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hermetic

(8,847 posts)
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 11:02 AM Sunday

What Fiction are you reading this week, April 27, 2025?

This discussion thread is pinned.

A 13th-century Gothic church in the Netherlands; originally served the Dominican Order. In 2006 it was meticulously restored and repurposed into a modern bookstore.

Reading Thunderhead by Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child. I am loving this story. Archaeologist Nora Kelly leads an expedition into a harsh, remote corner of Utah's canyon country, hoping to unravel one of archaeology's greatest mysteries. There's some "thing" out there, though, that doesn't want it to happen so a lot of really creepy stuff is happening to stop her. I cannot put this book down, wanting to know what's going to happen next. I also love that this is all taking place in areas I am quite familiar with.

Listening to The Left-Handed Twin by Thomas Perry. "Jane Whitefield helps people disappear. Fearing for their lives, fleeing dangerous situations, her clients come to her when they need to vanish completely." Only this time it's Jane who is being pursued and thus begins an action-packed, bloodthirsty chase. The 9th in a series but fine as a stand alone.

What's your choice this week?
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What Fiction are you reading this week, April 27, 2025? (Original Post) hermetic Sunday OP
Under the Harrow Mz Pip Sunday #1
That sounds quite good hermetic Sunday #2
Wake up and open your eyes cbabe Sunday #3
Interesting coincidence... hermetic Sunday #5
Thanks for the news. Beautiful cats. Warning: book mixes tragedy with the humor. cbabe Sunday #7
I like the sound of both of those Bayard Sunday #12
Two good ones. Especially smart, cunning Jane. cbabe Sunday #4
Finished Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman mentalsolstice Sunday #6
And havrn't we all... hermetic Sunday #8
From the Stranger Than Fiction column hermetic Yesterday #14
Finally finished Jilly_in_VA Sunday #9
A third way into "A Game of Thrones" by George R.R. Martin Number9Dream Sunday #10
I never saw it either hermetic Sunday #11
I finished, "Weyward," by Emilia Hart Bayard Sunday #13

Mz Pip

(28,067 posts)
1. Under the Harrow
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 11:14 AM
Sunday

By Flynn Berry. It’s a murder mystery set in the UK. It won an Edgar Award.

It’s told in the first person by Nora, who comes from London to visit her sister and finds her murdered. She becomes obsessed with finding the killer.

cbabe

(4,919 posts)
3. Wake up and open your eyes
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 11:45 AM
Sunday

‘From master of horror Clay McLeod Chapman, a relentless social horror novel about a family on the run from a demonic possession epidemic that spreads through media.’ (Fox news brainwashing…)

I made it about twenty pages in. Horror is not my genre. Book is very intense combo of Stephen King’s Cell and Stand.

Escape Clause/John Sandford

Virgil rescues endangered (pun intended) stolen zoo tigers. Usual cast of outliers or as Caitlin says: you’re a very odd bunch of people. Minnesota in the summer time.

hermetic

(8,847 posts)
5. Interesting coincidence...
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 12:17 PM
Sunday

I used to frequent the Como Zoo in MN, wonderful place, and recently heard they had 2 new Amur tigers. Photos and story here: https://comozooconservatory.org/marisa-and-maks-make-their-public-debut/
Now I'll have to read that book.

mentalsolstice

(4,571 posts)
6. Finished Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 12:27 PM
Sunday

Very good! Now reading I Hope This Finds You Well by Natalie Sue, about a young woman who accidentally gains access to her coworkers computers, texts and emails. Hilarity ensues. I recommend it for anyone who has worked in a large company’s soul-sucking cubicle environment.

Thanks for the thread hermetic!

hermetic

(8,847 posts)
14. From the Stranger Than Fiction column
Mon Apr 28, 2025, 09:18 AM
Yesterday

"Now, the security of thousands of employees and their parent companies is at risk after real-time images of their computers were leaked by an employee surveillance app.

On Thursday, researchers at Cybernews reported that over 21 million screenshots from WorkComposer, which works with over 200,000 companies worldwide, were discovered in an unsecured Amazon S3 bucket.

As part of its services, WorkComposer captures screenshots of an employee’s computer every 3 to 5 minutes. So, the leaked images potentially include sensitive content like internal communications, login information, and even an employee’s personal information that could leave them vulnerable to identity theft, scams, and more."

https://gizmodo.com/an-employee-surveillance-company-leaked-over-21-million-screenshots-online-2000593880?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

Jilly_in_VA

(11,836 posts)
9. Finally finished
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 03:55 PM
Sunday
Great Lion of God, by Taylor Caldwell, her novel about St. Paul, to which I had sentenced myself as a Lenten penance since I don't particularly like Paul. Yeah, I know it dragged out until after Easter, and that's my fault for starting it late in Lent! I can say a couple of things about it. It didn't make me like Paul any better, but the writing, as always with her books, was extremely good, and it interconnected with at least one other of her books, Dear and Glorious Physician, one of my favorites, very well. It was also extremely tedious and longer than it could have been.

I'm now reading a biography of Harry Truman, who's the first president I remember, called The Accidental President, by A.J. Balme. It focuses on his early life and the first four months of his presidency. No, of course it's not fiction. I kind of wish it still were, because some of the things he had to do were pretty horrendous...but I still think they were probably necessary, and I still think he was a greater president than many.

Number9Dream

(1,763 posts)
10. A third way into "A Game of Thrones" by George R.R. Martin
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 04:58 PM
Sunday

Thanks for the thread, hermetic.

I never saw the TV series, or read the books, and I was looking for something new. I wondered if the book would compare to the hype. I'm 220 pages in and am pleasantly surprised. Aside from one or two parts I could have done without (animal cruelty related), I'm enjoying this one. On the plus side it's well written and imaginative. On the negative, there are a LOT of characters (with nicknames) to keep track of. I'll check back in a few weeks when I've finished.

hermetic

(8,847 posts)
11. I never saw it either
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 05:27 PM
Sunday

But glad to hear you are enjoying the book. Hope it/they continue to impress.

Bayard

(24,811 posts)
13. I finished, "Weyward," by Emilia Hart
Sun Apr 27, 2025, 11:07 PM
Sunday

Loved it.

Now on, "From the Borderlands." Its a book of short stories by people like Bentley Little, Steven King, Whitley Strieber, and more. Some are better than others. A little light reading before bedtime....

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