Get out your flashlight..

I almost hesitate to recommend this site, because it is sure to be blamed for hours of procrastination. But since you’re going to waste those hours websurfing anyway, why not spend them here?

Flashlight worthy books has reading lists for every subject imaginable, as well as lists of favorite books by authors we admire. I love their categories – these lists are for readers of every kind of literature, not just the critically acclaimed, but they are still “best of.” My current favorite is: Books That Make My Brain Melt (In a Good Way). Isn’t that enticing? In fact, I want to read every book on this list. Except for the one about banking…

Wayward Women: Great Books Where Women Hit The Road is another I had to check out. After a while I started to feel like my brain might explode as I tried to calculate how many books I can read in the remainder of my lifetime. And oops, it’s time to go and I never did fold that laundry.

Amsterdam, by Ian McEwan

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A pox on large print! I somehow ended up with the easy-to-read edition of this book, and felt shouted at the entire time I was reading it. I am trying to blame that for my huge disappointment in this novel. Which is sort of interesting, given all this Kindle debate – does the delivery system affect one’s enjoyment of the product? Hard to say definitively; I’ve never read a book on a Kindle, and honestly I’ve always figured it wouldn’t make much difference to me. But if I ever get a LARGE PRINT book again I will be tempted to send it back and wait for the original.

Sadly, I really don’t think it would have helped to have a brand new, signed, hardbound copy. Ian McEwan is one of my favorite authors, I adore Booker Prize winners… what can I say? I figured I would love this book. Instead, it seemed contrived, predictable and silly, though amusing at times. It is interesting to me that I feel just a tiny bit guilty disliking an award-winning work by a writer I like so much. Kind of like seeing my child’s artwork pinned up on the classroom wall and thinking that the lines are awkward and the colors clash.


Where I heard about this book
: Trying to catch up on all things McEwan.


What I thought of this book
: Sigh. 2, no, 1 1/2 stars. He is a good writer.


What this book is about
: A satire about two old friends who reconnect at a funeral. Over the course of subsequent weeks they make one another a promise, get angry, forgive, get angry again, and come up with a ridiculous plot for revenge. What exactly is being satirized? The press, politicians, celebrities; the usual suspects. I’m glad it was short – I probably would have made myself finish no matter the length.

Here
is a new book website I’ve found. It’s got review summaries, a review consensus, and a list of grades from various respected sources. Kind of like the rotten tomatoes of books. They describe their site as follows:

A selectively comprehensive, objectively opinionated survey of books old and new, trying to meet all your book review, preview, and information needs.

Which would make me obsolete, to say the least, but check them out, anyway.

This is what I found there for Amsterdam.

MORE Neil Gaiman

Here’s a great piece in which my perennial favorite Neil Gaiman tackles the question “Can you say you’ve read a book when you’ve listened to the audio version?” He interviews other authors in his quest for the answer, including the always hilarious David Sedaris.