What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?
Time for another WWW Wednesdays, which is brought to you by Sam @ Taking on a World of Words. If you too want to participate, answer the above questions and post that link on Sam’s page.
Currently Reading
Finished Reading
Cosy by Laura Weir – audiobook = ♦ ♦
Hello, Habits by Fumio Sasaki – audiobook = ♦ ♦ ♦ ½
Why We Can’t Wait by Martin Luther King, Jr. – audiobook = ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ½
Classics Book Club: Peyton Place by Grace Metalious – book = ♦ ♦ ♦ ½
Reading Next
What are y’all reading? Feel free to leave a comment below on the books I’m reading, the books you are reading, and/or your own WWW link.
HAPPY READING!!!
I’ve always found Dickens so difficult to get through. I hope you have an easier time with A Tale of Two Cities than I did 🙂
I’ve managed to read 3 Dickens novels so far (I actually really ended up enjoying Great Expectations a lot), but Tale of Two Cities I never could get into. This time, I am reading it with a friend over the course of a few months, so I feel like she and I can struggle together, and we might actually get through it. 🙂
I enjoyed Peyton Place many years ago. Now I am curious about the book Unbuttoning America. Here’s MY WWW POST
Peyton Place has been on my shelf for years, so I’m happy I finally read it. It was actually not what I expected at all. I think it did have an impact on our culture and hope that Unbuttoning America will go into that a bit.
I love Dickens on audio especially if Martin Jarvis is reading!
That is a great recommendation in case I am having a hard time with the physical book.
Hello, Habits sounds very good! Enjoy your reading week!
After reading so many of these types of books, they all start to sound the same, but he gives a lot of steps, like fifty of them, to building habits. I’m sure any individual can take away something from Hello, Habits.
Some interesting books here, but, honestly, I never thought of Peyton Place as a “classic’ LOL
Oh believe me that that was a whole 20 minute discussion in our book club. I think we decided it was a classic because of the influence that it had in our culture – it challenged what topics are acceptable to write about; was basically the beginning of chick lit with a full cast of female characters; inspired multiple movies and tv shows; and the title literally became a continuing catch phrase.