Reading Fun and Fun Reading in the Burbs

Posted on May 21st, 2011

Before I go into the subject of fun reading books, I wanted to share with you a little personal history.  I moved to Weston in 1998 just before getting married and while working full-time as an executive recruiter for Reebok International, Ltd.  It was until October 1999 that I had my first child, and at this point, I wasn’t very networked in the community.  In other words, I barely had any friends….  Once my daughter was born, and I had scaled down my work schedule significantly, I decided to attend every WCCA (Weston Community Children’s Association) event, Newcomers event, Wellesley Mother’s Forum event and more.  I was determined to build a life – and a group of close friends - for myself and my family in the burbs.  As part of this initiative, I started a book club in Weston with a group of good friends in 2001.  Sadly the book club has disbanded – I think we are all over-scheduled at this time in our lives – but we had an awesome 10-year run, and I wanted to share with you a list of some of our favorites over the years as well as some that I read outside of the book club as we were gearing down.  Here are the mostly fiction faves (in no particular order):

  • The Help, by Kathryn Stockett – I’ve never run into a person who didn’t love this book about the intermingling and interconnectedness of the lives of white and black families in Jackson, Mississippi in the late 1960s.  This is currently #6 on the New York Times Best Sellers List.
  • The Other Boleyn Girl, by Philippa Gregory – this was a unanimous favorite in our book club; a saucy, steamy historical non-fiction account of life in the time of Henry VIII from the perspective of Anne Boleyn’s sister, Mary.
  • The Lace Reader, by Brunonia Barry - part of the reason I loved this was because it takes place in Salem, MA, and is filled with mind twists, intrigue and mystery surrounding a family of Salem women who can read the future in the patterns in lace and who have a long-standing history of secrets that unravel during the course of the book.
  • Water for Elephants, by Sara Gruen – a tale of those in the circus life during the Great Depression.  This is currently #1 on the New York Times Best Sellers List and has also been made into a movie, featuring Robert Pattinson as Jacob, the protagonist, and Reese Witherspoon as Marlena, Jacob’s love interest
  • The Road, by Cormac McCarthy – this is a disturbing book and hard to get through but it truly is a story of pure and unconditional love for one’s child.
  • The Man Who Turned Into Himself, by David Ambrose – another story of mind twists, secrets and intrigue which leaves you unsure of what is real and not real.  Could a parallel universe really exist?
  • The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak – once again, I have never met anyone who has read this book and didn’t love it.  The book is narrated by Death himself and set in Nazi Germany.
  • In The Woods, by Tana French – this too is filled with mind twists, intrigue, mystery and secrets – can you tell that I love these themes?  The story starts with the murder of a 12-year-old girl and links to a disappearance of two children twenty years before in the same suburb of Dublin, Ireland.
  • Olive Kitteridge, by Elizabeth Strout – a series of short stories with Olive Kitteridge as the common character and link throughout all of the stories.
  • Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, by Jamie Ford – I absolutely loved this book; it really was a bittersweet tale (hence the title) of a Chinese boy and Japanese girl who fall in love in Seattle at the time when the Japanese were being sent to the internment camps.
  • A Stranger Like You, by Elizabeth Brundage – I found this in the ultra-cool Books & Books in South Beach, FL, and I loved it.  Set in Los Angeles, this story is a twisted tale of several very different people whose lives strangely and disastrously intersect.
  • The Girl With The Dragon Tatto and The Girl Who Played with Fire, by Stieg Larsson – #23 and #25, respectively, on the New York Times Best Seller List. I’ve read both of these, and I don’t know which I liked better.  Lisbeth Salander, a reclusive, computer hacker, and Mikael Blomkvist, a famed journalist, pair up to solve disappearances, murder mysteries and much more in the world of evil. I have not read the third book in the trilogy, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest, which is currently #12 on the New York Times Best Seller List.
  • The Piano Teacher, by Janice Y.K. Lee – the story of a piano teacher in Hong Kong in the 1950s who becomes involved with a man whose secretive past makes its way into her present day life.
  • A Million Little Pieces, by James Frey – we all probably remember the “Oprah” controversy with this book about addiction and rehab, but I loved it whatever it was – truth, fiction or a mixture of both.
  • Drowning Ruth, by Christina Schwarz – another book filled with mystery and deep family secrets that surround the tragic drowning of Ruth’s mother.
  • The Time Traveler’s Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger – in my opinion, the movie did not do justice to this book about a man who continually and consistently travels through time into and out of his wife’s life.

I must admit as I contemplate these favorite books of mine, I am having a bit of trouble remembering the whole story, all of the characters and some of the subtleties of the plot.  In fact, I’m thinking it may be time for a re-read of some of these.   But anyway, I digress….  Back to the subject at hand – do you have other favorites and/or have you read any of these?  I’m also curious to hear your thoughts on the electronic aspect of reading a book.  Many have made the switch from holding a tangible book to using a kindle.  What is your preference?  I can’t wait to hear….

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2 Responses to “Reading Fun and Fun Reading in the Burbs”

  1. M.A. Gallerani

    thanks, Lisa! I have read many of these, and Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet is on my kindle waiting. Hope to see you soon so we can compare books in person!

  2. ellin

    Thanks for this list – I am looking for a new book!

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