Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat Fiction are you reading this week, May 18, 2025?


I'm still here.
Much thanks for your concern and suggestions. Greatly appreciated.
I am now reading Horse by Geraldine Brooks. Based on a remarkable true story of a record-breaking thoroughbred, this is "a novel of art and science, love and obsession, and our unfinished reckoning with racism." It's marvelous.
Listening to The Twist of a Knife by Anthony Horowitz. Totally loving this delightfully entertaining tale of who killed the theatre critic, "with Horowitzs own theatrical experience providing just the right amount of bittersweet bite."
What's your reading plan this week?

thomski64
(681 posts)another brilliant novel from
Laila Lalami...
hermetic
(8,865 posts)"..a riveting and utterly original novel about one woman's fight for freedom, set in a near future where even dreams are under surveillance." Scary stuff...
cbabe
(5,017 posts)A Dogs Purpose/W. Bruce Cameron
Cheesy cover but well-written and thoughtful.
Dog reincarnates through many lives taking care of his humans with love and dog smarts.
Suspect/Robert Crais
Marine war dog is retired after being shot in Afghanistan. Seriously wounded LAPD officer is her new handler. They are both suspect in being able to work due to injuries and ptsd. Healing comes from commitment to each other and the job as they chase murder suspects and diamond thieves.
One of Crais best.
Needing some cozy, back to Three Pines with Pennys The Brutal Telling.
hermetic
(8,865 posts)That one sure sounds like a must-read. Thanks.
Penny is always great, IMO.
cbabe
(5,017 posts)try a reread in a year or so, Hopefully itll be better then like spaghetti sauce is better the next day.
Bayard
(25,158 posts)Warning though--tear jerker.
cbabe
(5,017 posts)Demovictory9
(35,819 posts)So good
An eccentric detective matches wits with a seemingly omniscient adversary in this brilliant fantasy-mystery. Wonderfully clever and compulsively readable.."
Bayard
(25,158 posts)I just put, "Horse," on my shopping list.
I'm still working through, "From the Borderlands," Been trying to get to get to bed earlier to miss the heat of the next day here. Seriously cutting into my late night reading time.
I have a Michael Crichton, "Airframe," that I'm trying to get to next.
"Three passengers are dead. Fifty-six are injured. The interior cabin virtually destroyed. .. a lethal midair disaster aboard a commercial twin-jet airliner bound from Hong Kong to Denver triggers a pressured and frantic investigation."
Sounds rather timely.
Take care. The heat is getting brutal, already.
mentalsolstice
(4,577 posts)Im reading A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles.
A partial summary by Bill Gates on GoodReads:
A Gentleman in Moscow is a fun, clever, and surprisingly upbeat look at Russian history through the eyes of one man. At the beginning of the book, Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov is sentenced to spend his life under house arrest in Moscows Metropol Hotel. Its 1922, and the Bolsheviks have just taken power of the newly formed Soviet Union. The book follows the Count for the next thirty years as he makes the most of his life despite its limitations.
So far Im really enjoying it. It has been made into a limited series on Paramount+, starring Ewan McGregor.
Have a good week!

hermetic
(8,865 posts)Even though it's been some years since I read it, I still remember it quite well. It would be fun to watch.
txwhitedove
(4,108 posts)and I will be reading more of her work. Thin Air: "Private investigator Jessica Shaw is used to getting anonymous tips. But after receiving a photo of a three-year-old kidnapped from Los Angeles twenty-five years ago, Jessica is stunned to recognize the little girl as herself."
Now reading Howl Like the Wind, Book 3 of Marta Acosta's tales of Madeline Whitney, "Mad Girl", a definitely unique character on the spectrum, difficult to deal with, quirky, smart, trains dogs and part of a local K-9 rescue team. "A murder at a small-town festival
with no witnesses. An intruder on her ranch
and only the dogs know the identity. Old faces and old cases return with shocking demands. A fierce Thankgiving storm..., but thats only the start of a season of high crimes and mystery."
hermetic
(8,865 posts)Sounds like some really fun series there. Tanks.
yellowdogintexas
(23,238 posts)Football is a whole other thing in the South, Midwestern transplant Jewel Mantelle discovers, and on Sophia Island, they love the Gators. Jewel would be fine with that if her friends only meant the University of Florida football team, but they also seem to love the critters skulking around in the ditches and creeks running through their tiny beach town. At her first ever football party she finds herself front and center for the spectacle of the eccentric Bell Jackson calling the gators behind his huge mansionand it gives her the creeps.
But finding out those very same gators didnt hesitate to take a bite of Mr. Jackson when he fell off his balcony and landed in their domain is even creepier.
I started this week before last as an intermittent break from my other book "The Women" by Kristen Hannah. I needed a break because "The Women" is very intense. I took several of these breaks.
The Women is the story of one woman gone to war, but it shines a light on all women who put themselves in harm's way and whose sacrifice and commitment to their country has too often been forgotten. A novel about deep friendships and bold patriotism, The Women is a richly drawn story with a memorable heroine whose idealism and courage under fire will come to define an era.
I finished "The Women" Saturday morning; it was the book choice for the Liberal Ladies Book Club and we all enjoyed it. We had a lively discussion about it. One of the ladies in the group actually spent a year in Nam as a Red Cross social worker and she provided great insight on the reality vs the novel. It's a good read, moves really fast. The author really brings the closeness of the main characters, who began as strangers serving as nurses in Viet Nam. It is one of the best description of the support women can give each other that I have ever read. However we all had issues with the main character's naivete when it came to men (which was interesting considering the variety of age groups in the group - all the way from adults at the time of Viet Nam to young women who were not yet born) All of the younger women want to learn more about the war.
Number9Dream
(1,784 posts)Thanks for the thread, hermetic.
I had never seen the TV series, so this was all new to me. It took me 2 library renewals and 5 weeks to read the 674 pages of small print. Though, I have been busy with spring yard work, etc. I thought it was very well written and imaginative. I think I'll wait awhile before I tackle the next one in the series in favor of something lighter. It seemed that every time I put my bookmark in and set the book down, I'd say to myself, 'well, that was depressing and / or disgusting'. A scene where a 14 y/o girl eats a horse's heart raw without vomiting was especially disgusting. One DUer warned me, "don't get too attached to any one character." Quite a few gruesome deaths. Still... I'll probably give book 2 a try in a few months. Will hit the library tomorrow or Tues for something new.
Jilly_in_VA
(11,960 posts)so I am reading First Contact, the third book in Fay Abernethy's "Shantivira" series. So far no alien contact, but some interesting action involving spies, kidnappings, etc. I highly recommend this series, which begins with The Cleaner, The Cat, and The Space Station. This book seems to have been begun when Obama was still president, although there is reference to the 2016 election (shudder). I'm pretty sure this will be an ongoing series.
hermetic
(8,865 posts)