Although I have five books going this week, they are not the ones I expected I would be reading after just purchasing over a dozen new ones a a few days ago. Of course, my long term reading of Ron Chernow’s Mark Twain continues, but the other four that I’m reading were not in my immediate plans before…suddenly they were. I did abandon one last week that I had high hopes for, Rule of the Bone by Russell Banks. That one just turned out to be more depressing than I can handle right now, and I grew weary of every single character in the story. Had no sympathy for any of them, including the main character who is just a misguided kid with few prospects in life. That was my second attempt to read Rule of the Bone, and I quit only about 30 pages farther in than I quit on it the first time around. There won't be a third try.
In addition to the Twain bio, these are the four I’m reading now:
Buckeye was just destined to jump to the top of my TBR. Everywhere I looked for several days it seemed that someone was talking about this Patrick Ryan novel. The tipping point was finally reached when I read Susan’s review of Buckeye over on her blog The Cue Card. I’m over 40% of the way through the story now, and I’m enjoying it despite Ryan’s somewhat dry approach to storytelling. The best thing about Buckeye to this point is the quirkiness of Ryan’s characters; the worst is how slowly it’s all coming together. But maybe that approach works well as a whole, so I’m not going to judge him on that approach just yet. I do now understand, however, why so many readers seem to have given up on this long novel before finishing it.
I mentioned Time and Again to someone last week and then couldn’t stop thinking about how much I enjoyed reading it back in 1972. So I finally gave in and just started re-reading it for the first time in over 50 years. That’s the first edition cover of Finney’s classic time travel novel, so if you go looking for it today, it will look very different - especially after its move tie-in cover. This is the book that made me a life long fan of time travel fiction, and through the first two chapters it is holding up very well to my memories of that first reading.
Over the years, I’ve spoken many times about Elmer Kelton’s western novels. I’ve read most of them now, including the juveniles, so when I read Kelton it’s almost always a re-read. Stand Proud is no exception. I first read it in the mid-eighties when I was just becoming a big fan of Kelton’s writing, and honestly, I remember very little about it. As it turns out, it’s the story of an early Texas settler now near the end of his life who is own trial for the murder of a man who has been an enemy of his for about 50 years. It takes place in the present, with flashbacks to the 1860s when they first became such heated enemies. I’m almost halfway through it, and although it’s moving a little slower than I remembered it, the story is holding up really well.
I drove over to Beaumont last week for lunch with a few old friends I graduated high school with some sixty years ago, and I needed an audiobook to keep me entertained and awake for the 200-mile round trip drive. Without much research, I downloaded An American Outlaw, the first book in John Stonehouse's (if that’s not a pen name, it’s perfect for someone who writes this kind of book) eight-book series featuring US Marshall John Whicher. Turns out that it was a great choice for a road trip because it is so gritty and action packed that my mind seldom drifted from it for more than a few seconds at a time. It reminds me of the kind of thing that Craig Johnson writes, and I’m a big fan of Johnson’s work so it’s a good fit for me. I’m not much into audiobooks these days, so I still haven’t finished it, but I plan to soon.
So there you have it. I do have a couple of new ones sitting firmly atop my TBR for next week, but I’m enjoying my re-reading so much right now that I might just revisit my shelves again before I get to those.
It's nice that when you discontinue or discard one book, there's always another book to take its place. ;D Time and Again would be fun to read, I think. And John Stonehouse is a great name for an author. Happy reading all of these. :D
ReplyDeleteStonehouse doesn’t seem to be a pseudonym, but it just seems too perfect to be real. I’m still not totally convinced. Having a “next book” to pick up when I abandon one will never be a problem around here. I literally, and I do mean literally, have several hundred books around here that I haven’t read yet. I won’t be catching up in this lifetime.
DeleteTime and Again was the first book recommended to me by a male, so was very memorable at the time and I do like a well-done time travel. Also, I was living in NYC at the time, near where it is set - am I remembering correctly that the Dakota is an important part of the book?
ReplyDeleteThe Dakota plays a major role in Time and Again as the jumping off spot for our time traveler. I hadn’t realized the building was so old before reading about it here.
DeleteI had never heard of Finney's "Time and Again" and just ordered it. You are correct... the cover of the 50th Anniversary edition is waaaaay different, but lacks the character of what you have.
ReplyDeleteThis was trav by the way. Not sure why I'm having issues signing into things today.
DeleteTrav, my copy is a first edition, but the dust jacket is a second printing jacket that includes a reference to the fact that The Book of the Month Club had selected for publication, too. So I’m not sure if the book counts as a first printing or not. I’m not overly knowledgeable about that kind of thing. I hope you enjoy reading it a first time as much as I did.
DeleteYou and I had the exact same reaction to reading Time and Again all those years ago.
ReplyDeleteThis is one of the ones I never forgot, and one that I read at a much quicker pace than I normally read at. Sure seems like a long time ago, doesn't it?
DeleteI like the sound of the Stonehouse series, not familiar with that even though I'm very familiar with Craig Johnson. Will look that up. Is the Mark Twain biography good? I've read some of the travel books he wrote and am thinking a biography would be excellent. I'm rereading too at the moment. The first book of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Been thinking about doing it for ages, so I decided to stop 'thinking' and do it.
ReplyDeleteStonehouse’s books, at least this one, don’t seem to have the kind of mysteries that Johnson’s book has. This is more of a “let’s catch the bad guy” kind of book where you know from the beginning who has committed the crime. It’s a chase theme seen from both points-of-view, the one marshal doing the chasing and the one being chased.
ReplyDeleteThe Twain bio if very, very good, but it’s really long - and heavy.
I love the idea of re-reading, and even re-re-reading right now. It just feels right. I hope you enjoy the LOR trilogy again…I’m betting that you will.
Thanks for the shoutout about Buckeye. Granted the author's writing style had a lot of exposition and didn't have enough dialogue (for my taste in it) ... still I was a bit curious of the couples and their march through that era. Though I wasn't sure how likely it was ... especially their attitudes toward Felix in that day & age. But war affairs and post-war breakups seemed fairly common and impacted families. Hope you get something out of it.
ReplyDelete