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no, but that was a good guess - one of my all time faves!
ok, hint: author is female - initials are L. H. |
Are you reading Up Close and Dangerous?
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no, but that was a good guess - one of my all time faves!
ok, hint: author is female - initials are L. H. |
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My first thoughts when you said L.H. are of Linda Howard... but from there I had to cheat...
Are you reading Up Close and Dangerous? |
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nope, but she's another one i've read most of what she's done... altho she's getting a bit tiresome.
ok, another hint - female protagonist is the trustee for her adult stepchildren - one of whom is older than she is... they're VERY unhappy about it! |

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You can go now if you wish! I just did one the other day so I am more than happy to share the wealth... that and I'm not sure what to put up yet, since obviously I'm not reading anything new at the moment!
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It's an alternate timeline to ours, British, with loads of humor, first in a line of five books, but can be read in any order. The title refers to a classic novel, and the story jumps in and out of 'fiction.' It's hard to explain without giving it away... let's see...
Some points: ~Cheese is an illegal substance, black market and all... ~Literature and it's authors are more 'marketable' and popular (books lusted after, etc) than TV personalities. ~The main character is a detective who cracks cases involving literary crime. ~She has an odd name. ~She ends up jumping into literature... and thus starts solving crimes and stuff within the 'seedy underworld' of literature... ~the author is Welsh, and manages to poke fun at the differences between the Brits and the Welsh throughout the series. ~the author also has started a new series involving a different main character, one from 'fiction.' Need more? I told you guys I was into weird stuff ... Amanda |
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oooh, i love those! but i didn't know there were 5 of them... i think i have 3 or 4, tho. but i'm still reading the same thing, so i'm not going to say the book.... unless no one else can figure it out!
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BRB
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Oh oh, let's see...someone Fforde? Jasper maybe?
Tuesday Next is the protagonist. I can't remember any titles. One of the books she jumps into and out of is Jane Eyre! BRBETA - I think it's "Thursday Next: First Among Sequels" |
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Again, a first Novel:
The story opens in Amsterdam in 1972, when a teenage girl discovers a medieval book and a cache of yellowed letters in her diplomat father's library. The pages of the book are empty except for a woodcut of a dragon. The letters are addressed to: "My dear and unfortunate successor." |


But I did cheat and looked it up.

I am going to add a slight twist to this thread. I do read other genre than just classics. I am reading something right now by Richard Bachman, AKA _____________.
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Again, a first Novel:
The story opens in Amsterdam in 1972, when a teenage girl discovers a medieval book and a cache of yellowed letters in her diplomat father's library. The pages of the book are empty except for a woodcut of a dragon. The letters are addressed to: "My dear and unfortunate successor." |

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Ok, no one is going to guess this one, I guess. It's The Historian. The thing that the daughter discovers is that Dracula is still alive, as is her mother, who has been hunting Dracula all these years. It was pretty good!
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Wow! You are good. Have you read it? I have the annotated version. 150 pages of notes at the end. I hate that. I really want to read the notes but hate flipping back and forth. Actually the editor recommends reading the notes first and then reading a chapter. I revised that a bit and read the first chapter and then read the notes for chapters 1 and 2, and then read chapters 2 and 3, etc. That works better for me. But it is slow going and if you believe the introduction, most people that have read Lolita had no idea of what was going on in the book any more than people did with Animal Farm. I am just now getting into the "shocking" parts. Yes, it only took one word, nymphet to give you all the clue you needed!
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Actually I haven't read it. How is it? Probably "tame" compared to stuff we read nowadays.
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It is truly a masterpiece of writing. When I see an author writing in a language other than his native language and can still fill a book with puns and allusions that no other book has matched, except for Ulysses, I know it is going to be hard going for me to catch the entire breadth. As far as being tame, you would be correct, there is nothing graphical in the book that I have seen 1/3 of the way into it. Welp, back to reading...
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OK, finished Lolita. And now for something completely different...
I am now reading (or just finished) another book written by an author known for his horror books. But this book explains how to be a writer. What am I reading? |

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I havent read this, but I know from reading the KatKwery posts, that the book you just finished is: Stephen King's book "On Writing"
haha, now I can explain my book - that is if I'm right ![]() |

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I havent read this, but I know from reading the KatKwery posts, that the book you just finished is: Stephen King's book "On Writing"
haha, now I can explain my book - that is if I'm right ![]() |

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Hush, by Mark Nykanen...
Haven't read it, but it looks interesting... I am a Google Queen... way too much time on my hands... Amanda |
You go it. The book sat in my closet for some time and I just dug i out a week ago. By the time I got to the middle of the book I couldnt put it down.
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It is truly a masterpiece of writing. When I see an author writing in a language other than his native language and can still fill a book with puns and allusions that no other book has matched, except for Ulysses, I know it is going to be hard going for me to catch the entire breadth. As far as being tame, you would be correct, there is nothing graphical in the book that I have seen 1/3 of the way into it. Welp, back to reading...
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