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What's the last book you read? How would rate it---5 being great ---1 being it is not a reread. (Original Post) debm55 Mar 24 OP
Can't remember. OAITW r.2.0 Mar 24 #1
Thanks, OAITW r.2.0 debm55 Mar 24 #2
Backatcha. OAITW r.2.0 Mar 24 #3
Wizards First Rule Diraven Mar 24 #4
TY, Dirvaen. You might want to try the library. You don't have to pay for the books and when you take them back , they debm55 Mar 24 #5
I read maybe 12 of those. yellowdogintexas Mar 25 #13
Peter Straub's Shadow Land. limbicnuminousity Mar 24 #6
thank you very much, ;lim,bicnuminiousity. will give it a chance. debm55 Mar 24 #8
Jesus in the Talmud - 5. But at my age nothing is a reread. UTUSN Mar 24 #7
TY, UTUSN. It seems like a unique book. debm55 Mar 24 #9
I finished Octavia Butler's book 1 "Dawn" of her Xeogenisis/Lilith's Brood Trilogy... electric_blue68 Mar 24 #10
I have The Patternist series. Caught it on deep discount for my kindle yellowdogintexas Mar 25 #14
What are you reading? electric_blue68 Mar 25 #17
TY electric_blue68. Sounds good. debm55 Mar 25 #38
Harmony In My Head...by Steve Diggle..Copyright 2003 Tikki Mar 25 #11
Thank you Tikki. Sounds like a good read of a good man debm55 Mar 25 #39
The Key To Justice by Dennis Carstens yellowdogintexas Mar 25 #12
I read several in that series. rogerashton Mar 25 #26
Ty yellowdogintexas. I like surprise endings. Thanks for the recommendation. debm55 Mar 25 #40
The Land of Milk & Honey, by C Pam Zhang. Not for everybody, but 5 stars from me. Hekate Mar 25 #15
TY Hekate. I sounds interesting. Thank you for the recommendation debm55 Mar 25 #41
Connie Willis -- The Road to Roswell. hunter Mar 25 #16
Last one I finished was fiction - Victory City by Salman Rushdie; give it a 4 Backseat Driver Mar 25 #18
Victory City by Salman Rushdie - 4 star rating, debm55. Backseat Driver Mar 25 #19
"read" Fact or Fiction 2: 50 (More) Popular Myths Explained Behind the Aegis Mar 25 #20
"The Guns of August", by Barbara Tuchman. I'd give it a 5. Mister Ed Mar 25 #21
Been reading some Jeffrey Deaver books maxrandb Mar 25 #22
Jeffrey Deaver is one of my favorites. yellowdogintexas Mar 25 #42
I'm Your Huckleberry: A Memoir from Val Kilmer Niagara Mar 25 #23
I loved that book too! bedazzled Mar 25 #31
Val certainly put his heart and soul writing his autobiography. Niagara Mar 25 #43
He is so talented bedazzled Mar 25 #44
Here's one of his last interviews before he lost his voice. Niagara Mar 25 #45
AMAZING! THANKS SO MUCH! bedazzled Mar 25 #46
You're welcome, bedazzled. Niagara Mar 25 #47
Here's an interesting article back at ya bedazzled Mar 25 #48
Thank you sharing this article, bedazzled! Niagara Mar 25 #49
The Children of First Man by James Alexander Thom birdographer Mar 25 #24
OH good, Thank you birdographer. I will see if I can get it at the library. debm55 Mar 25 #37
Apartment 16 by Adam Nevill. Elessar Zappa Mar 25 #25
Ty so much fpr the recommendations, debm55 Mar 25 #36
Just finished The Family Remains MontanaMama Mar 25 #27
Thank you MontanaMama. I just think I found my summer reads. debm55 Mar 25 #35
Two men named Connelly Cartoonist Mar 25 #28
Oh my, not so good reads. Sorry debm55 Mar 25 #34
William Manchester's A World Lit Only By Fire... mike_c Mar 25 #29
TY mike_c . It spunds like some excellent reading. debm55 Mar 25 #33
"The Manicurist's Daughter" by Susan Lieu bedazzled Mar 25 #30
Ty. bedazzled. I will try to locate. debm55 Mar 25 #32
Chronicle Of The Pharaohs. Aristus Mar 25 #50
Been reading James Patterson's mystery series... Jrose Mar 25 #51
For me this is a funny question bucolic_frolic Mar 25 #52
Charlotte's Web Charlie Chapulin Mar 25 #53
Am in the middle of The Ghost Orchid by MOMFUDSKI Mar 25 #54
Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride rainy Mar 26 #55
Life, Keith Richards' autobiography. Mr.Bill Mar 26 #56

