What are we reading Jan-June 2024

TalkCanadian Bookworms

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What are we reading Jan-June 2024

1mdoris
Dec 31, 2023, 7:45 pm

Please add books, comments and ratings if you would like to!

2LynnB
Jan 1, 9:26 am

I've declared 2024 the YOBB (Year of Big Books) as I intend to get through some of the larger tomes that have been on my TBR shelves for a while. So far, I've read 14 of the 731 pages of Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow.

3rabbitprincess
Jan 1, 11:17 am

>2 LynnB: Great idea, Lynn!

In contrast, I will probably start 2024 with a short book, likely a graphic novel. I'm thinking A Man and His Cat, Vol. 8, by Umi Sakurai (translated by Taylor Engel).

4Cecilturtle
Jan 2, 2:07 pm

I'm halfway through three books,
The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice, a historical fiction about the free mixed-race French people in the 1840. The style is full of flourishes but it's really interesting.

Men Who Hate Women by Laura Bates, recommended by LynnB. I had actually tried to start an Everyday Sexism initiative at work, based on Bates's initial idea, but it was too controversial. 10 years later this book comes out and it's more relevant than ever. Truly disturbing but Bates does an amazing job of pulling all the strings together.

The Postmistress by Sarah Blake, a WWII novel set half in London, half in a sleepy Massachusetts town. The writing is very strong even if the story a bit slow to unfold.

5Cecilturtle
Jan 2, 2:12 pm

>2 LynnB: You can join us here if you need a bit of support!
https://www.librarything.fr/ngroups/24196/2024-BIG-FAT-BOOK-CHALLENGE

6rabbitprincess
Jan 2, 6:10 pm

Loved A Man and His Cat, Vol. 8 and immediately requested Volume 9 from the library. While I wait for it, I've started Les poisons de la couronne, by Maurice Druon.

7LynnB
Jan 3, 7:26 am

>2 LynnB: looks interesting! But I can't post??

8Cecilturtle
Edited: Jan 3, 12:36 pm

>7 LynnB: Are you talking about the BFB group? Did you formally join? I don't think you can post if you haven't joined.

9LynnB
Jan 7, 7:58 pm

I'm a little over half way thru Alexander Hamilton but have had to put it aside for library book deadlines and book club reads. I'm starting Pornography War: The Past, Present, and Future of America's Obscene Obsession by Kelsy Burke

10rabbitprincess
Jan 7, 10:08 pm

Just started a hefty biography of Mal Evans, the Beatles' roadie: Living the Beatles Legend, by Kenneth Womack. It has holds on it at the library, so I might have to read it in two goes (for reasons of time, not for lack of interest).

11rabbitprincess
Jan 8, 5:57 pm

Finished my current bus book, Les Poisons de la couronne, by Maurice Druon. Now I'm changing genres and languages with Howl's Moving Castle, by Diana Wynne Jones.

12LynnB
Jan 10, 3:06 pm

13LibraryCin
Edited: Jan 13, 3:30 pm

Oops! In the process of reviewing and posting two books right now. I usually only post my Canadian reads here, but this is the other one!

14LibraryCin
Jan 13, 3:49 pm

Fayne / Ann-Marie MacDonald
3 stars

In the late 19th century, 12-year old Charlotte lives with her father at Fayne (in Scotland or England). Her mother died in childbirth and her brother died when she was young, as well (Charlotte does not remember her brother). Charlotte is extremely smart and her father hires a tutor for her (who is initially perturbed that he was brought to tutor a girl). She wants to attend university.

This did not turn out as I’d expected. It was very long and I’m rating it ok. There were parts I liked (more toward the beginning of the book), but whenever we switched perspectives, I felt like I was starting over (even though after the first couple of times, we were mostly going back and continuing from where the last switch left off), and wasn’t interested for the first bit (of every switch). It took time to get interested again, but just as that happened, we switched again.

So, the other perspective is Charlotte’s mother. I honestly didn’t find this nearly as interesting, overall, as Charlotte herself. Though, after a bit, I was interested (then… switch!). Clarissa (Charlotte’s aunt) was a piece of work, wow! I didn’t like her from the start. The end was a bit weird: Did Charlotte live to about 140 years old!?

