It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? 2-18-19 #IMWAYR

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Finally Getting Around To

cover image of The Cuckoo's Calling audiobookThe Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith (aka JKR)
Listening to the audiobook (narration by Robert Glenister) and it’s good! If you like your private investigators slightly scruffy, surly, very smart, secretly sad, and preferably English, you will like Cormoran Strike, PI. He’s struggling financially, romantically, and healthwise, when a sharp, new assistant from the temp agency and a case concerning a questionable suicide come into his shabby office (where he sleeps on a camp bed in the back) and start to turn things around.
Published in 2013, there are already three more Cormoran Strike books since this first one. #alwaysbehind

White Teeth by Zadie Smith (2000)
I really am going to finish this novel this week. It’s so good that I’ve only been reading it when I have a big block of time to read, so I’ve been “currently reading” it for ages. Set in London, it’s got everything I like in a sprawling, big novel: over 400 pages; generations of families; ambitious scope; lots of witty/weighty conversation; and plenty of dry/dark humor.

Finished Last Week

cover image of Bel Canto print bookRead Bel Canto by Ann Patchett for a book & movie discussion with my library book club. Had listened to the audiobook a few years ago, so read it in print (mostly) this time. Dipped into the audiobook again to get the pronunciations of the names and because I remembered how good the audiobook narration by Anna Fields was.
The book was much better than the movie, but that’s always the way. The movie, taken on it’s own, is probably good, too, but simplifies the book’s themes and storylines so much that watching it right after reading the book made it a disappointment. There was also hardly any opera singing in the movie (Whaattt????) although it the whole book is saturated in opera.

Listened to The Cracked Spine audiobook cover imageThe Cracked Spine by Paige Shelton last week, while I was still using cozy mysteries to recover from my overdose of dark foreboding from too many psychological suspense audiobooks in a row!
The Cracked Spine is the first in a bookish mystery series set in Edinburgh, where the Midwestern archivist heroine has gotten a fresh start with a new job in a bookstore headed by a mysterious millionaire. Didn’t love it like I do the Max Tudor books by G.M. Malliet, but it was a good audiobook (narrated by Carrington McDuffie) and an interesting take on the bookstore cozy. Recommended for anyone who has a fondness for Scottish accents and bookstores!

cover image of The Cabin at the End of the WorldThe Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay Terrifying and tragic. WARNING: Do not read this if you can’t stomach a Stephen King novel. (There’s a reason a blurb from the master of horror is on the front cover of this book!) The Cabin at the End of the World is about a third of the size and twice as scary as your average Stephen King novel, with none of the extraneous wordplay that SK likes to throw in. If you like realistic horror about ordinary people like yourself finding themselves placed through no fault of their own into situations of extraordinary peril, you’ll find yourself unable to put this book down.

Up Next

Truly-Madly-Guilty cover image audiobook

 

 

 

 

Truly, Madly, Guilty by Liane Moriarty (2016)

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Home for Erring and Outcast Girls by Julie Kibler
(forthcoming July 2019)

I’m not doing well at posting what I’m reading every Monday, but I would love to hear what you’re reading this week (and every week), so please let me know in the comments!


It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? (#IMWAYR) is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date. It’s a place to meet up and share what you have been, are, and about to be reading over the week. It’s a great post to organize yourself. It’s an opportunity to visit and comment, and er… add to that ever-growing TBR pile! This meme started with J Kaye’s Blog and then was taken up by Sheila from Book Journey. Sheila then passed it on to Kathryn at Book Date.

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