Books in Bed

Sexy Novels

Susie Bright linked to The 25 Sexiest Novels Ever Written and has posted some interesting comments and ideas of her own. This topic is giving me a good reason to avoid the non-fiction I’m still avoiding – I’m trying to think of my own list of 25 Sexiest Novels…. I feel like “pure erotica” isn’t going to come close to making it onto my list.


What would make your list? Do you like Susie’s ideas? Agree with the books in the article? Is it wrong to think about sexy novels on Memorial Day?


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Booking Through Thursday

Finally! One I wanted to do!


Booking Through Thursday

  1. What are the last five books that you finished reading? Odd Girl Speaks Out (Rachel Simmons) The Egg & I (Betty McDonald), Rose of No Man’s Land (Michelle Tea), Pitching My Tent (Anita Diamont), Carolina Isle (Jude Deveraux)
  2. How long did it take you to read them? 8 days worth of reading
  3. Did you enjoy reading these books? Why or why not? Odd Girl Speaks Out and Carolina Isle, not so much. The Egg & I was ok. Pitching My Tent I could recommend. Loved Rose of No Man’s Land. Why? Why not? Scroll through the blog and find out!




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Carolina Isle

Problem #1 – Why is this book called Carolina Isle? Yes, it’s about an island off of NC (fictional island, real state) but the island is called Kings Isle. Why not name the book Kings Isle? Dumb name.

Problem #2 – The two cousins are suppose to look alike enough to be able to “swap lives”. So when RJ spotted Ariel across the room at a party, why didn’t he mention this look-alike to Sara? Weird and dumb.

Problem #3 – What the …. ? An island where the inhabitants set up tourists to fleece money out of them, ok I get that. But in such an extreme, dreamlike, unimaginable way? Give me a break.

What’s weird is I got past all three of those problems and found myself enjoying this ridiculous book – it was almost like science fiction or an episode of the Twilight Zone. Just as I’m enjoying it, and looking forward to the “mystery” resolved and the couples falling in love and stuff – BAM – cruddy ending.

I liked that the rich and spoiled and sheltered girl saved the day. Terrific. Good job. But to wrap it all up in a “1 year later” sort of way was just ridiculous. And have everything tied up, the way it was. Ack, it went from Twilight Zone (which was likeable) to Harlequin (which was ridiculous).

At some point last night I was looking forward to reading the other Jude Deveraux book that is on the shelf. Now I think I’ll just skip it. Mindless adventury/mystery/love stories I can enjoy, but when you screw up an ending that way – there are better ways to spend my time.
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Pitching My Tent

Pitching My Tent by Anita Diamont was what you would expect from the author of The Red Tent. Easy to read, lots of religious topics but the easy religion you’d expect a woman of the Jewish Reform faith. At least that I would expect – none Jew that I am.

This one won’t change your life but it was a nice read for a late Saturday night/early Sunday morning,. These stories were pulled from her newspaper and magazine columns. They feel like they were meant to be read over a cup of coffee (or tea) and chatted about with your partner or your friend.

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Michelle Tea – Fiction!

michelles.jpgIf you read the Daily Dose then you know the picture in this entry comes from the reading/signing at Wild Iris with Michelle Tea. You also know we bought Rose of No Man’s Land, Tea’s first attempt at “fiction”. I read it yesterday and loved it.

Tea said at the reading that it was hard to write fiction, compared to memoirs, I can understand that. She also said she worried that she’d written characters nobody would care about or a narrator who was so obnoxious you wouldn’t want to read the story, this I don’t understand. I thought Trisha was terrific. And Rose, ah Rose, she wasn’t bad herself.

I can totally see this as a film. A cult classic for wild and alternative teen girls. Sort of like Virgin Suicides and Thirteen. Stuff parents do not want to see because it would give them nightmares about their daughters. What it ought to give them is nightmares about what men and boys do to girls everyday and what effect that has on girls.

No, it’s not one of those male-bashing feminist books. Not really. Tea did a nice job of putting across the mesage without slamming it down your throat. And, she gave her female characters the power to deal with the BS men dish out to them. Excellent.

This isn’t going to be any adult’s favorite book of all time. The writing just isn’t that great and the story is bouncey. It might, however, become your daughter’s favorite book – if she’s a fan of The Virgin Suicides, or Thirteen or anything by Francesca Leah Block.

I look forward to Tea’s next work of fiction – well not the comic book. Maybe the further adventures of Trisha and Rose (Trisha should be on Real World, imagine THAT!) or just a story about Rose? Whatever it is, I’m pretty sure I’ll smile my way through it – just like I smiled my way through Rose of No Man’s Land.

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The Egg & I

Badger was talking about Betty McDonald last month and both TW and I said “We need to read those!”… I’m not sure why I said such a thing since I am not even a Mrs Piggle Wiggle fan but I have that weird crush on Badger so that probably explains it. Anyway, our library only had The Egg & I, which I immediately reserved.

It arrived a couple of weeks ago and TW read it and laughed all of the way through it. I, however, did not laugh my way through it. I fumbled my way through it. Chuckled every now and then. And kept putting it down and looking longingly at the other stacks of books waiting to be read. It was slow. It wasn’t all that funny. I was annoyed with just about every character. And yet, now that I’m finished with it, I’m finding more to be amused about.

I do know that I will never live on a chicken farm. With a man. Ever.

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Girls are Mean

I read Odd Girl Out and Odd Girl Speaks Out yesterday and as expected, girls are mean. But they’ve pretty much always been mean. Not all girls and not all of the time, of course. But they are, and they are mean in ways that boys are not. I enjoyed both books, though Odd Girl Speaks Out not so much. Suprisingly untouching stories – or maybe they weren’t very touching because I had just finished Odd Girl Out? Whatever the reason, I was disappointed.

I’ll be back, on one blog or another, to talk about mean girls, Odd Girl Out, us/them and she’s all that – after Michelle finishes reading both books and has time to process her thoughts. I don’t want to post and influence her.

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Hot Fudge Sundae Blues

You’d think after reading Girls of a Tender Age I’d have chosen something other than Hot Fudge Sundae Blues – more child abuse should have been the last thing I was interested in reading. Rather than feeling overwhelmed by all of the yukkiness, Hot Fudge Sundae Blues turned out to be a good follow up.

Sure, the women were victims – manipulated by men, or pretended to be manipulated by men in order to get what they wanted, but in the end they sorted it all out, sort of. Apparently Hot Fudge Sundaes cure a lot of things. (Is that why TW keeps asking me if I want to go and get ice cream? Even though I dislike ice cream?) Hot Fudge Sundaes cure blues caused by everything from losing your dad when you’re an infant to being date raped to being bullied by other girls to seeing your mom go to jail for killing your step-dad as he attempts to rape you. Hot Fudge Sundaes are the answer. What? You don’t believe me? Read the book, see for yourself!

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Penelopiad

OK I admit it, I just plain like Margaret Atwood. Yea, Oryx and Crake was a disappointment but I still liked it. And as I mentioned recently, I really enjoyed The Tent. So it’s probably not going to surprise you when I say that I really, REALLY enjoyed The Penolopiad on Sunday, is it? I haven’t read any mythology in awhile so this was an added treat. What did happen to the 12 maids? Was Penelope a female cult leader? Was she a slut? Fun stuff. I don’t know why sassymonkey didn’t enjoy it as much as I did. I’m also not sure where she gets that ‘feel sorry for them” thing. Were we suppose to feel sorry for Penelope or the Maids? What kind of Canadian woman doesn’t really like Atwood anyway? 😉


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