Diraven

(552 posts)
4. Wizards First Rule
Sun Mar 24, 2024, 10:24 PM
Mar 24

By Terry Goodkind. My wife has been trying to get me to read the Sword of Truth series for like 15 years, lol. Unfortunately we apparently lost the rest of the books when we moved last, I can't seem to find them anywhere in the house. 😕

Edit: forgot the rating: 4, would recommend. Contains some disturbing torture and abuse scenes if you avoid those.

debm55

(25,774 posts)
5. TY, Dirvaen. You might want to try the library. You don't have to pay for the books and when you take them back , they
Sun Mar 24, 2024, 10:28 PM
Mar 24

don't up space in your new home.

yellowdogintexas

(22,292 posts)
13. I read maybe 12 of those.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:37 AM
Mar 25

I also recommend the library especially for a big popular series like that one. Many ebooks are often available not to mention they don't take up space in our house

I decided to give Kindle a try when I realized I could go forever without bringing another book into the house.

limbicnuminousity

(1,407 posts)
6. Peter Straub's Shadow Land.
Sun Mar 24, 2024, 10:44 PM
Mar 24

Re-reading, actually, for the first time since it was released. Rating: 4.5.

It's a haunting coming of age story cast as a dark fairy-tale circa 1950s. Two school boys come of age while discovering magic, love, pain and loss. Reminds me a bit of Jack London although the plot is nothing like Jack London's stories and the writing style is dissimilar. It's really good story-telling, engaging in the same way that Jack London draws you into his short stories/novellas.

Not high fiction by any means but there's something graceful about the way the plot is woven together. And the fairy-tale vibe to the novel is unique to modern novels. Reminiscent of the original Grimm's in some ways. Definitely a dark fairy tale.

The rating is based on the quality of the story, the quality of the writing, and its uniqueness.

electric_blue68

(15,029 posts)
10. I finished Octavia Butler's book 1 "Dawn" of her Xeogenisis/Lilith's Brood Trilogy...
Sun Mar 24, 2024, 11:54 PM
Mar 24

Earlyish into book #2

Quite unique aliens. A daunting experience for Humanity. Interesting characters, settings, etc.

I'd give it a 4.

yellowdogintexas

(22,292 posts)
14. I have The Patternist series. Caught it on deep discount for my kindle
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:39 AM
Mar 25

the reading sample was very intriguing. Maybe I will read that after I finish the one I am in

Tikki

(14,562 posts)
11. Harmony In My Head...by Steve Diggle..Copyright 2003
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 12:47 AM
Mar 25

Steve Diggle is Guitarist, a vocalist and a song writer from an early (1977 ~) Punk band out of Manchester England.. The Buzzcocks.
I met Steve recently..nice guy.

I read an awful lot of these Musician biogs and auto-biogs.
Steve's was one of the more honest ones.
He was in the Scene really early. The crowd I met him with was there to learn and share.
He was very generous with his time.

Tikki

yellowdogintexas

(22,292 posts)
12. The Key To Justice by Dennis Carstens
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:33 AM
Mar 25

first in a lawyer/mystery series

THE CASE OF A LIFETIME WALKS IN THE DOOR...
Financially embarrassed, getting a divorce, living in a shabby apartment, and distinctly short of clients, Marc Kadella’s beginning to question why he ever went into the law when a friend brings him the case all Minneapolis is watching—defending an accused serial killer. If he wins, it could turn his life around—if he blows it, he better go into sales.
The story is full of twists and the ending is a surprise.

