- OT-Re: What are you reading?
- Posted by Nicole
I just got The Lake House by James Patterson from the library.
--
Nicole
- Posted by Leslie
Spend Game by Jonathan Gash
Leslie
- Posted by LionsDen@webtv.net
10 secrets to success and Inner Peace by
Dr.Wayne Dyer
Mark
- Posted by Jackki5
Right now I'm reading, "Lost in the Funhouse: Inside the Life and Mind
of Andy Kaufman".
J5
- Posted by Dana Carpender
Jules wrote:
Ooo, I've read part of that, need to go back and finish it. Interesting
stuff.
Currently reading Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in print,
and Callander Square, by Anne Perry, on tape.
--
Dana W. Carpender
Howard Dean For President
Take Back the Democratic Party!
Take Back America!
http://www.deanforamerica.com
- Posted by kayper
Just took the plastic off my July issue of Allure.
kayper
- Posted by Audra Dean
Trompe L'Oeil at Home: Faux Finishes and Fantasy Settings by Karen S.
Chambers. Been thinking I want to get into interior design, and this
art style fascinates me, especially when it's done REALLY well.
xoxo,
Audra
To e-mail, subtract 1!
"It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye."
- The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery
- Posted by Leslie
Just finished Coyote Blue by Christopher Moore, which got me through jury
duty today. Now starting the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by
Michael Chabon.
Leslie
- Posted by Marjie
When I go to chemo on Wed, I plan to dig into Shopaholic Takes
Manhattan. If it is as funny as the first one, the chemo nurses will
have to restrain me.
Marjie
- Posted by Carol
All the best to you Marjie, as you go through this. Good thoughts to you.
Carol
- Posted by newfy
Just finished _Secret Life of Bees_ by Sue Monk Kidd and about to start
_Running With Scissors_ by Augusten Burroughs.
JennP.
- Posted by Leslie
RandeeFW wrote:
Fluke is now on my library request list (I love being able to request stuff online;
my list is pretty greedy). I hope Kavalier doesn't dull out for me; I need a break
from all the mystery novels I've been devouring.
Leslie
- Posted by fig
Leslie wrote:
Leslie, you're a speed reader! You read more books than anyone I know!
fig
----
Who's The Fairest?
www.whosthefairest.com
- Posted by fig
Parakeet wrote:
I loved that book! The story is pretty bland but all the background
info is fascinating.
fig
----
Who's The Fairest?
www.whosthefairest.com
- Posted by fig
newfy wrote:
Running With Scissors is awesome!
fig
-----
Who's The Fairest?
http://www.whosthefairest.com
- Posted by Tara
I just finished The Boy on the Bus, by Debora Schupack. It's an odd
little book -- very creepy and compelling. A little boy comes home on
the school bus one afternoon, and his mother does not believe he is
really her son. He look and acts differently in small, subtle ways.
Tara
- Posted by KMS
Tara wrote:
Ooo! I've had this on my wishlist at Amazon for a few weeks now. It does sound
very odd and creepy. But I like odd and creepy!
-KMS
- Posted by mae8123
Just started Kundera's "The Unbearable Lightness of Being" and a book
on Maslow this morning.
So far the Kundera book is debating whether lightness or heaviness is
more desirable in being. Heaviness seems to be winning out, but I'm
only in the first couple chapters.
Megan
- Posted by Dana Carpender
mae8123 wrote:
I trust the author explains what he or she means by "lightness" and
"heaviness" because I confess I haven't a clue.
--
Dana W. Carpender
Howard Dean For President
Take Back the Democratic Party!
Take Back America!
http://www.deanforamerica.com
- Posted by Lindy
I just got Lucia Lucia by Adriana Trigiani. It takes place in NYC
during the 1950s and is about a young woman (25) who gets engaged to
her childhood sweetheart but then meets a "handsome stranger" that
promises her a life of luxury like she and other career girls (she's
an apprentice to a fashion designer) read about in the society
pages...she's forced to choose between duty to her family and her
dreams...

