What are you reading?

Posted by alive @alive, Jan 9, 2022

What books do you want to read this year? I’ve just gotten on a waitlist at my local library to borrow Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals. There are 7 copies available and I’m 42nd on the list, so I should be able to get this book by the end of the year. 😂

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@hopeful33250

I just finished reading Haben, A Memoir by Haben Girma. Haben is a deaf/blind woman who was the first deaf/blind student to graduate from Harvard Law School. Haben was of course, intelligent, but also very insightful in dealing with her disabilities and brings the reader to the conclusion that we must also take a second look at how we treat people who are different than us. This book was an eye-opener and one that everyone can learn from.

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I have Epilepsy. The sizures were not under controle untill I was35. My daughter had autisum, C,P. ceribal paulsey, scoileses, and a fused hip. She spent 3 years in a crippled childerns hospital. When her father threw her out in the street I took her in. I made her go to college. Only 1 class a term. That was where she found her nitch. She was soon invited to join the Houner Scocity. It was all A's and B's. She graduated with hounors. She was a published author, she had writen her own childrens book "The Old House" She died at the age of 48. The doctors told me she would not live to be 35. So much for praticeing medicne.
When I meet someone with a disabiled child I tell them about Suzyn. I tell them "NRVER GIVE UP. Who cares what you cannot do. Focuse on what you can do! AND Never Give UP!!
Suzyn znd I are Proof YES WE CAN!!!

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@imallears

@dorisjeanne

I have read and liked several of John Grissom novels and loved Jodi Picoult’s “ My sister’s Keeper”. They are both prolific authors and easy reading. Nothing like a good book on a snowy day or, here in Florida, a dreary rainy day,

FL Mary

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I am finishing another Picoult book: The Pact. It's a love story, but a very different one!!! I had to make myself put it down and go to bed last night!!! Still lots of snow on the ground here, but melted off the trees, at least.

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@imallears

I am reading two books at the same time....one is fiction for entertainment and one is not but equally entertaining to me.

One of my favorite authors is Joyce Carol Oates and I basically read everything she has written. What I am reading now by her is the 20th anniversary edition of Blonde where she reimagines the inner poetic and spiritual life of Norma Jeane Baker as a child, a woman and a celebrity known as Marilyn Monroe. I love the behind the scenes of old Hollywood and the Blonde mystique surrounding Hollywood at that time. It depicts the manipulative and harsh realities of show business without naming too many names.

The other book is called Food Fix by Dr Mark Hyman and is equally fascinating. What we eat has tremendous implications not just for our health but for the planet, society and global economy. Dr Hyman explains how our food and agriculture policies and influenced by money and lobbies and shows the resulting spread of obesity, chronic disease, climate change, poverty, violence, social injustice etc. He doesn't pull any punches and I believe this book will change the way you think about and eat food....a real eye opener with pages of references.

The first book is because of the author and Marilyn Monroe's always fascinating history. The second book is because I am passionate about what we eat and am appalled at the lengths the Food, Tobacco and Big Pharma go to for greed with no thought to the devastation their policies cause.

And, by the way, although I do read digital books, I love the feel of a book in my hand that I can cart around anywhere.

Ah soapbox again

FL Mary

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Make room for me on your soapbox! I read books in hand; check them out from our excellent local library!

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@sparklegram

I'm currently reading 3 books (I don't usually do this!). Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doer, The Firebrand and the First Lady, by Patricia Bell-Scott, and Homeland Elegies by Ayad Akhtar. I'm waiting for the Arrival of Alexander McCall Smith's latest novel in the 44 Scotland Street series.

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I just love the 44 Scotland Street series by Alexander McCall Smith. They are delightful. I didn't know there was a new one coming out.

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@hopeful33250

I just love the 44 Scotland Street series by Alexander McCall Smith. They are delightful. I didn't know there was a new one coming out.

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Yes, Love in the Time of Bertie is the newest one. Here in the U.S. it won't be available until Feb. 22. Have you read his No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency series? There are currently 22 novels in that series. I love it!!!

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@sparklegram

Yes, Love in the Time of Bertie is the newest one. Here in the U.S. it won't be available until Feb. 22. Have you read his No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency series? There are currently 22 novels in that series. I love it!!!

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I've read a couple of the No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency, but I've enjoyed the stories of Bertie and his experiences on 44 Scotland Street, the most. Bertie is such a lovable character. I really enjoy his thoughts as others try to manipulate his life as he grows.

