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-   -   Great Summer Books (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=134592)

AXOrushadvisor 05-31-2013 11:29 AM

^I to liked Discovery of Witches and was sooo mad when I got to the end and found out there was another book. BOO! I have yet to pick up the next one.

Sciencewoman 05-31-2013 04:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AXOrushadvisor (Post 2219127)
^I to liked Discovery of Witches and was sooo mad when I got to the end and found out there was another book. BOO! I have yet to pick up the next one.

It is also very good. I'm disappointed that the next one is delayed...the last two came out in July '11 and '12, so I was really looking forward to #3 this summer.

barbino 06-01-2013 04:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by carnation (Post 2219051)
Speaking of Indian authors, I love books by Anjali Banerjee and Chitra Banerjee Divarakuni. And from the Americans--Karen White's Tradd Street series!

Carnation, Check out Indu Sundaresan, too -- especially her first two, The Twentieth Wife and The Feast of Roses. She was the first Indian author whose books I read.

Just interested 06-01-2013 11:15 PM

ADPIEE,

I noticed you had Barbara Kingsolver on your summer reads. Two of her books that are my favorites are Prodigal Summer and The Bean Tree.
Also, another magical book is Little Bee by Chris Cleave. A very moving tale of survival.

carnation 06-01-2013 11:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by barbino (Post 2219273)
Carnation, Check out Indu Sundaresan, too -- especially her first two, The Twentieth Wife and The Feast of Roses. She was the first Indian author whose books I read.

Oooh! I will!

I like Shobwal Banti, Amulya Mulladi, and Anne Cherian too.

KillarneyRose 06-28-2013 02:32 PM

I just picked up the July issue of Oprah's magazine and she has an entire section devoted to summer book recommendations. I must've circled a dozen of them and am headed to my county library's website to reserve them. Some really great looking books in there!

ADPiEE 06-28-2013 02:57 PM

Glad to know Killarneyrose!

Just Interested--I'll have to check out those books. The Poisonwood Bible is one of my all time favorites!

Well I read the Yonalosse Riding Camp for girls and I have mixed reviews. Interesting read since it's set in the South in during the Depression (I love historical fiction) but it had a little too many intimate details for my taste--maybe I've gotten too old *lol*


I'm in the middle of Southern Ladies and Gentleman and love it--having married into a Southern family, I can really appreciate the humor. I grew up in the south but my parents are transplants so I didn't get a true Southern upbringing. Anyway, I have to say this book is really helping me understand my inlaws :)

My husband is a huge Game of Thrones fan so we got him the whole Fire and Ice series for father's day and he's loving it.

Mizeree I2K 06-28-2013 03:11 PM

I just bought a new one called "Striving while Black" written by Kwame.

angels&angles 06-28-2013 03:26 PM

Okay so I just read a book that may become my new all-time favorite. It's called Farthing by Jo Walton, and it's a murder mystery set in an alternate postwar England that made peace with Hitler and is slowly marching in fascism. It is so, so fascinating, both as a mystery and also as an alternate history book (which may be my favorite genre, aside from post-apocalyptic dystopias). Farthing is the first of three novels, which are currently being reprinted. The first two are out, and the third will be reprinted in September (but you should still be able to get the original at the library). Can't recommend enough!

The author mentions Josephine Tey and Dorothy Sayers as influences, and both also make great summer reading, if you like British mysteries!

KillarneyRose 06-28-2013 04:41 PM

For those of you who like lighthearted biographies, check out Jerremy Fine's "Someday My Prince Will Come: True Adventures of a Wanabee Princess". It's a frothy, fun read plus the author is a Delta Gamma!

KillarneyRose 07-05-2013 04:08 PM

I just finished reading "Astronaut Wives" and it was absolutely fascinating! Not a dry, musty biography but extremely readable.

Oh, and it turns out Neil Armstrong's mom was a Delta Zeta so our Badge actually IS on the moon!



;) Just kidding about that last part

honeychile 07-05-2013 04:23 PM

I'm usually reading two books at a time (depending on where I am). Right now, they are Passing Strange by Martha A. Sandweiss ("A gilded age tale of love and deception across the color line") and Echoes by Maeve Binchy. This is the first summer without a new Maeve Binchy book to read and it's rather disquieting for me!

As an aside, I wish that the NPC & NIC would send one of EVERY sorority and fraternity pin to the moon, so this nonsense would stop! :p Of course, then it would be "the only platinum opal and diamond encrusted ABC pin is on the moon..."!

barbino 07-05-2013 05:59 PM

I just read Danielle Trussoni's Angelology (2010). It was really good; kind of like a Dan Brown book only with angels as the subject. She just came out with its sequel, Angelopolis, which is getting good reviews so I have to read it, too.


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