15LynnB
Jan 14, 8:47 am

16Cecilturtle
Jan 15, 2:40 pm

I've finished Sans feu ni lieu by Fred Vargas, one of my favourite French detective fiction writers.

I've also picked up the small book Histoires jamais entendues dans un sushi bar au Japon par Masayo Kokonoke, a series of short stories.
It's part of a travelling series called Histoires jamais entendues (insert typical location of a country here); so far there are 5 countries: Japan, Nepal, Ireland, Spain and Brazil. Several other countries are planned, including Canada. The books are written by authors from the country. My daughter and I were so delighted by the idea that we bought all 5 in the series in a floating barge bookstore in Paris - one of the most unique and lovely bookstores I've ever been in. I recommend it: https://www.penichelibrairie.com/

18rabbitprincess
Jan 23, 8:24 pm

I've switched from fantasy to crime with Mystery Man, by Colin Bateman. A friend picked this up for me at a used bookstore in Toronto because it was on my to-read list and the library didn't have it.

19LynnB
Jan 23, 9:38 pm

I'm starting Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson

20Cecilturtle
Jan 28, 6:04 pm

I finished Maximum City Bombay Lost and Found by Suketu Mehta who was a Pulitzer Prize finalist around 2005. Well-deserved: his writing and ability to bring the city to life is outstanding.

21LynnB
Jan 29, 6:15 pm

22rabbitprincess
Jan 29, 6:27 pm

Hankering for a re-read, so I pulled an Agatha Christie off the shelves: Easy to Kill (aka Murder Is Easy).

23Cecilturtle
Jan 30, 1:47 pm

I've finished The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice, a historical novel about Creole society in New Orleans, right after the Louisiana Purchase. Very interesting and, of course with Rice, high in colour and drama.

24Cecilturtle
Edited: Feb 6, 9:53 am

I've started A Banquet of Consequences by Elizabeth George, my first book from this author. My dad loved it, and he doesn't read much, so I'm looking forward to it. It's a 700 page door stop so I'll have time to settle in!

25LynnB
Feb 5, 5:42 pm

I'm re-reading The Post-Birthday World by Lionel Shriver for a book club.

26LynnB
Feb 10, 5:58 pm

I am about to re-read The Way the Crow Flies by one of my favourite authors, Ann-Marie MacDonald for a book club discussion.

27LibraryCin
Feb 12, 10:41 pm

What Strange Paradise / Omar El Akkad
4 stars

Amir is a 9-year old Syrian boy who survives a shipwreck. Everyone else to be seen has washed up on shore, dead. He is on an island, but doesn’t know where he is, nor does he understand the language. When two men see him and point and shout, Amir gets scared and runs. He runs into Vanna, 15-years old and though they are unable to communicate verbally, she hides him.

The story then shifts to “Before”, which brings us up to date on how Amir got where he is. We go back and forth between Amir’s before and “After”. Much of after is told from Vanna’s POV, but occasionally we switch to the POV of a colonial who is dead set on finding Amir, the little boy who ran away.

Given that it’s (primarily) from a 9-year old’s POV, it took a bit to figure out what was going on through much of the story. I am still not sure I understand the ending. But it was a “good” (powerful) story, even so.

28Cecilturtle
Feb 13, 2:19 pm

>27 LibraryCin: I work with El Akkad's mom and got a signed copy (my little boasting moment!). Like you, I didn't so much enjoy it as I found it powerful and though-provoking.

I finished Guilt by Jonathan Kellerman. It was a good story. I enjoyed Dr. Delaware's psychoanalyses but the intrigue was plodding: I definitely was not sitting on the edge of my seat since I figured out the denouement fairly easily.

29LibraryCin
Feb 13, 9:56 pm

>28 Cecilturtle: Oh, that's pretty cool you work with his mom!

30WeeTurtle
Edited: Feb 26, 9:22 pm

I planned on reducing my tbr pile but I bought three more books while I was out today so that's not about to happen right away.

I was invited to a book club this year so I'm reading for that. Right now it's Hag-Seed (my pick), Atwood's retelling of The Tempest and after that it's The Silent Patient which I'm not familiar with.