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First, kudos, FL Mary: holding a real book in your hand is not only a great way to read, but keeps those of us who work to publish books working! I just finished "A Wolf Called Romeo" by Nick Jans, who writes a column in every issue of "Alaska" magazine. Nick has a great appreciation for and understanding of the natural world. Romeo lived almost in Juneau, taking time to play with certain local dogs. Nick also wrote a very fair book about Timothy Treadwell, who wanted to become "one" with bears...and eventually did so, as he and his girlfriend were consumed by the very bears they had lived with for several seasons. My husband's parents emigrated to Alaska in 1948; my husband turned a year old during the six-week drive to get there. We've both spent lots of time fishing in Alaska, plus Marty's entire family still lives in Anchorage--when Marty learned that he could fish for steelhead in western Oregon year round, he moved here and has stayed. We live in the woods close to the Pacific, in what's close to a wildlife sanctuary. I'm currently designing a book about the High Sierra for a client and just starting to write and design a book about the wild little river where I've collected data for the past 29 years. When we moved out of the city into this house I've now owned for 60 years, I learned that a book designer should never move: I gave away a big truckload of books but still packed over 100 cases of them, carried them out to the truck or trailer, then up into the loft here. I'm never moving again! We were evacuated due to a forest fire a year ago...I picked out the 10 most valuable collectible fly rods and grabbed lots of original fishing art off our walls--but I totally failed to pack any of the first edition books personally autographed by authors thanking me for my work! Had we been evacuated last summer, I was much better prepared.

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Joyces thank you for the recommendation for A Wolf Called Romeo - I read the Timothy Treadwell story which inspired me to buy the DVD. My favorite part was the pilots comment about the bears sensing something was wrong with Timothy. Your life sounds interesting living in a majestic place and recording data- dreamy job. Tragic to lose all those books to fire.

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@joyces

First, kudos, FL Mary: holding a real book in your hand is not only a great way to read, but keeps those of us who work to publish books working! I just finished "A Wolf Called Romeo" by Nick Jans, who writes a column in every issue of "Alaska" magazine. Nick has a great appreciation for and understanding of the natural world. Romeo lived almost in Juneau, taking time to play with certain local dogs. Nick also wrote a very fair book about Timothy Treadwell, who wanted to become "one" with bears...and eventually did so, as he and his girlfriend were consumed by the very bears they had lived with for several seasons. My husband's parents emigrated to Alaska in 1948; my husband turned a year old during the six-week drive to get there. We've both spent lots of time fishing in Alaska, plus Marty's entire family still lives in Anchorage--when Marty learned that he could fish for steelhead in western Oregon year round, he moved here and has stayed. We live in the woods close to the Pacific, in what's close to a wildlife sanctuary. I'm currently designing a book about the High Sierra for a client and just starting to write and design a book about the wild little river where I've collected data for the past 29 years. When we moved out of the city into this house I've now owned for 60 years, I learned that a book designer should never move: I gave away a big truckload of books but still packed over 100 cases of them, carried them out to the truck or trailer, then up into the loft here. I'm never moving again! We were evacuated due to a forest fire a year ago...I picked out the 10 most valuable collectible fly rods and grabbed lots of original fishing art off our walls--but I totally failed to pack any of the first edition books personally autographed by authors thanking me for my work! Had we been evacuated last summer, I was much better prepared.

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@joyces

We have such interesting people here on the Mayo forum and you are definitely one of them. I have listed A Wolf Called Romeo as my next read. It reminds me of Gorillas In the Mist. I like stories about interspecies relationships. But, as the life of Timothy Treadwell shows, other species will generally revert to their natural born instincts and not all of these interspecies relationships end on a happy note. That also applies to some domesticated animals so reasonable safety precautions are a must.

I have had to give away books simply because I ran out of room. When I lived in Long Island , we had bookcases full in several rooms besides my husbands scientific journals and books. I donated his to a local college when he passed away.

Now that I live in such a smaller house and I find books starting to pile up on the floor ((I use that look as a decor statement lol),
I have to pass on or donate. I have bought far too many at our library’s book sale…how could you not?. Especially if you can fill a bag for a couple of dollars.

I don’t think libraries will ever go out of existence as there are so many activities going on in them. I am happy to see so many people who do read (although many of them are older) and there are so many many books on the “hold” shelf.

My children always liked to read and still do to this day. My grandchildren don’t and I remember how torturous if was for my granddaughter to “get through” assigned books in school. I used to read with her and so many of her books were really really boring I wasn’t surprised that she got turned off. The other grandkids, despite their aversion to reading (and they are all young adults) did emerge into adulthood with excellent writing skills and a “way with words” My son and daughter and one of my grandsons are so eloquent in their social media postings so something right happened along the way.

One thing I still do and always insisted my kids and grandkids do is to look up an unfamiliar word even if you can get the meaning from the sentence. I forget sometimes what a particular word means and still look it up…now I can just goggle it lol.

Here’s to books and civilization!

FL Mary

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I absolutely love to read. I love the feel of having a book in my hand. No audio or ebooks for me. History, biographies and travel are my go to for reading.

I am currently reading Dear Bob…Bob Hope’s Wartime Correspondence with the G.I.s of World War II by Martha Bolton with Linda Hope.

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