Currently I am reading the second book Desperate Justice

Hekate

(91,010 posts)
15. The Land of Milk & Honey, by C Pam Zhang. Not for everybody, but 5 stars from me.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:39 AM
Mar 25

There’s been a semi-apocalypse that kills off most edible plants. The unnamed female protagonist has been hired to be the chef in a billionaire’s retreat.

hunter

(38,350 posts)
16. Connie Willis -- The Road to Roswell.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:50 AM
Mar 25

Light entertainment rating: 5

It reminded me of situations I've been in.

Here's an interview with Willis by a Los Angeles Public Library librarian:

https://www.lapl.org/collections-resources/blogs/lapl/interview-author-connie-willis


Backseat Driver

(4,402 posts)
18. Last one I finished was fiction - Victory City by Salman Rushdie; give it a 4
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 03:05 AM
Mar 25

An interesting story of the rise and fall of a magical city/state grown from seeds through times of peace and times of pain and intrigue.

Backseat Driver

(4,402 posts)
19. Victory City by Salman Rushdie - 4 star rating, debm55.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 03:11 AM
Mar 25

An interesting story of the rise and fall of a magical city/state grown from seeds through times of peace and times of pain and intrigue. Loss of 1 star - Seemed not quite up to Rushdie's best sarcastic romancing of the story, but still held my interest to continue on until the end.

Behind the Aegis

(54,053 posts)
20. "read" Fact or Fiction 2: 50 (More) Popular Myths Explained
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 03:13 AM
Mar 25

It was actually pretty good, so a 4 or 5; though, I tend not to re-read too many things, except classics.

I am currently "reading" The Language Instinct: How the Mind Creates Language, which is somewhat technical, but given my love of languages and linguistics, I am really enjoying it.

I do HIGHLY recommend: Generations: The Real Differences between Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, Boomers, and Silents—and What They Mean for America's Future and Jewish Space Lasers: The Rothschilds and 200 Years of Conspiracy Theories.

And, if you haven't read it, Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism: READ IT!!! This doesn't get a "5" it gets a "10"! It is PHENOMENAL!

Mister Ed

(5,950 posts)
21. "The Guns of August", by Barbara Tuchman. I'd give it a 5.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 03:47 AM
Mar 25

Tuchman was an historian whose writing style allowed her books to flow like novels. "The Guns of August" details the events of August 1914, when the nations of Europe blundered inexorably into the disastrous World War I, "the war nobody wanted".

maxrandb

(15,393 posts)
22. Been reading some Jeffrey Deaver books
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 07:31 AM
Mar 25

With Coulter Shaw as the main character. The new TV series Tracker is based on these books.

I would rate them a 4. Kind of a guilty pleasure for me.

Niagara

(7,760 posts)
23. I'm Your Huckleberry: A Memoir from Val Kilmer
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 08:34 AM
Mar 25

Interesting memoir.



I haven't really had time to read books lately.

Niagara

(7,760 posts)
45. Here's one of his last interviews before he lost his voice.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 03:55 PM
Mar 25

If you've already viewed it that's okay ...I wanted to share it with you.



bedazzled

(1,771 posts)
46. AMAZING! THANKS SO MUCH!
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 04:09 PM
Mar 25

I had never seen that. He has a great sense of humor. He is a great singer. I love "Top Secret" and "The Doors" best of his work

Elessar Zappa

(14,139 posts)
25. Apartment 16 by Adam Nevill.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 10:57 AM
Mar 25

It’s a horror and very good. Very scary atmosphere, my only complaint is the ending isn’t as satisfying as I would have wanted.

Also I’m reading the non-fiction Eleanor of Aquitaine by Alison Weir. Queen Eleanor was a remarkable woman.

