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Thread: What are you reading in 2026?

  1. #21
    Senior Member Tradd's Avatar
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    Firestorm by Jacob Soboroff. It's by an NBC LA based reporter who grew up in the area of the Palisades fire. Just a bit in, but very good

  2. #22
    Senior Member iris lilies's Avatar
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    I keep buying books, digital ones, and not reading.Ugh. Video scrolling is so… Unsatisfying these days. Empty. I need to get absorbed in a decent novel. I’ve read a little way into A Little Life which is 800 pages and may be absorbing, we shall see.

    I just bought Lionel Shriver’s novel about an immigrant that was just released this week. I bought it based on the strength of an interview she did with Douglas Murray for the Manhattan Institute. I love that man. I finally bought his nonfiction book about the death of The West but I may not wade into it because it’s just sad, what we are doing to ourselves.

  3. #23
    Senior Member catherine's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by iris lilies View Post
    I keep buying books, digital ones, and not reading.Ugh. Video scrolling is so… Unsatisfying these days. Empty. I need to get absorbed in a decent novel. I’ve read a little way into A Little Life which is 800 pages and may be absorbing, we shall see.

    I just bought Lionel Shriver’s novel about an immigrant that was just released this week. I bought it based on the strength of an interview she did with Douglas Murray for the Manhattan Institute. I love that man. I finally bought his nonfiction book about the death of The West but I may not wade into it because it’s just sad, what we are doing to ourselves.
    I just looked up Lionel Shriver because I never heard of her. She seems interesting. Which of her books would you recommend for someone who has never read her? What is the name of the Douglas Murray book?
    "Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
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  4. #24
    Senior Member iris lilies's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by catherine View Post
    I just looked up Lionel Shriver because I never heard of her. She seems interesting. Which of her books would you recommend for someone who has never read her? What is the name of the Douglas Murray book?
    Her most well known work is the fictional “We Need to Talk About Kevin” which is arresting and horrifying, and the film of that novel is also stellar. Unforgetable.

    The Shriver book released this week is “A Better Life” about a well meaning woman who has a comfortable life. She opens up her large home to an immigrant.

    Shriver is about 70 years old. She writes about cultural and social problems. She’s a speaker in the transgender critical world, and I am anxiously awaiting any novel she does about trans people. She gave a good interview to Douglas Murray, where she said she is increasingly alone in her centrist political views among novelists. She worries about lack of thought diversity of young writers, and she blames the universities that are turning out group think writers.

    Douglas Murray is an English political commentator, a fairly young guy who looks older than he is. He’s so elegant. I just love him. His big book is “The War on the West” about loss of Western values and culture.

  5. #25
    Senior Member catherine's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by iris lilies View Post
    Her most well known work is the fictional “We Need to Talk About Kevin” which is arresting and horrifying, and the film of that novel is also stellar. Unforgetable.

    The Shriver book released this week is “A Better Life” about a well meaning woman who has a comfortable life. She opens up her large home to an immigrant.

    Shriver is about 70 years old. She writes about cultural and social problems. She’s a speaker in the transgender critical world, and I am anxiously awaiting any novel she does about trans people. She gave a good interview to Douglas Murray, where she said she is increasingly alone in her centrist political views among novelists. She worries about lack of diversity on young writers, and she blames the universities that are turning out group think.

    Douglas Murray is an English political commentator, a fairly young guy who looks older than he is. He’s so elegant. I just love him. His big book is “The War on the West” about loss of Western values and culture.
    OK, I'll try one of Shriver's book--probably A Better Life.
    "Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
    www.silententry.wordpress.com

  6. #26
    Senior Member Rogar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by iris lilies View Post
    I keep buying books, digital ones, and not reading.Ugh. Video scrolling is so… Unsatisfying these days. Empty. I need to get absorbed in a decent novel. I’ve read a little way into A Little Life which is 800 pages and may be absorbing, we shall see.

    I just bought Lionel Shriver’s novel about an immigrant that was just released this week. I bought it based on the strength of an interview she did with Douglas Murray for the Manhattan Institute. I love that man. I finally bought his nonfiction book about the death of The West but I may not wade into it because it’s just sad, what we are doing to ourselves.
    If you are browsing for something to read, "Theo of Golden" by Allen Levy came highly recommended from a trusted reader friend. I just started it so can't comment, but it had high ratings and reviews.
    "I spent the summer traveling: I got half-way across my backyard." Louis Aggasiz

  7. #27
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    Theo of Golden is very popular with book clubs these days. Coincidentally, a friend loaned me her copy the other day. At first, I thought it was kind of weird/silly but I am growing more interested to find out who Theo really is and what his motivation is for giving away gifts to strangers.

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