RAE’S READS

Tag: novels

  • Open what you’re reading now, pick a random couple of sentences and post them (scroll way down until you see the words “Leave a Reply” and enter your sentences, title and author in the box) as your Tuesday Teaser to tempt us to add your book to our TBR list. Here’s mine from The Bone People, truly…

  • Ali Smith’s 2014 publication, How to Be Both,  is a novel written around a novel, and is one of the strangest, yet best written books I have read.  It’s theme (This is a guess.) is androgyny. The beginning reads like poetry and is even placed on the page as such.  If there is a “story” it…

  • This is the first book in the Holland Family Trilogy by James Lee Burke, a new writer to me, but one to whom I will return again and again. The novel has wonderful writing and masterful dialogue. The story begins in 1934 when 16 year old Weldon Holland sees Bonnie and Clyde camped out on…

  • Take what you are reading now (or one of the books you are reading now, if you’re like me), and put your finger randomly on any page you have read (or where you’re starting to pick up reading).  Copy two sentences as a teaser and give the title and author.  I’ll bet you’ll find some…

  • The game is played by opening what you are currently reading and copying two sentences(or a paragraph) and sending it as a comment to PWR.  NO SPOILERS PLEASE. Here is my Tuesday Teaser from Ali Smith’s How to Be Both.  There are no chapters, no paragraphs, no sections or headings.  In that respect, it is…

  • The gentleman of the title is Count Alexander Rostov who was 30 years old when placed under house arrest in 1922.  His crime was being an “unrepentant aristocrat” and his place of incarceration was the Metropol, a grand hotel across the street from the Kremlin.  Rostov spent from 1922 until the mid-fifties as a political…

  • This 1999 novel by Patrick A Davis came to me via a box of donations for my LFL (Little Free Library) from a friend who was moving. My husband confiscated the book for his own reading as he helped unpack the box, and after finishing it, said, “You’ve got to read this book.” And, I’m…

  • A family secret is always a good basis for a novel, and when an outsider who has married into the family begins to investigate what happened, it almost always makes for “good reading.” Beautifully researched, the novel deals with the great Vel’ d’ Hir’ roundup of Parisian Jews that took place on July 16, 1942.…

  • Because I enjoyed my first Read-a-Thon last October, I decided to say farewell to summer by entering The High Summer Read-a-Thon this morning.  Dewey’s, the only other one I have done ,was a 24 hour thing, but this one is a week long. As contestant #57, I am leaving the starting gate late (I must…