nisiprius wrote:Breezed through reading Nora Ephron's play, Imaginary Friends, about Lillian Hellman and Mary McCarthy. I think I'd like to see it as a play; enjoyed it but it didn't have that much resonance for me since I know little about and have read little by either author. And am not the right age for names like Philip Rahv, "Bunny Wilson," etc. to mean much to me. I read The Group ages and ages ago, all I remember that the dirty part wasn't as dirty as I'd hoped. ...
jay1ess wrote:A Coffin for Dimitius, Eric Ambler 1939--An adventure into Turkey, Istanbul well written by an author well known in his day for screenplays. This actually was made into a fairly good movie.
Briar Patch, Ross Thomas 1985--a quickly read tightly written with a fast pace and intersting characters. Enjoy
randomwalk wrote:I just finished The Heart of the Matter by Graham Greene, Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow, The Spectator Bird by Wallace Stegner, and The Forever War by Dexter Filkins.
Now reading Last Lion by Peter Canellos.
FabLab wrote:Ah, Wallace Stegner. One of my idols, not just for his literary contributions, which were immense and influenced so many writers, but also for his environmental sensibilities.
randomwalk wrote:I just finished The Heart of the Matter by Graham Greene, Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow, The Spectator Bird by Wallace Stegner, and The Forever War by Dexter Filkins.
Now reading Last Lion by Peter Canellos.
chaz wrote:"Ten Big Ones" by Janet Evanovich.
Default User BR wrote:chaz wrote:"Ten Big Ones" by Janet Evanovich.
You're behind. She's up to like nineteen now.
Brian
Mr Grumpy wrote:Just finished Michael Connelly's The Drop - after the last three books, IMHO, he's back in form. I'm half-way through Dennis Lahane's Moonlight Mile and it's terrific if you like the Kenzie series. Ditto to a previous poster - if you're looking for a crime novel, George V Higgins The Friends of Eddie Coyle can't be beat. The dialogue pops off the page.
Bungo wrote:...
Now reading Roger Lowenstein's Buffett: The Making of an American Capitalist. I'm not very far into it yet - Buffett is currently taking a securities analysis class at Columbia, taught by Benjamin Graham - but so far it's good.
gkaplan wrote:He's never been out of form.
gkaplan wrote:I respectfully disagree back at you. I've read all his books and thoroughly enjoyed them all. Connelly seems to be devoting more time to his Lincoln Lawyer series than to his Harry Bosch, and you prefer the Bosch series to the Lincoln Lawyer series.

Fallible wrote:I thought this Buffett bio was one of the best (maybe because Buffett wasn't all that happy about it), but then I've liked other Lowenstein books, including The End of Wall Street, and When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management.
Bungo wrote:Fallible wrote:I thought this Buffett bio was one of the best (maybe because Buffett wasn't all that happy about it), but then I've liked other Lowenstein books, including The End of Wall Street, and When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management.
Yes, I enjoyed both of those books, especially When Genius Failed. Lowenstein does a good job writing efficiently paced financial narratives, providing enough detail so the reader can more or less understand what happened, without getting bogged down in the minutiae, and enough characterization to give the story some color but without dwelling too much on the personalities at the expense of the plot. I found The End of Wall Street to be less interesting, but I think that's mainly because the events were so recent that I still remembered most of it from reading the news. But it will be a great read for someone 20 years down the line who wants a good summary of what caused the meltdown in 2008.
Return to Personal Consumer Issues
Users browsing this forum: fkampere, jonesy, p14175, scrabbler1 and 45 guests