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What have you just finished, what are you reading now and what next?

120 replies

Girlputyourrecordson · 29/06/2024 08:57

Plus recommendations/reviews if you like!

  1. I have just finished Yellowface by Rebecca F Yuang

  2. I am now reading Daughter of The Moon Goddess by Sue Lynn Tan

  3. I am going to read Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus next

OP posts:
EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/06/2024 12:56

Recently read : River Kings by Cat Jarman

Currently reading : Sometimes People Die by Simon Stephenson

and

Wedlock by Wendy Moore

Up next : James Blunts memoir

EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 29/06/2024 12:57

I loved Tom Lake!

Alonglongway · 29/06/2024 13:09

Just finished Sisters In Law by Harriet Wistrich

Currently reading Lessons in Chemistry (loving it)

Next up The Outsider by Jane Casey

SpikeWithoutASoul · 29/06/2024 14:03

Adatewithmyself · 29/06/2024 12:43

@SpikeWithoutASoul Am loving EvA, just discovered her!

It’s got an E.M Forster vibe and that same sense of languid Edwardian summertime that I love!

I might have spoilt The Enchanted April as I found the film on YouTube and watched it, but I’ll try and finish this weekend. Glad to know there are other good ones by her.

Expiation and Vera are both fantastic. Mr Skeffington was a bit more cynical but definitely still worth reading. Have got Love and The Pastor’s wife on my TBR pile.

Cooper77 · 29/06/2024 16:06

I have just finished a collection of Bertrand Russell's journalism. Sounds dry, but it really isn't. He had a column in an American newspaper in the 1930s, and was allowed to contribute articles on anything he liked. They're wonderful. He writes about all sorts of things, from the joys of laziness to why free love makes us miserable. Wise, funny, and written in crystal clear prose.

Currently have two books on the go: I'm re-reading Stephen Fry's autobiography, Moab is My Washpot. I have a feeling this is what he'll be remembered for. It will definitely go down as a classic. I'm also reading Austen's Emma for the first time. There are so many classics I've never read, and I'm trying to put that right this year. I've also got Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Middlemarch, Bleak House and Vanity Fair lined up (though whether I actually read them or not is a different matter).

I've got a few audiobooks on the go. Listening to Stephen Fry read P. G. Wodehouse is pure bliss. I also love his readings of Sherlock Holmes. And I'm re-listeing to Evelyn Waugh's Sword of Honour books (just made for audio).

Next up is the final volume of Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Guide. I sort of 'discovered' Adams this year, and wonder what took me so long. He's fantastic – the British Kurt Vonnegut. You can also see the influence of Wodehouse in Adams' beautifully crafted sentences. I also want to re-read Robert Graves' I Claudius, mainly because I've just bought the brilliant 1970s BBC adaptation and plan to re-watch it.

oddgirl · 29/06/2024 17:24

Just read Any Human Heart : William Boyd . Enjoyed it
Currently reading The Loving Spirit: Daphne du Maurier (difficult to go wrong I hope(
After have Glimpses of The Moon: Edith Wharton
Didn’t love or hate YellowFace or Lessons in Chemistry but thought both over hyped

petuniasandpetals · 29/06/2024 17:43

Just finished
the Exhibitionist ( so so) and Patchwork Planet (the last Ann Tyler I hadn't read :( )
Now on The Lincoln Highway ( a slog)
And next is Tom Lake.

Borka · 29/06/2024 17:43

MaxandMeg · 29/06/2024 12:54

Oh, I didn't think anyone else had ever read 'The Making of a Marchioness'. My friend Richard who went on the be the Pepys Librarian gave me a copy 50 years ago. He was always good for recherché reading matter. He also started me on Nancy Mitford - not so much celebrated then - and Emily Eden. Emily Eden was writing in the mid 19th century and anyone who like Jane Austen will like her book 'The Semi-Attached Couple' and 'The Semi-Detached House'. Anyone else read these?
I loved 'Wise Children' too.

Just finished: 'On The Cusp' by David Kyanaston. An examination of three months in the summer of 1962 when the world turned.

Currently reading (but not for much longer) 'In Remembrance of Past Times.' I'm half way through but running out of steam. I've tried before but I don't think I've got the right sort of mind for Proust.

Reading next: Not sure but something cheerful.

I love Nancy Mitford too - I first read The Making of a Marchioness because it's mentioned in Love in a Cold Climate. I like the sound of Emily Eden very much, thank you for giving me a plan for what to read next!

Similars · 29/06/2024 18:25

I’ve just finished Upgrade by Blake Crouch.

Now on Transcription by Kate Atkinson.

Next in the pile is A Greek Island Escape by Kate Frost.

Bit of a mixed bag 😃

hazandduck · 29/06/2024 18:31

In the last week I’ve read
A Town Like Alice and Lessons in Chemistry

Currently reading Vox (it is giving me stomach ache I feel so angry) and Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow.

I have got Yellowface, The House of Mirth and Woman on the Edge of Time in my TBR pile but I also picked up Jurassic Park recently just out of curiosity and am tempted to read that next!

