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What are you reading the week of March 9th, 2014? (Original Post) Goblinmonger Mar 2014 OP
Skylark of Valeron by E.E.Doc Smith TexasProgresive Mar 2014 #1
Armies of the Night by Norman Mailer pscot Mar 2014 #2
Tony Hillerman's The Thief of Time. Enthusiast Mar 2014 #3
I love Hillerman! And I love to read all of an author's books in order! scarletwoman Mar 2014 #6
I feel just as you do, scarletwoman. Enthusiast Mar 2014 #7
A little over two years ago, my then-84 year old dad and I did a 12-day road trip through the SW. scarletwoman Mar 2014 #8
That is so cool! Enthusiast Mar 2014 #9
Well, maybe you can go there again yourself sometime. scarletwoman Mar 2014 #10
I'm happy to share this with you. Enthusiast Mar 2014 #11
Same here! scarletwoman Mar 2014 #12
Let's see, I just finished SheilaT Mar 2014 #4
Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin - TBF Mar 2014 #5

TexasProgresive

(12,157 posts)
1. Skylark of Valeron by E.E.Doc Smith
Mon Mar 10, 2014, 05:07 PM
Mar 2014

Very old and a so-so read. The author has all of the prejudices of his time.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
3. Tony Hillerman's The Thief of Time.
Tue Mar 11, 2014, 06:27 AM
Mar 2014

We are reading all the Tony Hillerman books in order. He improves over time. Highly entertaining if you like the subject matter.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
6. I love Hillerman! And I love to read all of an author's books in order!
Sun Mar 16, 2014, 12:43 PM
Mar 2014

I've read all of Tony Hillerman's books, although it's been awhile now. I can't remember which title I picked up first in a matter of random chance, but as soon as I read that one book I set out to read all the way through his entire oeuvre in order, starting with his first book.

Great plots, wonderful characters, and the incredible landscape of the Southwest woven in throughout. They are beautiful books!

I was very sad when Hillerman died, he seemed like a truly good soul. And I will miss never being able to follow Leaphorn or Chee through another new mystery again. I will always treasure the journeys those books took me on.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
8. A little over two years ago, my then-84 year old dad and I did a 12-day road trip through the SW.
Sun Mar 16, 2014, 06:10 PM
Mar 2014

My dad totally loved it, he had never been in that part of the country before. I'd only been in New Mexico one time years before, so it was a wonderful trip of discovery for both of us. And while we did not travel on the sorts of back roads we would have needed to follow in order to enter into the heart of the Navajo reservation and Tony Hillerman territory, just being close was great fun.

I will always have the image in my memory of when we came around a curve of the highway and I could see Ship Rock in the distance. It was so awesome - we were far away, but there it was all the same, like a dream made real.

Enthusiast

(50,983 posts)
9. That is so cool!
Sun Mar 16, 2014, 06:25 PM
Mar 2014

I'm glad your dad loved it. My mother is gone now, but when we were young she used to tell us about the beauty of the Southwest. We had visited our aunt in Phoenix by car when we were just babies. That would have been in the early 1950s.

scarletwoman

(31,893 posts)
10. Well, maybe you can go there again yourself sometime.
Sun Mar 16, 2014, 06:56 PM
Mar 2014

It really was reading Tony Hillerman that made me start dreaming about going to see that part of the country. Reading all those wonderful books made me so hungry to be there I finally couldn't NOT go.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
4. Let's see, I just finished
Wed Mar 12, 2014, 03:29 PM
Mar 2014
The Returned by Jason Mott. The new ABC series "Resurrection" is based on it.

The book was for me, ultimately unsatisfying. It's not a plot spoiler to say that the set up is that people start returning from the dead. In the book at least, a lot of questions that should have been obvious to the most casual observer were never asked, such as, were the bodies of the returned still in their graves?

It will be interesting to see how they do the series. Unfortunately, like most series on U.S. networks it's undoubtedly conceived as being open ended. The Brits will take something and do a deliberately limited series and that to me is much more effective.

TBF

(32,081 posts)
5. Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin -
Sun Mar 16, 2014, 11:15 AM
Mar 2014

It's a good book (if you like sagas that include magical themes) ... and it is a long book. I'm almost finished.

Most recently recommended book from my book club - The Martian by Andy Weir. Folks are really liking that one!

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