RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized
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I have read both Commonwealth and The Dutch House, two of Patchett’s NY Times bestsellers, so I had been exposed to her expertise as a novelist. Imagine my great pleasure to discover she is equally adept as an essayist. This large print edition’s cover, published in 2009 caught my eye at the local library. I…
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The Shipping News was one of my favorite books–ever. This novel, Accordion Crimes by the same author was not as engaging but a darned good read in its own right. The metaphor or theme was pure genius: a small green accordion which was passed from owner to owner over the decades, and character sketches of…
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REMEMBER the Ramona books by Beverly Cleary? They’re back; actually, they never went away, just the same homespun wisdom and humor with new covers. I think I read all the Ramona books, but it was only as an adult I discovered Amber Brown. Those too are great books for kids. If your kids or grandkids…
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Here are the questions from Classic Club’s questionnaire: When did you join The Classics Club? late 2019 after seeing the club on Readerbuzz. What is the best classic book you’ve read so far? I liked most of them, so it’s hard to pick the BEST, but maybe Brideshead Revisited. What is the first classic book…
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I have enjoyed several books by Pat Conroy, best known for The Great Santini. His 2010 publication, My Reading Life introduced me to him as an essayist, and a good one at that. Actually Conroy’s book is a collection of tributes to authors and books that helped form him as an author and as a…
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Ruth Ozeki’s The Book of Form and Emptiness was a real challenge to read. To begin with, the narrator of this novel is a Book. Yes, you read that right, a book; a story, the story of Benny Oh, a young boy who hears the voice of the Book, his story. His mother Annabelle, is…
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Nora Stephens, an agent who almost always gets the best deals for her clients has been dumped at the beginning of the story. She misses her mother, who has died and feels responsible for her younger sister, Libby, but lives a driven life as a career woman. She meets Charlie, a hot-shot editor, for lunch…
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Originally posted on Random Specific Thoughts: They both listened silently to the water, which to them was not just water, but the voice of life, the voice of Being, the voice of perpetual Becoming.― Hermann Hesse, Siddhartha Hoarse visions and misty revolutions –Shrivelled, turbid and warm,Drip down civilization’s neck,Littering mausoleums Of forgotten gold and silver.…