Makegoodchoices · 29/06/2024 18:38
  1. Read ‘Project Hail Mary’ by Andy Weir (fabulous)
  2. Reading Hags - the demonisation of Middle Aged Women by Victoria Smith (enraging)
  3. Going to read - something light like a Tom Holt after Hags has filled me with impotent fury 😁
TattiePants · 29/06/2024 18:50

My last book was The Hiding Place by Corrie ten Boom which was excellent. Currently reading The Book of Negroes and will probably read either The Marriage Portrait or The Heart is a Lonely Hunter next, both books I’ve already started but not got round to finishing.

Pastimperfection · 29/06/2024 18:51

Currently reading Muriel Spark Loitering with Intent and The Cat who saved books. I am enjoying both

cheezncrackers · 29/06/2024 18:53

I just read 'The Temple of Fortuna' (book 3 in The Wolf Den trilogy - I enjoyed it very much).

Now reading 'Abroad in Japan' (about a guy who went to live in Japan as part of the JET programme and is still there 15 years later - it's very amusing).

Next? No idea. I have to see what I fancy when the time comes.

Hellohah · 29/06/2024 18:59

I have just finished One True Loves by Taylor Jenkins Reid. I didn't really like it.

I am about to start The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

And I think I will read Nineteen Steps by Millie Bobby Brown after this.

merryandbrightdelight · 29/06/2024 19:01

Playing With Fire: The true story of Fireman Scam
by Coleen Greenwood and Karen Crear

Im from the area and couldn't put it down!

kublacant · 29/06/2024 19:02

Great thread! I have just finished James by Percival Everett.

I am now reading Wilfred Owen the biography by Dominic Hibberd.

My next book will be read on holiday and is Restless Dolly Maunder by Kate Grenville

DonnaGiovanna · 29/06/2024 19:03

Just finished Godmersham Hall, can't remember author's name & I'm on holiday so can't check...
Currently reading Wait For Me, autobiography of Debo (Mitford) Devonshire.
Lined up after that is The Other Bennet Girl by Janice Hallett (I think)...

Jane Austen and/or families of sisters seem to be my thing at the moment.

Lansonmaid · 29/06/2024 19:03

Just finished 'Mosquito' by Rowland White, about a special raid by SOE and the RAF to support the Danish resistance in WW2. Now reading The Ship beneath the ice by Mensun Bound, about the discovery of the Endurance (Sir Ernest Shackletons ship) - very readable and very good. Next will probably be The Keys of Hell and Death by Charles Cordell (unless I save it for my holiday). This is the second book in a series of novels about the English Civil War. The first one was great.

letmeeatinpeace · 29/06/2024 19:04

Finished - Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup: The Story of Elizabeth Holmes and the Theranos Scandal << it was interesting to start but got boring halfway

Started - You Don't Have to Be Mad to Work Here: A Psychiatrist’s Life << REALLY good

Hellohah · 29/06/2024 19:05

Johnhasalongmoustache · 29/06/2024 09:56

The only Anne Patchett book I liked was the one the Dutch house all the other ones have been so complicated. I’ve found it hard to get into them.

I enjoyed The Dutch House as well.
I picked up Tom Lake earlier in the year and managed about 40 pages. I just could not get into it. Glad it's not just me, not sure whether to try another of hers now.

Inspectorlemon · 29/06/2024 19:07

Just read Nothing Holds Back the Night by Delphine de Vigan - very French - memoir of growing up in a bohemian intellectual family and the damage it caused. Well written, not a misery memoir.
Now reading Two Girls Down by Louisa Luna - tough female private eye and her ex cop sidekick looking for 2 girls who disappeared from a car park while their mother was in a Kmart (US supermarket). Very readable, a library book by an author new to me.
Next book will be Captain Correlli’s Mandolin by Louis de Bernieres - I’m off on holiday and like books set in places I’m visiting (Kefalonia)

hazandduck · 29/06/2024 19:15

Also will say I liked Lessons in Chemistry but felt slightly patronised by it. I gave it a solid 3.5 stars!

Kayemm · 29/06/2024 19:17
  1. Fresh Water for Flowers by Valerie Perrin
The Marriage Portrait by Maggie O'Farrell Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishigoru (Book club book) Bleeding Heart Yard by Elly Griffiths.

Loved all of them.

  1. The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins for the umpteenth time. I'm also half way through Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey but it's not gripping me.

Then need something to fit in before

  1. 300 minutes by Rosamund Lupton which is my Book Group pick on 9th July.
hazandduck · 29/06/2024 19:22

Inspectorlemon · 29/06/2024 19:07

Just read Nothing Holds Back the Night by Delphine de Vigan - very French - memoir of growing up in a bohemian intellectual family and the damage it caused. Well written, not a misery memoir.
Now reading Two Girls Down by Louisa Luna - tough female private eye and her ex cop sidekick looking for 2 girls who disappeared from a car park while their mother was in a Kmart (US supermarket). Very readable, a library book by an author new to me.
Next book will be Captain Correlli’s Mandolin by Louis de Bernieres - I’m off on holiday and like books set in places I’m visiting (Kefalonia)

Captain Corelli’s is one of my favourite books, you are so in for a treat! I first read it when I was about 13 and I went to Kefalonia, it’s such a beautiful island. Hope you have a lovely holiday. I read So Much Life Left Over by Louis de Bernières earlier this year and adored it.