My friend and I are also reading through Tamsyn Muir's The Locked Tomb series as it was recommended to him based on a book he's writing. We're both literature nerds so it's fun to read and compare. We've read through Gideon and Harrow, and I'm waiting for Nona the Ninth to arrive at the library. Not my favourite in terms of writing, but the discussions we've been having about what might be going on (especially in Harrow) have been fun. Science Fantasy I've heard it called, genre wise.

And the books I picked up recently are Annihilation (the movie was really neat so reading the book), No Longer Human (I saw a Junji Ito manga based on this but I'm not much of a manga reader), Slaughterhouse Five (because I haven't read it yet) and Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman because I wanted another Murakami book.

Oh, and the previous book club book we read was The Personal Librarian. I got an audio copy and really enjoyed it. It's a fictionalized account of the life of Belle da Costa Greene, the librarian for the J. P. Morgan library in New York. I had no idea who she was at the start and found the politics and art scene in New York at the time to be interesting.

31LynnB
Feb 18, 4:10 pm

I'm starting the Canada Reads shortlist with The Future by Catherine Leroux

32Cecilturtle
Feb 19, 10:17 am

I finished Seeing Others by Canadian-American Michèle Lamont with the subtitle: How Recognition Works and How it Can Heal a Divided World.
I was a little disappointed that Lamont didn't draw more on the Canadian model - it's all very US focused. It tries to present various points of view and in doing so, muddles the main message. It's very narrow in scope but with wildly broad approach. In short, I didn't love it, but I agree that it's important to apply a sociology lens to modern problems and not just an economy one.

33librorumamans
Feb 19, 5:10 pm

>30 WeeTurtle:

You have misspelled Tamsyn and therefore have created a dead link to her author page.

34ted74ca
Feb 20, 1:03 pm

As usual, I'm doing very little reading, as I'm just too busy with everything (work, my dog and her sports and a big reno at my house). I did manage to finish
A Man Called Ove by Fredrick Backman, which I really enjoyed
and Not Dark Yet by Peter Robinson, which I liked, but it made me sad again that there will be no more Inspector Banks novels.

35LynnB
Feb 21, 7:07 am

I'm reading Meet Me at the Lake by Carley Fortune for Canada Reads

36LynnB
Feb 21, 11:01 pm

About to start my third Canada Reads books, Shut Up You're Pretty, a collection of short stories by Tea Mutonji.

37LynnB
Feb 23, 2:12 pm

I'm continuing my Canada Reads pentathlon with Bad Cree by Jessica Johns

38LynnB
Feb 26, 4:13 pm

Finishing up the Canada Reads finalists with Denison Avenue by Christina Wong, illustrated by Daniel Innes

39WeeTurtle
Edited: Feb 26, 9:27 pm

>33 librorumamans: Fixed.

Last couple reads were pretty quick but slowing down now as Nona is less interesting than Muir's other two books and Replay is fairly dense, though interesting enough.

40ted74ca
Feb 27, 11:35 am

I'm really enjoying Richard Osman's Thursday Murder Club series. I finished the second one The Man Who Died Twice the other day and have already requested the 3rd on in the series from our local library. My workplace is very stressful right now and I'm also in the middle of a major kitchen/dining room renovation so these light, humorous reads are just perfect right now.

41LynnB
Feb 27, 8:32 pm

42Cecilturtle
Mar 1, 1:24 pm

I'm finishing Suites inoubliables by French-writing Japanese Akira Miubayashi. It's a multilayered love story which weaves through 3 generations with a beautiful cello and a love of music that ties it all together. I really want to love it but I find the style stiff and descriptive: I don't feel connected to the characters at all. The plot and themes, however, are quite original.

43LynnB
Mar 3, 1:20 pm

44LynnB
Mar 6, 2:51 pm

I'm reading The Forgotten Garden by one of my favourite authors, Kate Morton

45LynnB
Mar 10, 6:49 pm

46LibraryCin
Mar 14, 11:25 pm

Somewhere in France / Jennifer Robson
4 stars

Lady Elizabeth is in her early 20s(?) and has not had a real education, although she would have loved that. She is expected to marry, be a wife, and mother. When her brother’s friend, Robbie from university, visits, “Lilly” is swept away. But he is far below her “station”, and her mother sends him packing (with a lie Lilly doesn’t know about). Lilly thought they were getting along very nicely and was very disappointed Robbie left without a word.

