#TBR2022RBR
Adam is asking us how we are doing so far with this challenge.
Since the August checkpoint, I have finished two books:
📚 Eventide, by Kent Haruf
Literary fiction
Published in 2004
I so enjoyed this book!
It was great meeting again the McPheron brothers, and Victoria. The brothers are two old farmers, living and working together on this isolated farm near the very small village of Holt, Colorado.
Victoria is a young woman they sheltered in the previous book (Plainsong), when she was in trouble. She now has a young child, and she is going back to school.
I really enjoyed the slow pace, the description of the landscape, of the daily chores on the farm. And obviously the study of the relationships between people in this city. The focus is really on relationships, within different families, in different social milieus.
And Haruf is so good at dialogs, especially at evoking the accent and speech characteristics of these two old guys. I read the book, I didn’t listen to the audiobook, but still, their voice was so alive to me through Haruf’s writing!
He wrote a 3rd book in this trilogy (Benediction), but it’s not about the same characters. I’m disappointed, as Raymond is kind of turning a new page in his life (you are never too old for that), and I wanted to know more about that. I also wanted more on the young boy DJ. But alas the author has passed away, so no more adventures coming on these characters I feel like I met in real life.
📚 Ensemble, c’est tout,
by Anna Gavalda
Literary fiction
574 pages
Published in 2004
I read French Leave by Anna Gavalda in 2011. I liked it, but was not super impressed. But something (or someone??) told me to try another book, and I must have found Ensemble, c’est tout at a second-hand book sale – not easy to find these in French around Chicago!
VERDICT:Â Very enjoyable character-focused novel, with flowing dialogues.
Click on the cover to read my full review.
📚 📚 📚
Here is my full list for this challenge:
- Thomas Jefferson’s Crème brûlée: How a Founding father and his slave James Hemings introduced French cuisine to America, by Thomas J. Craughwell 6/12/22
- Le Voyage d’Octavio, by Miguel Bonnefoy 5/22/22
- A Raisin in the Sun, by Lorraine Hansberry 5/21/22
- Stuart Little, by E.B. White 5/18
- The First Men in the Moon by H.G. Wells 7/22/22
- Eventide, by Kent Haruf 9/10/22
- The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey 8/21/22
- Ensemble, c’est tout, by Anna Gavalda 8/26/22
- Wanderlust: A History of Walking, by Rebecca Solnit
- Absolutely on Music: Conversations with Seiji Ozawa, by Haruki Murakami (currently reading)
- Arvo Pärt: Out of Silence, by Peter C. Bouteneff
- A is For Alibi, by Sue Grafton 7/13/22
Alternates:
11. Joie de Vivre: Secrets of Wining, Dining, and Romancing Like the French, by Harriett Welty Rochefort
12. The Discovery of France: A Historical Geography, by Graham Robb
HOW ARE YOU DOING SO FAR WITH YOUR CHALLENGES?
What a list, Emma! I have only read “Ensemble, c’est tout” and I have left you a comment on your review.
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It was my effort to focus on books collecting dust on my physical shelves!
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That’s always a good incentive.
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And making cleaning easier, lol
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I see you have an alternative list. I can’t recommend The Discovery of France by Graham Robb too highly. It’s a wonderful look at French history via its minor roads. I read it some years ago and would cheerfully do so again.
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Yes, we usually have 2 alternate titles for this challenge. I’m planning to read them all. I read The Discovery of France years ago a well, and keep recommending it, I thought it was time to read it again.
Have you read his book on Paris? Looks good too
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I haven’t, though oddly I have read The Debatable Land, discussing that slightly no-man’s land territory between England nd Scotland. I’ll look out for his book on Paris.
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Oh, I forgot he wrote that as well. Is it a good one as well?
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It’s a long while since I read it, but yes, I’m pretty sure it was a good read.
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Thanks, good to know. I may do some (book) travelling
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You have almost read all of the books on your list.
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Yes, I’m hopeful
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Great list and you don’t have so much left. Well done.
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Yes, I’m hopeful!
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