What Are You Reading?

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kingricefan

All-being, keeper of Space, Time & Dimension.
Jul 11, 2006
30,011
127,446
Spokane, WA
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle by David Wroblewski

"I flat-out loved The Story of Edgar Sawtelle. Dog-lovers in particular will be riveted by this story, because the canine world has never been explored with such imagination or emotional resonance. Yet in the end, this isn't a novel about dogs or heartland America — although it is a deeply American work of literature. It's a novel about the human heart, and the mysteries that live there, understood but impossible to articulate. Yet in the person of Edgar Sawtelle, a mute boy who takes three of his dogs on a brave and dangerous odyssey, Wroblewski does articulate them, and splendidly. I closed the book with that regret readers feel only after experiencing the best stories: It's over, you think, and I won't read another one this good for a long, long time.
In truth, there has never been a book quite like The Story of Edgar Sawtelle. I thought of Hamlet when I was reading it (of course... and in this version, Ophelia turns out to be a dog named Almondine), and Watership Down, and The Night of the Hunter, and The Life of Pi — but halfway through, I put all comparisons aside and let it just be itself.
I'm pretty sure this book is going to be a bestseller, but unlike some, it deserves to be. It's also going to be the subject of a great many reading groups, and when the members take up Edgar, I think they will be apt to stick to the book and forget the neighborhood gossip.
Wonderful, mysterious, long and satisfying: readers who pick up this novel are going to enter a richer world. I envy them the trip. I don't reread many books, because life is too short. I will be rereading this one."
— Stephen King, author of Duma Key
King is spot-on with his review. This is an absolutely stunning debut novel! I loved everything about it- richly drawn characters, wonderful storyline, a great protaganist. There's alittle bit of supernaturalism in it, which was surprising at first but it makes the story even better. You'd think that a tale about an adolescent boy making a trek through the country would be boring, as so many have already written about that subject, but it kept me captivated the entire time. You know when the main character is a mute boy with a last name of Sawtelle (get it? Saw Tell?) that it's got to be a great story! Lovely tale!
 

MadamMack

M e m b e r
Apr 11, 2006
17,958
45,138
UnParked, UnParked U.S.A.
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skootie

Well-Known Member
Aug 4, 2010
183
328
I just started it, I'm less than 100 pages in and like it so far!
It only gets better. I read this book after picking it up at a garage sale 3 years ago (or thereabouts) and to this day I regret the moment I finished it, wishing it would never end. I rarely recommend books to others, but Edgar Sawtelle was an exception. My sister, who is not a dog person, did care for the book; our dog-sitter loved the book. I also loaned my copy to a friend who is an avid reader AND a dog lover, and she never bothered to even start it! Her loss. She returned my copy, and said she picked one up of her own, but has never indicated that she ever got around to reading it. If I were going to do a re-read of any book I've ever read, Edgar Sawtelle would be it.
 

skootie

Well-Known Member
Aug 4, 2010
183
328
Just finished "Heart: An American Medical Odyssey". Even if your not a Cheney fan, this book is fascinating. I would never have thought to pick this off the library shelf last week, when I noticed it, other than the subject matter...heart disesae... has become pretty relevant to my life since my spouse's heart surgery a few months back. The book is a terrific read. It is as much a history of cardiovascular medicine as it is a story of one person's 35-year battle with heart disease. It's very concise, and interesting, as the story is narrated alternately by both Cheney and his cardiologist. I gained a huge respect for the innovators and professionals who over the decades have created and refined the medical procedures we have available to us today.
 

FlakeNoir

Original Kiwi© SKMB®
Moderator
Apr 11, 2006
44,082
175,641
New Zealand
Just finished "Heart: An American Medical Odyssey". Even if your not a Cheney fan, this book is fascinating. I would never have thought to pick this off the library shelf last week, when I noticed it, other than the subject matter...heart disesae... has become pretty relevant to my life since my spouse's heart surgery a few months back. The book is a terrific read. It is as much a history of cardiovascular medicine as it is a story of one person's 35-year battle with heart disease. It's very concise, and interesting, as the story is narrated alternately by both Cheney and his cardiologist. I gained a huge respect for the innovators and professionals who over the decades have created and refined the medical procedures we have available to us today.
Hi Skootie, please could I get you to change your font colour? It's just that I had to highlight the text to be able to read your post.

Heart disease is awful... I'm sorry you guys have been through so much.
 

skootie

Well-Known Member
Aug 4, 2010
183
328
Hi Skootie, please could I get you to change your font colour? It's just that I had to highlight the text to be able to read your post.

Heart disease is awful... I'm sorry you guys have been through so much.
Sorry about that...I like the color fonts, but will stick to the darker tones from now on, or black. Thanks for the heads up. And for your thoughts. Things are good, and getting better every day. This caught us by surprise...my husband was symptom-less...so we are grateful that the problem was caught and fixed before he suffered a heart attack. He was undergoing a physical in preparation for an unrelated surgery when the blockages were discovered. There is no damage to the heart, and he should make a complete recovery with the new plumbing!
 

FlakeNoir

Original Kiwi© SKMB®
Moderator
Apr 11, 2006
44,082
175,641
New Zealand
Sorry about that...I like the color fonts, but will stick to the darker tones from now on, or black. Thanks for the heads up. And for your thoughts. Things are good, and getting better every day. This caught us by surprise...my husband was symptom-less...so we are grateful that the problem was caught and fixed before he suffered a heart attack. He was undergoing a physical in preparation for an unrelated surgery when the blockages were discovered. There is no damage to the heart, and he should make a complete recovery with the new plumbing!
Thanks for that :) it just seems to be the very light colours that I can't see so well.

He was very fortunate to catch this... so lucky! I'm really pleased there was no damage to his heart and that he's on the road to good health again. :)
 

EMARX

Well-Known Member
Feb 27, 2009
2,970
15,757
Wrapped up, Mr Penumbras 24 Hour Bookstore. It's a delightful romp with all of the ingredients of a thriller but with a cool cast of geeks and eccentrics on a quest for "eternal life." Also I'm about halfway Telegraph Avenue. It's a book that, for me at least, demands attention to the musicality of the language for full enjoyment.
 

carrie's younger brother

Well-Known Member
Mar 8, 2012
5,428
25,651
NJ
Struggling with Serpent of Venice. Moore is working with a mash up of Shakespeare, Poe, and Elizabethan history, and some bits are funny, but others fall flat. So far, I like Sacre Bleu (his last book) quite a bit better.
What was the verdict on Serpent? I have read a lot of Moore and like him. Did not read Sacre Bleu though.
 

Neesy

#1 fan (Annie Wilkes cousin) 1st cousin Mom's side
May 24, 2012
61,289
239,271
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
'Twas my favourite of the series, Drawing of the three. I loved Roland's bemusement at our world, and his amazement at how good a "Tooter Fish Popkin" tasted.
He was not as impressed with the hot dogs, but really liked the sugar in the Coke!

(I like the fantasy in this book and the moving back and forth) so now I better understand the quote:
"There are other worlds than this"
 
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mjs9153

Guest
Just finished reading the Colorado kid.. And it was okay, not one of my favorites, but not the worst either..what I did like,and what keeps me coming back to his writing is the final paragraph.. I don't mean of the story, but the afterword. That was worth the price of admission right there..
 
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