Best book you've read in the past few months?
#51
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Central Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA
Posts: 7,695
I read all of the Outlander series several years ago. Until a few days ago I was unaware that they had made it into a TV series. I don't have Starz, but was able to watch the first 10 episodes on Xfinity's "Watchathon". They did a terrific job with the casting. Jamie is just as handsome and appealing as he is in the book (I've been in love with him since the first book ) and Claire is lovely.
I'm also an audio book person. I don't actually read much anymore as audios let me do two things at once. The Outlander books are also on audio and they are wonderful. I was able to get them from the library and I highly recommend them.
Another audio series that I highly recommend are the Clan of the Cave Bear books. Wonderful narrator on those, as well.
I'm also an audio book person. I don't actually read much anymore as audios let me do two things at once. The Outlander books are also on audio and they are wonderful. I was able to get them from the library and I highly recommend them.
Another audio series that I highly recommend are the Clan of the Cave Bear books. Wonderful narrator on those, as well.
#52
Super Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: The other Milwaukie, Oregon
Posts: 1,913
I just finished All the Light We Cannot See and it is wonderful. The writing is great; it is almost poetic and so descriptive. The characters are so well developed and the story is simply gripping. I bought it at Costco so didn't have to pay full price for a hardback.
#54
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Jeffersonville, In
Posts: 2,621
I am mostly a mystery and quilt related reader but this thread has encouraged me to expand that list. I enjoyed "Alice's Tulips" (can't remember the author right now) It is set in the civil war but from the view of a young woman
who marries a man who goes off to fight and leaves her with his mother, far away from her family.
who marries a man who goes off to fight and leaves her with his mother, far away from her family.
#55
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,018
#57
My newest favorite book is "The Painted Veil", by Somerset Maugham, published 1925.
Literature from the early 1900s fascinate me. It doesn't seem as formula as modern works. Old fashioned story telling is just better, to me, than what I find on the market today.
Literature from the early 1900s fascinate me. It doesn't seem as formula as modern works. Old fashioned story telling is just better, to me, than what I find on the market today.
#58
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Clay Springs AZ
Posts: 3,229
Just finished Greg Iles " Natchez Burning" .
It takes place in Tenn. during the 60's.
Ive had to enter all my read books into the computer and print out a list so I don't buy a book already read.
Still have time for quilting since I am retired.
It takes place in Tenn. during the 60's.
Ive had to enter all my read books into the computer and print out a list so I don't buy a book already read.
Still have time for quilting since I am retired.
Last edited by Rose Marie; 04-18-2015 at 07:37 AM.
#59
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Vancouver Island, Beautiful BC
Posts: 2,090
No way I can choose just one book.
Non fiction I am currently reading Daring Greatly by Brene Brown. I have read about 10 books on healing from a broken marriage over the past 10 months.
Fiction - This past 10 months has been incredible hard since the break up of my marriage. I found that almost every book I had in my 'to read' box had relationships in it and I could not face them.
A friend loaned me "The Sweetness that the Bottom of the Pie" by Alan Bradley. It is a wonderful story about a young girl who fancies herself to be a chemist and detective in post WWII England. I have bought about 4 more in the series. I will be donating them to the school library.
Non fiction I am currently reading Daring Greatly by Brene Brown. I have read about 10 books on healing from a broken marriage over the past 10 months.
Fiction - This past 10 months has been incredible hard since the break up of my marriage. I found that almost every book I had in my 'to read' box had relationships in it and I could not face them.
A friend loaned me "The Sweetness that the Bottom of the Pie" by Alan Bradley. It is a wonderful story about a young girl who fancies herself to be a chemist and detective in post WWII England. I have bought about 4 more in the series. I will be donating them to the school library.
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