MontanaMama

(23,367 posts)
27. Just finished The Family Remains
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 11:25 AM
Mar 25

by Lisa Jewell. It’s the sequel to The Family Upstairs. I could not put either of them down. 10/10. I picked them up after reading The Night She Disappeared by the same author…I couldn’t put that one down either. Riveting.

Cartoonist

(7,326 posts)
28. Two men named Connelly
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 12:05 PM
Mar 25

I read a book by Michael Connelly that was about a 3. It was a crime novel. I thought he also wrote a fantasy novel so I checked it out.
My mistake, it was John Connelly. His book was a 1.

mike_c

(36,281 posts)
29. William Manchester's A World Lit Only By Fire...
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 01:11 PM
Mar 25

...about the end of the dark age in Europe. I thoroughly enjoyed it, 5/5. I'm currently re-reading Manchester's biography of Churchill, The Last Lion. This is my third reading of The Last Lion, but the first time I've had a copy of the third volume. I'm re-reading the other volumes in preparation for the third. I'm very excited about it.

I'm also re-reading Manchester to prep for Churchill's own six volume history of WW2 and his four volume History Of The English Speaking Peoples. I've wanted to combine these thirteen volumes into one marathon read for years, and only just now have time to do it.

bedazzled

(1,771 posts)
30. "The Manicurist's Daughter" by Susan Lieu
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 02:23 PM
Mar 25

Very moving book about the lives of a Vietnam refugee family in America. Of special interest is the relationship of the author with her mom, who died when she was young due to complications of unnecessary plastic surgery. The clash of American and Vietnamese culture was very challenging. Give it a five!

Aristus

(66,527 posts)
50. Chronicle Of The Pharaohs.
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 06:19 PM
Mar 25

Part of a series of "Chronicles Of..." books detailing the reigns of various historical monarchies, the Roman Emperors, the Popes, the Czars, and so on.

I think I have the whole series.

One glaring absence from the series that they need to correct pronto: "Chronicle of the Byzantine Emperors." I would snap that up in a heartbeat.

Chronicle Of The Pharaohs is very interesting. It confirms the assertion that the cheesy Hollywood movie "The Scorpion King" was at least correct in that the shadowy, mysterious, earliest known pharaoh is named "Scorpion".

As important as Pharaoh "King Tut" Tutankhamun is to archeology, the book puts him in his proper historical context as a minor, otherwise obscure ruler.

5/5.

Jrose

(858 posts)
51. Been reading James Patterson's mystery series...
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 06:25 PM
Mar 25

Very suspenseful, lots of surprising twists and he writes from many points of view - even as first person from the view of Lindsay Boxer, a female detective.

bucolic_frolic

(43,490 posts)
52. For me this is a funny question
Mon Mar 25, 2024, 06:30 PM
Mar 25

I read a book by a new author I met in a writers group. I won't mention title or name because it was awful. It was like no editing, characters that repeated the same words and actions throughout, not a lot of plot, and the ending was a 90 degree turn as if it needed to be finished fast. If there were 4 ways to say something, all 4 were included in successive paragraphs, so you sure couldn't miss them.

I'm not sure self-publishing Amazon has improved what's available in any given year. The vast, vast majority will never make a dime. But people can call themselves "writer"!!!

rainy

(6,096 posts)
55. Heaven and Earth Grocery Store by James McBride
Tue Mar 26, 2024, 05:25 PM
Mar 26

Loved it. we read it for book group. So much discussion of pertinent topics.

Mr.Bill

(24,368 posts)
56. Life, Keith Richards' autobiography.
Tue Mar 26, 2024, 06:23 PM
Mar 26

Trust me, this guy has some stories to tell. Great book.

I'm currently reading Like a Rolling Stone by Jann Wenner, the founder of Rolling Stone magazine. Again, some great stories to tell. Some I would have never dreamed of. For instance, he was very good friends with Jackie Kennedy.

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