WWI arrives, and Edward (Lilly’s brother) heads to war, and Lilly learns that Robbie is a doctor and has gone to France to perform surgeries on wounded soldiers at the front. Lilly wants so badly to help, but is forbidden by her mother. She finds a way to secretly learn to drive, and when things blow up with her parents, she leaves to live with her former tutor in London. From there, she manages to get a job driving an ambulance in France to help shuttle soldiers from when they were wounded to the makeshift hospitals.

This was also a romance, which is not usually my thing, but I got swept away in this one. I really liked it. I really liked both Lilly and Robbie. And it was interesting to learn about the women ambulance drivers in the war. The author’s father was a historian with an interest in the two world wars.

47LynnB
Mar 15, 7:00 pm

I'm re-reading...after more than a decade....Fall On Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald, one of my top three fiction books of all time.

FYI, the other two are The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy and Not Wanted on the Voyage by Timothy Findley

48LynnB
Mar 17, 1:33 pm

My book club has put off our discussion of Fall on Your Knees, so I'm going to put it aside for a week or so. I'm reading The First Day of the Rest of My Life by Cathy Lamb

49librorumamans
Mar 17, 6:45 pm

The Books section of Le Monde this week devotes two pages to Lucy Maud Montgomery, the cover article a review of a new translation of Emily of New Moon, and on page three another arguing that she is underrated as an adult author. I don't believe I ever read the Emily books.

Any comments?

50LibraryCin
Edited: Mar 17, 9:19 pm

>49 librorumamans: I read them, but it was so long ago, I don't really remember what I thought. I'll double check, but I think I read them before I was rating and writing reviews.

ETA: Yeah, read before I wrote reviews, so I just don't remember!

51LynnB
Mar 18, 8:17 am

>49 librorumamans: I've never read them. I did read Anne of Green Gables decades ago.

52LynnB
Mar 20, 6:57 pm

I'm reading Anastasia: The Life of Anna Anderson by Peter Kurth. I know that recent DNA evidence shows Anastasia is buried with her family, but I remain interested in the life and times of pretenders.

53LibraryCin
Edited: Mar 20, 10:43 pm

A Beautiful Truth / Colin McAdam
3.5 stars

Walt and Judy want children, but are unable to have any. When Walt sees a chimpanzee at a circus, he decides he will get one for his wife, in place of a child. They love Looee very much, like a son, but as with all wild animals, as he ages, he is too much to handle.

There is a chimpanzee sanctuary where people are studying the chimps’ behaviour. In the story, we alternate between Walt/Judy/Looee’s perspectives, and the perspectives of the people and chimps at the sanctuary.

I listened to the audio and at first, particularly when we switched to the sanctuary, I had some trouble initially figuring out what was going on. It was interesting to see things from the chimps’ perspectives at times, though. And heartbreaking. I also had trouble getting “into” the book at the start knowing Walt and Judy had done a terrible thing treating a wild animal as a child; There was no way it was going to end well for Looee. I felt like the book didn’t fully end, but it’s possible I missed something (audio), or maybe the author wanted “life” to just sort of continue on.

54ted74ca
Mar 22, 12:26 pm

Really enjoying Richard Osman's Thursday Murder Club mystery series. I just finished The Bullet That Missed.

55LynnB
Mar 26, 10:03 am

56ted74ca
Mar 27, 1:26 am

March's selection for my book club was The Personal Librarian by Marie Benedict. A piece of historical fiction, set in New York City in the early 1900s, that I found it somewhat interesting, but didn't enjoy the writing. The main character was rather unlikeable, everyone's speech seemed somewhat stilted, the story didn't seem to flow well, and the moral message about prejudice and bias against blacks in America was reiterated over and over until it lost its impact.

57WeeTurtle
Mar 29, 3:40 am

So I just finished American Psycho. Wow. One of the best books I've read I think, but it's not something I think I could ever casually recommend, much the same way one wouldn't casually recommend the movie Texas Chainsaw Massacre. It's graphic and appalling in all ways, but also makes a very strong point that, in the world of Patrick Bateman, something is wrong.

