Monday, June 03, 2024

What I'm Reading This Week (June 3, 2024)


 Just as I hoped, Dennis Lehane's Small Mercies ensured that last week ended up being a really good reading week. I've read quite a few Lehane novels now, and this one just might be the best of the lot. But I'll have more to add on Small Mercies later in the week, so enough said for now. The wild card of the week turned out to be the unexpected copy of John O'Hara's Butterfield 8 that came my way. The only other book I finished was Why We Read by Shannon Reed, but I also made some progress on Matt Haig's The Humans and started reading Harbour Street by Ann Cleeves. Oh, and I DNF'd the Bill Mahar book, What This Comedian Said Will Shock You, because it was way more one-sided and biased than advertised.

I've kind of settled into a routine lately of having one physical book, one e-book, and if the right one comes along, maybe one audiobook going at the same time. That's what I'm doing with these three, and as long as the approach continues to work for me, I'll stick with the routine. Not sure what caused me to pull back that way, but it feels comfortable for now. I'm hoping to attack my shelves and Kindle backlist a little more successfully this way, but the only way to make that work for long is to limit temptation by cutting my library visits way back. And that won't be easy.

I'm having fun with The Humans but I can't shake the feeling that it has some kind of mysterious tie to the Resident Alien TV series I watched a while back. The premise of both stories is eerily similar: alien comes to Earth to eliminate mankind because humans have become a threat to the rest of the galaxy all of a sudden, but said alien learns to respect and even love certain humans enough to make the alien question his entire mission. They don't seem to be linked at all, but the similarity between the two is pretty astounding to me.

I noticed John O'Hara's Butterfield 8 was available when I opened the Libby app to return an e-book to my local library. I haven't read much O'Hara, but I do remember that Butterfield 8 was a semi-scandalous Elizabeth Taylor movie back in the day, so the title and cover caught my eye. I never did get around to watching the 1960 movie, but my memories of the publicity it got made me wonder how it could have possibly been written in 1935. I'm about one-third of the way through it now, and I'm finding the novel to be well written and and much more frank than I thought a 1935 novel would be. Still not sure where this one is headed.

Harbour Street is book number six in the Ann Cleeves Vera Stanhope series. I vaguely remembering watching the TV series version of this one a few years ago, but so far that hasn't impacted my reading of Harbour Street at all. I'm only ten percent in, and Cleeves is still in the process of setting up the crime scene and introducing all the players, but this one already seems a little bit easier to get into than some of the earlier books in the series. Maybe it's because Joe is the main character in the first chapter, and Vera in the second. No having to read 75-100 pages before Vera shows up for the first time. That's always a good thing.

Depending on what I finish this week, this is the small pool of books I'm likely to be choosing from for my next reads:




I'm also putting together plans for a ten-day roadtrip beginning on June 22 during which I hope to explore a couple of states with my youngest grandson. I want to introduce him to the history of blues music, Cajun culture, and a Civil War battle site or two, so reading time is going to be limited for the last week of June. Generally, the plan is to explore southwest Louisiana, ending up near Natchez, Mississippi, before heading north up Highway 61 (The Blues Trail), and over to Shiloh Battlefield in southern Tennessee. Then we'll head back down through places like Tupelo and Oxford before circling back through Louisiana and home. I'm familiar with all the stops we will be making, but I hope to lock in for him the same love for road trips that my father passed on to me. 

If you guys have any trip-tips for that part of the country, please let me know. Have a great week!

10 comments:

  1. Oh your road trip sounds good! I have not been to Mississippi yet and I would like to visit a Civil War battlefield again. So many good spots. Our recent road trip to Calif made me a bit more open to doing more road trips in the future. We went to the Hoover Dam & toured it, which is quite a marvel. Enjoy your travel planning.
    I think the Lehane novel could be my favorite of his as well. Just the strength of Mary Pat and the detective made it very good. I have not read any from your list this week but I hope you find a good one.

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    1. I'm really looking forward to the trip, but I've got to slow myself down when we get on the road. I always tend to rush through things rather than thoroughly enjoying the experience. I've purposely limited us to two states on this trip, forcing me, I hope, to really get a look at them. It will be his first visit to Mississippi and seeing Louisiana in any kind of detail, so it should be a lot of fun for both of us.

      I just wrote a review for the Lehane novel, and I think I appreciate it even more now. Funny how that works.

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  2. Cutting back on library visits is where I fail all the time when trying to read more of my own books. I think I'm addicted to library books. But I'm not looking for a 12-step program yet to help me cut back. Because libraries might not always be around, so I feel like I need to take advantage of them now. ;D And your upcoming road trip sounds so fun! It's such a great way to make memories and see the country.

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    1. I love libraries with a passion, too. Even on road trips I find myself scouting for those old Carnegie libraries. There were almost 1700 of those built in this country and I've only visited about 15 of them. What a bucket list that would make.

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  3. What a great road trip you have planned! Small Mercies just keeps showing up on blogs, and I'm going to have make sure I get to it!
    Have a wonderful time with your grandson, Sam; he will remember your times together forever!

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    1. I think you'd like Small Mercies although it's pretty dark and grim. No happy endings, but that's Lehane. He's not one known to pull many of his gut punches. Mary Pat, his main character, is just the most memorable new character I've encountered this year. She's not someone I would want to hang around with in real life or have as a neighbor, but I can't help admire her courage and determination.

      We're both looking forward to the trip, Jen. On the way home, I'm taking him deep into Cajun country to show him some of the family roots that he can only imagine. Funny thing is that he's such a huge hot sauce fan that I think he's most looking forward to visiting Avery Island down in south Louisiana most of all. Ha.

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  4. Enjoy that road trip, Sam-- it sounds wonderful. You reminded me of the time I was ten and my maternal grandparents, my mother, and I took a road trip from Illinois to California. Lots of fantastic memories.

    Butterfield 8 is known to me only by the movie. It was not one of Elizabeth Taylor's best, but she won an Oscar for it because she almost died the year before. I think the Academy wanted to make sure to give her some sort of honor before she had another chance to kick the bucket again.

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    1. My father would often manage to save up enough money for a family road trip at least every other summer when my brother and I were growing up. It was my first exposure to the American West and it firmly planted the road trip bug in me...if not so much in my brother. I'm hoping to pass on a third generation love to my grandson this way. And actually, he's the one who brought it up. We haven't done one of these together since 2021 and he seems eager to get on the road.

      Funny how awards often work that way, isn't it. The old sympathy vote often wins out like that. The novel is not bad at all, but it's not quite what I expected, either. It's very jaded.

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  5. I did not realize how far behind I am in commenting here.

    I am very interested to find out what you think of John O'Hara's Butterfield 8. And I love that cover. I wish I was that far into the Vera Stanhope series by Anne Cleeves. Now that I have read your review of The Humans, I am sorry that you did not enjoy it.

    Your road trip later this month sounds very good. I look forward to hearing about it.

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    1. Butterfield 8 is very different from the impression I had of it when I decided to read it. I'm going to have to think about it a bit before trying to write down my thoughts about it. Even though I haven't seen the movie version, I can easily picture a young Elizabeth Taylor in that role.

      We're looking forward to the trip. Watching YouTube videos others have uploaded, looking at maps, etc. Less than two weeks away now.

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