at all. The central character is Kit Blue as Sue Grafton, and the stories mirror the life Grafton experienced growing up with alcoholic parents.
nisiprius wrote:It's on my To Read list, but if you wouldn't mind... does she ever reveal whether she actually lives in a tiny but meticulously-designed, efficient, well-organized, nautically-themed apartment?gkaplan wrote:I just finished Kinsey and Me. This a compilation of short stories by Sue Grafton. The stories in the first half of the volume, some of which have been published in crime novel anthologies or in periodicals, feature the Kinsey Milhone character of her alphabet mysteries. The second half stories are not mysteries at all. The central character is Kit Blue as Sue Grafton, and the stories mirror the life Grafton experienced growing up with alcoholic parents.
nisiprius wrote:All of that organization, that system, and that machinery. Now go back to the envelope and the sheet of paper. Is he saying that in 1912, Sears Roebuck & Co. had not yet invented the order blank?
camontgo wrote:Just finished Rabbit Redux by John Updike. I liked it better than Rabbit Run. I am hoping to work through the rest of the tetralogy this year.
Austintatious wrote:The Last Lion: Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965, William Manchester's Vol. 3 of his "The Last Lion" work on the life and times of English Prime Minister Winston Churchill, largely completed by Paul Reid after Manchester's death. You'll be fighting the war from the perspective of the English people and from the personal perspective of Churchill. It's an outstanding read, filling in much interesting detail around the bits and pieces of WWII that I already knew of. Little, Brown and Company, 2012. 1053 pages. $40 cover price, but you can get it for less.
randomwalk wrote:Austintatious wrote:The Last Lion: Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965, William Manchester's Vol. 3 of his "The Last Lion" work on the life and times of English Prime Minister Winston Churchill, largely completed by Paul Reid after Manchester's death. You'll be fighting the war from the perspective of the English people and from the personal perspective of Churchill. It's an outstanding read, filling in much interesting detail around the bits and pieces of WWII that I already knew of. Little, Brown and Company, 2012. 1053 pages. $40 cover price, but you can get it for less.
Have you read the first two volumes? I ordered the boxed set a few months ago and am looking forward to reading all three... someday.
supersharpie wrote:I am on a 20th Century Russian/Eastern European history kick:
Just finished:
http://www.amazon.com/Iron-Curtain-Crus ... 0385515693
Am half way through:
http://www.amazon.com/Nicholas-Alexandr ... 0345438310
Also just started:
http://www.amazon.com/Khrushchev-Man-Hi ... 0393324842
All fine reads IMO, the Applebaum book provided great insight into Eastern Europe's post-war submission to the USSR.
camontgo wrote:Just finished Rabbit Redux by John Updike. I liked it better than Rabbit Run. I am hoping to work through the rest of the tetralogy this year.
I am now reading The Missing Risk Premium by Falkenstein. It is interesting to read an attack on standard finance theory by someone who is trained in modern finance. I doubt he'll convince me, but I think some of the stuff on Falkenstein's blog is thought provoking.
Halfway through The Grim Smile of the Five Towns, by Arnold Bennett. Definitely has its moments but maybe just a little bit too precious and whimsical."You're right, sweetheart—everything will check out on zero, to nineteen decimals. I've been fighting windmills and I've been scared sick—but how was I to think that a wonder-girl like you could ever love a mutt like me? You certainly are the gamest little partner a man ever had You're the world's straightest shooter, ace—you're a square brick if there ever was one.
nisiprius wrote:Just finished To the Last Man: A Novel of the First World War by Jeff Shaara.
I liked it. I learned some history. If you're interested in WWI and already know you like Shaara, I'd definitely read it, though if you're a WWI buff you may already know the history. BTW The Killer Angels isn't by Jeff Shaara; it's by his father, Michael Shaara.Bungo wrote:How did you like it? I enjoyed his Killer Angels novel about Gettysburg, and I have been on a WWI kick lately, so To the Last Man is on my radar screen.nisiprius wrote:Just finished To the Last Man: A Novel of the First World War by Jeff Shaara.
nisiprius wrote:I liked it. I learned some history. If you're interested in WWI and already know you like Shaara, I'd definitely read it, though if you're a WWI buff you may already know the history. BTW The Killer Angels isn't by Jeff Shaara; it's by his father, Michael Shaara.
If you liked The Killer Angels I think you will like Jeff Shaara's books. I think The Killer Angels was a touch more literary, story-telling, novelistic and Jeff's are a touch more factual and journalistic.Bungo wrote:Thanks for the info. I keep forgetting that there were two Shaaras, probably because I've only read the one book by either of them.nisiprius wrote:I liked it. I learned some history. If you're interested in WWI and already know you like Shaara, I'd definitely read it, though if you're a WWI buff you may already know the history. BTW The Killer Angels isn't by Jeff Shaara; it's by his father, Michael Shaara.
Austintatious wrote:The Last Lion: Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965, William Manchester's Vol. 3 of his "The Last Lion" work on the life and times of English Prime Minister Winston Churchill, largely completed by Paul Reid after Manchester's death. You'll be fighting the war from the perspective of the English people and from the personal perspective of Churchill.
fickle wrote:Austintatious wrote:The Last Lion: Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965, William Manchester's Vol. 3 of his "The Last Lion" work on the life and times of English Prime Minister Winston Churchill, largely completed by Paul Reid after Manchester's death. You'll be fighting the war from the perspective of the English people and from the personal perspective of Churchill.
I just finished The Grand Alliance, the 3rd book in WC's series on WWII (I picked up a 1953 copy for pennies). Very interesting. I loved reading all his correspondence. A stroll through Amazon has bagged me most of the others for cheap.
Of all the famous people in history, I'd like to have lunch with WC. I'd promise not to ask a thing, just listen.
tacster wrote:"The Grey Seas Under", by Farley Mowat. Great factual story about the operations of a North Atlantic rescue/salvage tug during the 1930's-40's. Hard to imagine what the crewmen endured, working in conditions from gales to hurricanes.
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