Author Archives: beckylindroos

Black Flags: The Rise of Isis by Joby Warrick

This looked interesting and was on my wish list even before it won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction.  So picking up that award brought it to the top – and here we are. Actually,  the book was coming along so … Continue reading

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A Little History of Philosophy by Nigel Warburton

Okay so I’ve read a fair amount of philosophy but I’ve never felt like I completely understood it.  And I’d forget it pretty quickly so that’s probably proof I didn’t really grasp the concepts. This book presents the philosophers and … Continue reading

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Colonel Chabert by Honoré de Balzac

I leeerrve 19th century classics -(a lot of them anyway)!   And Balzac is way up there in my favs.   Balzac was a pioneer of literary realism and it shows early on in this odd little novella  – (loc … Continue reading

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Darknet by Matthew Mather

Disappointing by comparison to Cyberstorm but it’s okay.  I just so enjoyed Cyberstorm I went right ahead and got Darknet by the same author.  Cyberstorm had almost everything plot, characters, writing woven together for some really believably delicious suspense and ideas about contemporary issues as … Continue reading

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ZERO K by Don DeLillo

I’m a long time and hard-core fan of Don DeLillo -(as many of you already know).  I remember standing in the narrow aisle of a little indie bookstore back in 1998, reading the entire Prologue to Underworld,  then brand new on the … Continue reading

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Cyberstorm by Matthew Mather

Aaaaahhhh….  a nice suspense-filled genre novel.   I’ve been reading some fairly intense fiction and nonfiction lately and I’m due to just settle in with a good tale well told. Set in New York any day now it seems that … Continue reading

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Confucius Mecius Laozi Xhuangzi Xunzi: by Michael Pruett

Confucius Mecius Laozi Xhuangzi Xunzi: Selected Passages from the Chinese Philosophers by Michael Pruett and Christine Gross-Loh 2015 / very short – 45 pages? rating – 9 (?) This is just exactly what the subtitle says it is and it … Continue reading

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The Path: by Michael Puett, Christine Gross-Loh

Suggested on the All-nonfiction list I saw it was on sale at Audible and just took it.  After a couple of intense fictions it seemed time for some nice and more relaxing ideas. It seems that the author,  Michael Pruett, … Continue reading

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A Brief History of Seven Killings by Marlon James x2

Another 2nd reading!  This is getting exhausting because these are dense and complex novels I’m rereading.)   But I’ll want to remember better for a discussion and then I’ll get drawn into  the book (“sucked into the book” is the … Continue reading

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Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights by Salman Rushdie x2

Oh I do like this book  – the first time through I thought it was a roller coaster of a ride and barely made sense of the plot much less all the characters.   I did get a bit of … Continue reading

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For the Major by Constance Fenimore Woolson

For the Major by Constance Fenimore Woolson 1982-83 / 84 pages  (novella) rating  8.5  / classic US Constance Fenimore Woolson was the great niece of James Fenimore Cooper and excellent author in her own right.  Also a good friend of Henry … Continue reading

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Did You Ever Have a Family – x2 by Bill Clegg

The Bookies II reading group chose this book for it’s April 16 selection and because I enjoyed it so much (rating 9.25) I volunteered to do the discussion questions.  Well – I read it last September and really don’t remember all that much … Continue reading

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Will in the World:by Stephen Greenblatt

This is April and the 400th anniversary of the Will Shakespeare’s  death (23 April 1616),  so  a reading of the one of the best recent biography/social histories re his life and times would seem in order – (for the All-nonfiction group). I know … Continue reading

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An Innocent Client by Scott Pratt

What a nice surprise  – I got the book only because it’s a legal thriller and it sounded interesting.   But it turns out I read an earlier book by Pratt,   Justice Redeemed,  back in December.  I only discovered this … Continue reading

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The Strangler Vine by M.J. Carter

Oh wow –  an atmospheric historical mystery of 19th century East India Company in and around Calcutta.   It’s historically accurate (as far as I can tell) and  intelligently written with an intriguing plot line plus interesting characters.  What else could I … Continue reading

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In Defense of Bookstores

Originally posted on Buried Under Books:
The passage of HB2 in North Carolina is causing a great deal of concern in many quarters, rightfully so because there’s a lot that’s wrong with it, but reactions have not always been well…

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The Girl From Home by Adam Mitzner

Oh,  my!  A new Adam Mitzner novel hit the stands (and the downloadables) on Tuesday and I snapped it up yesterday  (Thursday) and was finished last night -yup – one of those midnight oil thingies.   I read and very much enjoyed Mitzner’s two prior novels, A Conflict … Continue reading

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