JayMass
Dis Dad #871 Disney Deadhead
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2019
- Messages
- 486
8/40 False Witness by Karin Slaughter. My wife recommended this book after reading a few of Slaughter's novels. It was really good. I won't give anything away, but Slaughter is a gifted writer! Some pretty disturbing content, though I will add.
9/40 Our Country Friends by Gary Shteyngart. This was a highly touted book about a group of friends who ride out the COVID pandemic lockdown together. I thoroughly hated this book. I made it about 85% of the way but gave up. I don't like books that lack sympathetic characters. Now I don't mean I have to like the characters, but I do have to feel some sort of connection with them. Even if it's a murderer or general horrible person ala Walter White, I still want to relate to them in some way. I hated every character in this book. None of them displayed anything that I felt sympathy for. There was nothing redeeming about any of them. This book was a colossal waste of my time.
10/40 Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen. This was a great read. I really like Franzen's ability to tell a story. It's about a a family in the midwest in the 70s (mostly, although there are flashbacks/retellings of earlier years). It's actually supposed to be a trilogy of books, this being the first. If you liked the Dutch House or Middlesex, I'd recommend this.
9/40 Our Country Friends by Gary Shteyngart. This was a highly touted book about a group of friends who ride out the COVID pandemic lockdown together. I thoroughly hated this book. I made it about 85% of the way but gave up. I don't like books that lack sympathetic characters. Now I don't mean I have to like the characters, but I do have to feel some sort of connection with them. Even if it's a murderer or general horrible person ala Walter White, I still want to relate to them in some way. I hated every character in this book. None of them displayed anything that I felt sympathy for. There was nothing redeeming about any of them. This book was a colossal waste of my time.
10/40 Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen. This was a great read. I really like Franzen's ability to tell a story. It's about a a family in the midwest in the 70s (mostly, although there are flashbacks/retellings of earlier years). It's actually supposed to be a trilogy of books, this being the first. If you liked the Dutch House or Middlesex, I'd recommend this.