I have quite a bit of free time here. The Chinchillas often spend their nights watching telenovelas, but I find them nearly impossible to follow. The most popular one in the Chinchilla house comes on every day, and I swear that someone dies or gets married or puts a voodoo spell on someone or changes their mind about being in love with someone every five minutes. That´s a lot to keep up with at half-speed Spanish!
So, I´ve been reading.
Here´s what I´ve read so far - have any of you read any of these?
Say You´re One of Them - Uwem Akpan
Short fiction stories set in Africa. Some are very, very hard to read, but it is a book I found myself thinking about days later, which says something good about how powerful it is.
The Geography of Bliss - Eric Weiner
This is a non-fiction book about a guy visiting the five "happiest countries on earth." I found it vaguely interesting and liked some of the common threads between the happy countries, but didn´t at all enjoy the author´s writing.
A Gate At the Stairs - Lorrie Moore
A novel by someone I had never heard of, this follows a young college girl through her first (?) year at school in the post 9/11 midwest. It is a strange story, and I think it could have been told well while cutting a third of the length, but I looked forward each day to the next time I´d get to read on in it.
Possible Side Effects - Augusten Burroughs
This was a nice break from the more serious reading I´d been doing - by the author of Running with Scissors and Dry, both of which I enjoyed. I liked having something light to sit down to, but missed the narrative that the other two books had. This one is more a collection of essays than the other two - but still very funny.
A Long Way Down - Nick Hornby
I really liked this story. Nick Hornby also wrote About a Boy and High Fidelity, and his love of music is in this book too. It´s a story about four strangers who all arrive at the top of a building one night as jumpers, and the friendship they begin from there. It´s lighter reading than it sounds like, and I devoured it in one hammocky afternoon.
The Reluctant Fundamentalist - Mohsin Hamid
This story is told entirely by one man talking to another (who never speaks) in a restaurant in Lahore, Pakistan. It´s interestingly done, and definitely an unusual way to tell the story. I found it a quick read, one that I didn´t want to leave to do my daily chores (which doesn´t sound like much, but I like my daily chores!)
So - let me know if you have read these, and if you have, what you think!
Monday, November 16, 2009
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3 comments:
Hey! It's Kimberly...glad you got Ben's picture:) If you ever want to read anything that won't make you think, let me know! I couldn't live without my weekly People magazine and novels by Baldacci and Brown. I show Ben your blog and read it to him so he can also stay in touch with you. Be safe! We love you!
It's Jena....and I am very slowly reading Say You're One of Them. I've found the stories interesting so far, but you're right, some of the sections are hard to read.
Also, I'm reading The Book Thief by Markus Zusak. I've been trying to read more than just picture books for work, so I found this in our young adult section. It is set in Nazi Germany. I like it so far. Have you read it?
I have finished your Dan Brown book and have no clue about any of the books you discussed - hard to imagine, I know...: ) I do plan to read a mystery on the plane or at the airport, so if you have one you want, I will buy it and read it on the trip and then just leave it with you.
I am soooo very much enjoying your blogs, as always, your way with words makes me want to keep reading and gives me a visual image of where you are and what you are doing..
and the comments... Kimberly's almost made me tear up - the image of her reading your blog to Ben so he stays connected to you - too sweet.... and Jena's made me laugh, the part about trying to read something other than picture books, makes me smile as I type it. ; )
Hope you are smiling too-
Love you! Mom : )
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