I've seen the film a few times so I had an idea of what to expect, but not to the extent that was in the book.

58Cecilturtle
Mar 29, 1:15 pm

>57 WeeTurtle: It's been on my list for years... now I'm curious!

I've been on vacation and finished two books:
B is for Burglar by Sue Grafton - a light detective fiction set in the 1980s, which makes for a fun blast from the past

The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion - a really touching and authentic account of grief, as the author copes with her husband's sudden passing while her daughter is struggling with a serious illness. It was not what I was expecting but I'm really glad I read it.

59LynnB
Apr 1, 7:10 pm

I'm starting The Postcard by Anne Berest

60LynnB
Apr 3, 12:41 pm

I'm about to start Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

61Cecilturtle
Apr 3, 7:51 pm

I've finished a bunch of books over my vacation, but most recentlyThe Rebel's Apothecary by Jenny Sansouci which provides practical advice, research and recipes to support health. The author provides a super balanced view, including using these foods with a traditional Western treatment, and demonstrates how cannabis, CBD, and mushrooms help. I've started experimenting and it's been really rewarding.

62WeeTurtle
Apr 7, 3:51 am

I'm almost through Annihilation. It's much more internal and meandering than I thought it would be, for lack of a better word. I saw the film and am wondering if maybe it borrowed from the second book as well, since much of the action in the movie isn't present in the book. It's hinted at though, in ambiguous ways, like I think I can see where the film-makers got their idea. I think I'm going to keep going with the trilogy.

65Cecilturtle
Apr 12, 11:13 am

I'm reading Dossier 64 by Jussi Alder-Olsen, a pretty terrifying thriller where a eugenicist forces abortions on "unworthy" women. Luckily a good dose of humour alleviates the tone.

66librorumamans
Edited: Apr 12, 11:52 am

I'm finding Changer : méthode by Édouard Louis a compelling read.

67LynnB
Apr 12, 3:19 pm

I'm reading Health for All: A Doctor's Prescription for a Healthier Canada by Jane Philpott, after having heard her interviewed on CBC Radio.

68LynnB
Apr 14, 2:14 pm

69mdoris
Apr 14, 3:15 pm

70LibraryCin
Apr 14, 3:23 pm

Up and Down / Terry Fallis
4 stars

David used to work in Ottawa, but moved to Toronto to be closer to his dying mother, who has been mostly taken care of by his sister. His new job is with a PR firm and he is thrown into the fire immediately to help with a NASA campaign. Some love, some don’t, his idea of a “citizen astronaut” campaign. People can enter to randomly be selected to go up to space, as long as they can pass the training requirements. But the people at NASA who matter love the idea and it’s on. There will be one winner from the US and one from Canada. But someone (in the DC office of the PR firm) have specific ideas about who they think should win the “random” draw. And the random person in Canada? Definitely not what anyone expected!

This was fun! Fallis’ books are humourous and this was definitely that. And I loved L Percival, Canada’s winner. There were interesting “side” stories for both David and L Percival. The PR guy in DC was horrible! But, I suppose, for the humourous slant of the novel, it makes sense to have some over-the-top characters. I really should read more of Fallis’ books (I’ve already read the political ones with Angus, but no others -- yet.)

71rabbitprincess
Apr 14, 8:28 pm

>70 LibraryCin: This one and The Best Laid Plans have been my favourite Fallis novels. I still have to read Operation Angus!

72LibraryCin
Apr 14, 9:36 pm

>71 rabbitprincess: I did look up his others yesterday and chose one more to add to the tbr... I am going to (at some point, anyway... hard to say when) give Poles Apart a try.

74LynnB
Edited: Apr 18, 9:59 am

75Cecilturtle
Apr 17, 11:30 am

I finished A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith, a very well-written coming-of-age story largely inspired by the author's own youth.

76LynnB
Apr 18, 12:48 pm

77Cecilturtle
Apr 18, 3:35 pm

I'm finishing 3 short stories featuring one of my favourite detectives, Adamsberg, in Coule la Seine by Fred Vargas.

