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August book

Sherrie

Posted 2:02 am, 08/13/2006

Babygirl I am kind of nutty like that. I didn't notice the correlations. LOL!

BABY_GIRL

Posted 5:58 pm, 08/12/2006

I'm more into historical romance but I just gotta ask this...

Anyone else besides me notice a pattern here???

Too Close to the Falls....Going Topless....Sex, A Mystery....The Breakdown Lane....A Fine Balance

Using titles only, it sounds like life in a nutshell...Dating, sex, sex, marriage, mental INstability from the previously mentioned...lol

Sherrie

Posted 2:27 am, 08/10/2006

I forgot to mention that all of these books are available at www.half.com

Sherrie

Posted 2:26 am, 08/10/2006

I felt a little better tonight after a good crying spell and one muscle relaxer :? so I thought I would add the books I was going to recommend. Keep in mind the books that others have already mentioned too. Give your input on which book catches you fancy the most and I'll go by that. I know I said I was going to just start picking one, but I just hate to not let others give input. The first book says that it is great for discussing in book clubs.

Too Close to the Falls by Catherine Gildiner

Catherine Gildiner, a clinical psychologist and advice columnist, has written a fascinating memoir about her years growing up in Lewiston NY in the 50s. As a hyperactive and precocious child of four, she was put to work in her father's pharmacy under "doctor's orders." Her unconventional upbringing by older, free-thinking parents, who gave her a lot of leeway to think for herself and take responsibility for her actions, contrasted sharply with her stringent Catholic school education. Gildiner deftly uses her psychology training to show how young Cathy perceived herself and others, and how she struggled to peel through the layers of social and religious convention to see small-town Lewiston as it really was.
The author does an excellent job of painting portraits of the people that influenced her life. These include her mother, a very atypical 50s housewife who never cooked or kept house, her hard working civic-minded father, and Roy, the black pharmacy deliveryman who took Cathy on his rounds. Through her prescription deliveries, Cathy met Warty, a disfigured outcast who worked at the garbage dump, Mad Bear, the chief of the Tuscarora Indian tribe, and Marie, a retired prostitute/abortionist. Cathy bumped heads with an assortment of classmates, nuns, and priests at school and church.

This is a wonderful coming of age story that is poignant and thought-provoking. There were many humorous touches as Cathy described the world through an innocent child's eyes. There was also a dark side to this memoir as she puzzled over the disturbing and often contradictory elements of society that were often kept under wraps during that era. Having grown up in western New York in the 50s, I recognized many of the details of Cathy's childhood, such as beef on weck, early TV programming with its frequent test patterns, the use of fluoroscopes in shoe stores, and the severe lake effect snow storms in the area. This book makes an excellent selection for a discussion group, and the paperback edition includes a reader's guide for that very purpose.

Going Topless by Megan McAndrew

Pamela Redmond Satran author of Babes in Captivity Sexy, witty, surprising, and full of charm.
Kirkus Reviews Two sets of sisters reunite tensely on a Mediterranean island to honor their dead patriarch. Constance arrives at her family's dilapidated house in Santerre brandishing her new boyfriend Jim, hoping that his presence will improve her rank in the household. She's always watched her older sister Isabelle garner all the compliments and is surprised when the intriguing next-door neighbor takes a liking to her instead. Isabelle is on the prowl, wounded from publicly losing her famous and charismatic husband to a younger fling. She butts heads with her English stepsister Lucy, another beautiful, strong-willed woman who grew up longing to usurp Isabelle for the role of her father's favorite daughter. Even as an adult, she refuses to believe he could ever have wronged them. Lucy's younger sister, the sensitive Jane, also smarting from losing her lover, knows better. The man in the middle of all this is the late Ross Wright, a schemer who went down in his heavily mortgaged plane, leaving his family literally to pay the price for his poor investments. His third wife, Odette, certainly feels the burden. Forced to leave their New York apartment and move back to her native France, she too finds herself on the island, privy to the familial and culture clashes. Newcomer McAndrew realistically relays sibling love and tension as the sisters bicker with and comfort one another in the days leading up to their father's memorial service. The narrative takes some crazy turns that might seem preposterous in any other story, but McAndrew's skill is such that you buy every minute of the partner swapping, surprise appearances, quirky locals, and discovered treasure that pop up on the way to epiphanies about dear old dad, relationships, and life in general. A smooth, engrossing debut.
Newsday Masterful...If you're reminded of the novels of Diane Johnson, then you're on the right track...a wry, comic voice and a sharp eye.
Entertainment Weekly Perfectly formed characters...their couplings and uncouplings make for a fun French farce.

Sex, A Mystery by Fiona Quirina

Lydia Guess has a degree from Barnard, and an MBA from Harvard. She had been a vice president in a corporation until her ethics caused her to blow the whistle on corporate wrongdoing. So, using her business training, she goes into a different line of work and becomes a high priced courtesan. As she puts it, "Just lucky I guess." She gets her referrals from a sex therapist - someone she knew in school who has a mail order psychology degree from India and a thriving business improving people's libidos, an equal opportunity business using both courtesans and gigolos.

