Thursday, October 18, 2007

Information overload.

So far nobody's volunteered to pick the first book. I'll do it if you would like. I still haven't decided; I'll get back to you.

Here are a few books on my current list--most are nonfiction, a few are fiction. Anything stand out to you? Sorry; it's kind of a long list.

  • Girls Gone Mild - Shalit (trend of chastity, modesty, mildness in young women)
  • The Feminine Mistake - Bennetts
  • What Would Barbra Do? - Brockes ("history, art, and politics of musicals")
  • The Next Thing on My List - Smolinski (from what I remember, this lady or man dies and had a list of things she/he wanted to do before dying; so, a friend, or someone, picks up the list and tries to finish it)
  • Dandelion Wine - Bradbury (RB's first novel, supposed to be really good)
  • On Chesil Beach - McEwan (iffy--about a newlywed couple's disastrous honeymoon night)
  • 100 Questions from My Child - Chopra
  • How Starbucks Saved My Life - Gill (interesting concept; the guy seems like a jerk though)
  • Sarah's Key - deRosnay (historical fiction; Paris during the Holocaust)
  • Back on the Career Track - Cohen and Rabin (I think this was the more practical volume I had in mind when I read The Feminine Mistake)
  • The Escape Artists - Piven (all about "escape artists"--e.g., race car drivers, animal hunters, alligator wrestlers, standup comedians)
  • The Maytrees - Annie Dillard (don't remember)
  • Tamar - Peet (don't remember)
  • Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety - Judith Warner
  • Bridge of Sighs - Richard Russo (a novel about a prisoner...I think)
  • Bowl of Cherries - Millard Kaufman (don't remember)
  • An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England - Clark (fiction)
  • A Farewell to Arms - Hemingway (I read this in HS and want to read it again)
  • The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court - Jeffrey Toobin
  • Memo to the President Elect - Madeline Albright
  • The Zookeeper's Wife - Ackerman (about the Holocaust, I think)
  • Children at Play - Chudacoff (a social history--"parents try to keep children indoors for fear of dangers lurking outside, but children take new kinds of risks playing in cyberspace.")
  • The Rope Walk - Carrie Brown (novel; don't remember)
  • The Godmother - Carrie Adams (novel; don't remember)
  • The Sisterhood: Inside the Lives of Mormon Women - Solomon
  • Realityland - Koenig (I have "Bonny" written next to this; I think it's something about Disney I wanted to tell her about)
  • Everything He Hasn't Told You Yet - Silver (don't remember)
  • From the Hips - Odes and Morris
  • My Sister's Keeper - Jodi Picoult
  • 19 Minutes - Picoult
  • Finn - Jon Clinch (got good reviews; a story about Huck Finn's dad)
  • The Alexandria Link - Berry (don't remember)
  • To Hell with All That: Loving and Loathing Your Inner Housewife - Caitlan Flanagan (apparently Leslie Bennetts's "nemesis")
  • Teenage: The Creation of Youth Culture - Jon Savage
  • The Golden Notebook - Doris Lessing (who just won the Nobel Prize--the oldest lit. prizewinner at 87)

In case you didn't see it, Bonny suggested:

also - what might be fun - a women's theme -

american jezebel (anne hutchinson - ancestor)

marie antoinette

well behaved women seldom make history (or any of the laurel thatcher ulrich books - she's so interesting to me)

fem mystique

i am a mother

and i'm sure there are more


just a brain storm

we could also do theme like:

19th century, pioneer, early 20th century (STEINBECK!!!), etc.

4 comments:

grannybabs said...

That is a long list - where do you find these?

Although the stack on my nightstand is pretty random.

Sarah's Keys sounds pretty good - we are studying the Holocaust in my LA classes.

Eliza said...

For my job I read book reviews. I kept a notebook with my work stuff for the express purpose of jotting down titles that I wanted to read for myself, as opposed to books I wanted to order for the library, although they overlapped sometimes.

I am still in the habit of reading book reviews. My favorites are Library Journal (which I don't have a subscription to since I quit work, but I read them online) and the book review insert of the Sunday Washington Post.

grannybabs said...

So have you picked one? I'm still interested in Sarah's Keys.

How do we post on this site? Or do we just comment.

Phoebe said...

I am good with whatever. We are reading My Sister's Keeper for my ward bookgroup this month. I have read Dandelion Wine. I really liked it. Finn looked interesting, too.