78ted74ca
Apr 21, 3:51 pm

Just finished Hamnet & Judith by Maggie O'Farrell-our book club selection for this month, and really enjoyed it.

79LynnB
Apr 21, 7:24 pm

I've just started The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro

80Cecilturtle
Apr 22, 9:06 am

I'm finishing Cover her face, a nice classic who-dunnit by PD James.

81MurphyJesus
Apr 24, 9:21 am

My goal this year is to read books from my own shelf, i'm trying not to go to the library or read e-books. I've accumulated so many books during the pandemic that I want to read, but they're coming in faster than I can read them. Hoping to make a nice dent in my collection (I tend to get rid of most of what I read afterwards). Saying that though, there are two upcoming community book sales that I "have" to go to. Sigh. Trying to get some of my larger books and classics done. Started off the year with Middlemarch and going from there. Mixing it up with some sci-fi and nonfiction (biography's and history). Happy reading everyone!

82LynnB
Apr 25, 9:09 am

>81 MurphyJesus: I have twice had years where I decided to read what I had at home. I found some support on LT with groups Books of the Shelf (BOTS) and Read our own Tomes (ROOT). Don't know if they are still active, but you could check.

I declared 2024 the YOBB (Year of Big Books) because I noticed I was consistently skipping over the larger books on my shelves. I have now cleared everything over 500 pages and am trying to read those that have been around the longest. Finding lots of good stuff!

Enjoy wanting what you have.

83Cecilturtle
Apr 25, 9:25 am

>82 LynnB: I can confirm the ROOT group is still very active! I've read 26 off my shelves this year already.
There's also the 2024 Big Fat Books Challenge that's going on. It's definitely encouraged me to pick up my door stoppers.

84LynnB
Apr 25, 5:10 pm

I'm reading Trust by Hernan Diaz

85ted74ca
Apr 27, 2:03 pm

I've enjoyed every one of Tara French's novels so far, and The Hunter was no exception.

86LynnB
Apr 29, 4:11 pm

87Cecilturtle
Apr 30, 10:15 am

I'm finishing Henry, Himself by Stewart O'Nan, a really sweet series of vignettes of 75 year-old Henry and his wife, Emily.

I'm also reading Borden Chantry by Louis L'Amour. This is my first L'Amour which I picked up out of curiosity, and I'm loving the style!

89ted74ca
May 3, 8:00 pm

I just finished The Forever Witness by Edward Humes-a true crime story about the use of genetic genealogy in solving a cold case double murder. A fascinating read.

91Cecilturtle
May 14, 10:56 am

I'm struggling with reading this month, but I have a few on the go:
1. Rue Deschambault by Gabrielle Roy, which earned her her second Governor General's award
2.Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell, which I really want to like because it's a fictionalized biography based on William Shakespeare's son but the airy-fairy-ness of the writing is irking me
3. The Brethrens by John Grisham which is another lawyer story; I'm waiting for it to become interesting.

92LynnB
May 14, 8:15 pm

93ted74ca
May 16, 2:30 pm

My book club's selection for May is Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus. I'd already heard so many accolades about this book that I was actually a bit disappointed when I finally read it. It was funny and witty but somehow not quite what I expected. A good read nonetheless.

94ted74ca
Edited: May 16, 7:31 pm

Also read a somewhat less than thrilling "thriller": What Happened to Nina? by Dervla McTiernan

95LynnB
May 17, 3:13 pm

96LynnB
May 21, 3:00 pm

97LynnB
May 23, 8:09 am

I'm reading The Mistress of Nothing by Kate Pullinger for a book club. I first read it for another book club in 2010 and didn't like it much. Let's see what 14 years brings!

101ted74ca
May 28, 10:42 pm

I'm really enjoying Richard Osman's Thursday Murder Club series. I just finished # 4 The Last Devil to Die.

102Cecilturtle
May 29, 11:13 am

I'm finishing Mrs Fletcher by Tom Perrotta, a humorous and candid look at modern sexual mores.
I've also started My Husband's Wife by Jane Corry - it looks like another one of those gas-lighting novels that function on half-truths being revealed to the reader until the grand finale. One of the main characters is a nine year-old that sounds like a five year-old which is both annoying and confusing.

103LynnB
Yesterday, 4:55 pm

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