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January 14, 2008

I want a knock-your-socks-off book

It's been a long time since I've really loved a book - the kind where you can't stop talking about it and you make it your own personal crusade to get everyone you know to read it. I'm reading Fitting Ends, a collection of short stories by Don Chaon, but it's not scratching the itch for a novel that I can really obsess over. Any suggestions?

Comments

The Book Thief. It's "young adult literature," but I haven't stopped talking about since I finished it at O'Hare at 6:00 a.m. - tears streaming down my face.

Try "Cloud Atlas". Not sure if it is a know your socks of, but definitely an amazing and impressive display of, how would you say, "range?". Its really several stories told through completely unique voices and styles intertwined. It took a while to get through and longer to digest. But it was the first book in while that stuck to my ribs.. IMHO

Between the Bridge and the River by Craig Ferguson.... amazing. I never knew Craig Ferguson could write.

Emergency Sex & Other Desperate Measures. I know the title is terrible, but...wow. Murder, International Intrigue, Massacre, Politics, Travel & Friendship/Romance...and its all true!

running with scissors.

running with scissors.

Blood Meridian, Cormac McCarthy

The Magus and
The French Lieutenant's Woman, John Fowles

The Recognitions, William Gaddis

Forget the preceding and hie thee to the graphic novel section of your library or fave bookstore and pick up Persepolis. It's outstanding and everyone should read it. I know the movie's coming out but the novel is just wonderful. Or, Fun House is another great graphic novel by the chick who does Dykes to Watch Out For, a comic I never cared for in the least but her autobiographical graphic novel will KILL you it's so good.

If you want to start an addiction which can be sustained over several months, buy the trades of Y: The Last Man and Fables, the former being all about what happens when a mysterious virus kills all the male mammals on earth save one guy and his research monkey, and the latter exploring what happens if everyone from every fairy tale you've ever heard off lived in a Far Off Land until they were invaded and had to move to Manhattan. Excellent, excellent stuff.

Don't know if you've already read it but Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides is one of my all time favorites. I obnoxiously recommend it to almost everyone.

Hello, just stumbled across you from the Blogs of Note page. I'm interested in what your reading, and agree with the suggestions above, Persepolis is wonderful. If you haven't read it, something I loved was Bel Canto by Ann Patchet - it's about a hostage situation in South America that ends up lasting for months, and the relationships between the hostages and their captors that ensue.

All the best, Marianne

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  • This is the personal web site of Sarah McAuley. After a few years in SF and NY, I have returned to Boston, Jamaica Plain specifically, to continue my career as a marketing wench. I recently (Dec. 07) switched industries, leaving telecom for the exciting world of clean tech. I no longer commute to an office park 75 minutes away, which has helped my mood considerably. I hate pesto and I love to read. I think sharing my life with strangers is odd and narcissistic, which of course is why I'm addicted to it and have been doing it for several years now. Need more? You can read the "About Me" section, drop me an email, or you know, just read the drivel that I pour out here.

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