One of the places I would have liked to have spent a bit more time was at Thursday's ABA hosted lunch for independent booksellers, the theme of which was "What Are You Reading?" Unfortunately, there was considerable overlap with the blogging panel, and as a result I only got to spend about ten minutes there. But I wandered through the room stopping at tables, and here's what a handful of folks wanted you know about.
Joel Crockett, Wallala, CA: "I'm reading Aragon, which is a book for younger people but it's a whale of a book, a Tolkien-type book and I'm loving it."
Nancy Rutland, Bookworks, Albequerque, NM: "I'm reading For the Love of Stones by Tobias Hill, and it traces a woman's obsession with a jewel created in the 1500s, and where it is now, and her path around the world."
Jan Hect, The Bookvault, Wallingford, CT: "I'm reading The Kite Runner, a wonderful coming of age story which takes place in Afghanistan just before the Russian invasion, and it's just wonderful to learn about a new culture through fiction."
Leslie Reiner, Inkwood Books, Tampa, FL: "I just finished Chris Bohjalian's Before You Know Kindness, and it's wonderful."
Julie Drake, Tidalwave Books, Anchorage, AL: "I'm reading Sex Lives of Cannibals by J. Maarten Troost. It's a funny travelogue of going to Kiribati down in the South Pacific and finding it's not a tropical paradise."
Lisa Kirbus, Syracuse University Bookstore: "I'm reading Cloud Atlas by Liam Callahan and it's a good historical novel."
Archie Kutz, Rockport, NY: "I'm reading Inner Circle by T.C. Boyle, due out in September of this year. It has to do with the Kinsey Report, interesting stuff, historic, dealing with sexual liberation."
I just posted a review of J. Maarten Troost's fantastically funny and very well written book, The Sex Lives of Cannibals, at book-blog reviews. The permalink is: http://www.book-blog.blogspot.com/2004_07_01_book-blog_archive.html#109105315182437137. I can't recommend the book highly enough. (Wait. That's ambiguous. It's an excellent read.)
Posted by: Debra Hamel | July 28, 2004 at 04:16 PM