Things are going well until a client ends up naked and very dead, with an icepick in his back lying face down on Lydia's bed. That leads to some interesting conversations with the investigating police about the nature of her business. It also involves Lydia in the investigation as she tries to prove that she did not commit the crime.

Lydia discovers things she did not know about some of the people in her life, and meets various interesting people along the way. Characters introduced in the story are her celibate roommate Paddy Riordin, a priest who administers to the needs of the moles living under Grand Central Station with some financial help from Lydia; Paddy's assistant Manuel, who lives in a dumpster as a matter of choice; Dr. Sylvia Kahn, the sex therapist friend; Angelica Linscott, the wife of the dead client (who does not seem to be overly crushed by his death); Captain Amy Liu of the police, who has some marital problems of her own (women should learn that primitive hunks are for weekend entertainment, not for marrying - there comes a point when you have to talk to them); and Danny Bloomster, a self centered gigolo who had been servicing Angelica and others for a price.

The case has its twists and turns as Lydia tries to identify the killer, and puts herself in some danger in the process. She declines to make herself an instant millionaire by cashing in on a secret Swiss bank account she discovers in the process (probably the same ethics that got her fired from the Corporation). The mystery is finally solved, but Lydia ends up unemployed again, or so it seems.

The Breakdown Lane by Jacquelyn Mitchard

No one could blame Julieanne Gillis, beleaguered heroine of this no-holds-barred family drama by Mitchard (The Deep End of the Ocean, etc.) for not seeing the signs. At first her lawyer husband, Leo Steiner, seems to be in the throes of a midlife crisis, informing Julieanne that he is planning to take early retirement and go and live on a commune in upstate New York for six months. The next thing she knows, he's vanished, leaving her with three children and only her meager income from her advice column for the Sheboygan, Wis., local newspaper. To make matters worse, she's diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. The narration alternates between plucky Julieanne and her 15-year-old son, Gabe, a handsome Holden Caulfieldesque loner with a mild learning disability. When things get desperate, Gabe and his 14-year-old sister, Caroline, scan their dad's old e-mails and learn where he might be. Then, during spring break, lying like troopers, the two juveniles take off by bus to find their father. Surely, they think, he'll come home when he learns that their mother is sick. He comes, but the baggage he brings along means further disaster. Leo's behavior is almost campishly craven, but the novel's soap-operatic bathos is perversely satisfying. Rousing melodrama; fluid, often funny, dialogue; and the convincing portrayal of children involved in the collapse of a marriage add up to another page-turner from Mitchard.

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry

The setting of Mistry's quietly magnificent second novel (after the acclaimed Such a Long Journey) is India in 1975-76, when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, defying a court order calling for her resignation, declares a state of emergency and imprisons the parliamentary opposition as well as thousands of students, teachers, trade unionists and journalists. These events, along with the government's forced sterilization campaign, serve as backdrop for an intricate tale of four ordinary people struggling to survive. Naive college student Maneck Kohlah, whose parents' general store is failing, rents a room in the house of Dina Dalal, a 40-ish widowed seamstress. Dina acquires two additional boarders: hapless but enterprising itinerant tailor Ishvar Darji and his nephew Omprakash, whose father, a village untouchable, was murdered as punishment for crossing caste boundaries. With great empathy and wit, the Bombay-born, Toronto-based Mistry evokes the daily heroism of India's working poor, who must cope with corruption, social anarchy and bureaucratic absurdities. Though the sprawling, chatty narrative risks becoming as unwieldy as the lives it so vibrantly depicts, Mistry combines an openness to India's infinite sensory detail with a d***ensian rendering of the effects of poverty, caste, envy, superstition,corruption and bigotry. His vast, wonderfully precise canvas poses, but cannot answer, the riddle of how to transform a corrupt, ailing society into a healthy one.

I apologize for adding so many. Some sound fun and some sound serious. They all seem good to me. Hope to hear some input on your interests. :)

Sherrie

Posted 3:00 am, 08/09/2006

i had several books i wanted to suggest but have been slack. would anyone else like to read joie's suggestion. I would be interested. i will get it together soon i promise and post suggestions for next month. if no one else agrees to read on the road, i will post more suggestions for this month. I am now trying to read a book called The Jane Austen Book Club. If you look it up and like it join me in that too. i can juggle a few at a time. :)

joie

Posted 4:31 pm, 07/28/2006

How about an unconventional classic like Jack Kerouac's On The Road?

Sherrie

Posted 2:44 am, 07/28/2006

Hey fuzzy. Sorry I haven't responded earlier to this. I watched the movie of Constant Gardener last night and it reminded me to check the posts of book club. I have a few suggestions that I saw that seem pretty good. I will try to post them in a bit. If anyone has any other suggestions let us know. I am so glad that interest is still here.

fuzzyslippers

Posted 11:10 pm, 07/23/2006

is it too early to find out the book for August? I have missed the last couple of months and would like to read for August.

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