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September 02, 2006

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Shirley

I don't think I will read "The Stolen Child" since I don't like magical realism or fairy tales either. Thanks for an honest review.

amy

ok, i guess i've been exonerated...i think. though i'm nervous about the recprucussions of the Stolen Child recommendation being the reason that diane had to change the name of her blog. does this mean that i might be set upon by hundreds (thousands?) of angry bleaders (hey, i am just a lowly respondent and therefore cannot be sued by the Great Julie Powell, all hail, all hail) who resent that diane just writes about recent books, not favs? Does this mean she will no longer be culling the wheat from the chaf? I don't dare recommend my all-time favorite book ever, A Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin because it is all about magic and mystery. On the non-fiction end however, i would recommend The Children's Blizzard--and skip all the weather parts, which unless you are a weatherphile (i'm sure the NYT crossword torturers have a much more archaic and complex name for someone who loves the weather, but i am still working on 24 down and can't be bothered to look it up), will bore you to tears--the un-how-our-weather-reporting-system-began parts of the book are fascinating, it is the Anti-Little House on the Prairie tv series book. Actually, the author quotes Laura Ingalls Wilder many times and applauds her accuracy in describing the harshness of prairie life, and in reading The Children's Blizzard, I was continually amazed and depressed as to how anyone could ever live in those extreme weather conditions, then or now. Michael Landon and Melissa Gilbert wouldn't have lasted 10 minutes. And neither would their trailers, hair and makeup people, craft service, camera-lens-people, etc.

But Diane, it's yet another NON-FICTION and i know how you are trying to be more balanced. I will attempt to read and finish at least 3 of the 30 or so books i've stored up for the long winter courtesy of Barnes and Noble (which, you may have noticed, was 98 down this week. No amazon references that i saw!) and see if i can't complete my partial redemtion.

Not that i'm competitive or anything, but the gauntlet has been thrown and i'm up to the task. Let the reading begin!

amy

Di

I remember struggling through about a third of A Winter's Tale because I think this was the first Amy recommendation that didn't work out. I guess we have to agree to disagree about the magical realism thing.

As for gauntlets, now that you are doing the Times Sunday puzzle you have inspired me to actually do it and TIME IT!!! 49 minutes this week with one pee break and eating a sandwich that Haley was supposed to take for lunch but left (for me?) This is all I need. Now that I've started timing it, it's only a matter of time before I want to compete in the Annual Crossword Championship. Ugh!
Di

Susan Helene Gottfried

Whew. I just contacted the author this morning, since he's local, to see if he'd be available to speak at a PFA meeting!

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