Where in the world are you? (2024 part 1)
Betreff des ursprünglichen Themas: Where in the world are you? (Jan-Mar 2024)
ForumReading Globally
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1labfs39
A long-standing tradition, Where in the World Are You? is a place for you to share the setting of your current book in a witty one-liner. Try to incorporate the title and the locale.
For example:
With cherry blossoms and cedar trees, the Old Capital of Kyoto is a nature lovers paradise.
For example:
With cherry blossoms and cedar trees, the Old Capital of Kyoto is a nature lovers paradise.
2labfs39
The Seventh Cross is reserved for the last escapee from a WWII German concentration camp.
3Selliers
Let me begin by paying Homage to Catalonia where I tried to fight well for the right cause, and received a bullet wound through the throat; you might say that my year started off with a bang.
4jveezer
Right now I'm hanging with The Writer's Sister in Abracadabra on Mount Karma, an invented place in The Invented Part.
5labfs39
Chekhov is busy writing writing for humor magazines trying to finish his medical degree while supporting his parents and five siblings in Moscow.
6JerBa
Wondering where Der Mann mit den Facettenaugen is going next in Taiwan.
8labfs39
>7 mnleona: And I just left Troy myself, after enjoying The Song of Achilles.
9jveezer
In Paris, recovering from the crush of a Simple Passion.
10labfs39
In the Negev Desert of Palestine, it's no Minor Detail to get bitten by a spider, but sometimes focusing on minor details helps us see larger truths.
11labfs39
I'm spending my Days at the Morisaki Bookshop in Japan wishing I knew more modern Japanese authors.
13kjuliff
I’m in a car driving across Syria. Death is Hard Work
14labfs39
When travelling across the desert in Kazakhstan, The Day Lasts More than a Hundred Years.
15labfs39
My Vietnam, Your Vietnam, what's the difference?
16ludmillalotaria
I’m The Man Who Spoke Snakish in the forests of Estonia looking for the Frog of the North.
17jveezer
I'm in Suriname getting entangled while getting the lowdown on a woman's madness.
18labfs39
>16 ludmillalotaria: That looks really interesting. Noting.
19kjuliff
I’m back in Japan reading Earthlings by Sayaka Murata
20BuecherDrache
Horrified by a terrible storm in Newfoundland that wrecked ships, wiped out several crews and oh wonder! a single ship was unexpectedly saved in The Shipping News by Annie Proulx
22AnnieMod
I am waiting with Berta Isla for her husband to come home in Madrid.
23BuecherDrache
In New York, looking Bartleby the scrivener over the shoulder. Of course, he said immediately to me: "I would prefer you not to do it".
A question to the psychologists under the readers: Did Herman Melville writte about an autistic character?
A question to the psychologists under the readers: Did Herman Melville writte about an autistic character?
24jveezer
I'm not sure where the freak I am because I'm in the dreamed part.
25kjuliff
>22 AnnieMod: I keep meaning to read that novel. I’ve read almost all Javier Marias’s novels but can never get into Berta. I do hope you’ll review it.
26labfs39
In a Chinese reeducation camp, Grass Soup is on the menu every day.
27BuecherDrache
In Piemont, in the middle of a jiddish settlement, that came from Spain through France some generations ago. Described with many short anecdotes in Das periodische System by Primo Levi.
28icepatton
Walking the streets of Honolulu on a series of detours to learn about its colonial past.
29mnleona
Traveling to different places with Unsolved Mysteries of History by Paul Aron; So far I have been to Egypt (Pyramids), England (Stonehenge), and now off to Crete.
30labfs39
I'm in Shanghai during the Cultural Revolution with the Red Scarf Girl.
31BuecherDrache
Ups! Something went wrong out here :(
32labfs39
>31 BuecherDrache: I liked Red Scarf Girl, but note that it is a YA book. It doesn't take long to read. My review is here. I have started another memoir of the same time period called Feather in the Storm that seems like it's going to be interesting as well.
33BuecherDrache
>32 labfs39: Thanks a lot for the link to your review. After reading it, I'll definitely try to get this book! :)
34labfs39
>33 BuecherDrache: I hope you like it if you read it!
35labfs39
I'm in rural China depending on A Dictionary of Maqiao to understand the local culture and language.
36jveezer
I'm wandering with the writer between Cergy-Pontoise and Paris as she examines the exteriors of everything in the aftermath of moving to a place with no memories.
37BuecherDrache
Biking to Baku, Aserbaidschan with the cat Nala and her driver and best friend Dean, a Scottish Globetrotter, in Nalas Welt by Dean Nicholson
38BuecherDrache
>34 labfs39: Thank you! I'm still trying to get it. I'll let you know! :)
Are you still (reading) in China?
Are you still (reading) in China?
39labfs39
>38 BuecherDrache: I am still reading A Dictionary of Maqiao. Without a plot driving the action forward, it's a bit slow, but interesting. An interlibrary loan book came in today, so I'm also reading that. I have ordered three Chinese history books, but they haven't arrived yet.
40BuecherDrache
>39 labfs39: three chinese history books! That sounds like going deep in history, fascinating! Which epoch(s) is/are on the way?
41labfs39
>40 BuecherDrache: Roughly 1958-1976, i.e. The Great Famine, the Anti-Rightist Movement, and the Cultural Revolution. I should clarify that the three books I've read so far are memoirs from the time period. I am waiting for the true history book to arrive. But I think memoirs are part of history, which is why I answered the way I did. I have a whole list of recommended books about this time period on my Club Read thread, if you are interested.
42ludmillalotaria
>35 labfs39: I liked Han Shaogong’s book when I read it years ago and have been meaning to return to it for a re-read. It’s challenging but worth it.
As for me, it is 1802 and I’ve just escaped the Haitian Revolution with my wife Lydia Bailey.
As for me, it is 1802 and I’ve just escaped the Haitian Revolution with my wife Lydia Bailey.
44BuecherDrache
Diese Nachricht wurde vom Autor gelöscht.
45BuecherDrache
>41 labfs39: That's an impressive list! Thank you!
I think I'll take a first glimpse into 20th century China through the Red Scarf Girl and then turn to older times.
I think I'll take a first glimpse into 20th century China through the Red Scarf Girl and then turn to older times.
46BuecherDrache
>43 jveezer: Sounds also very interesting! I noted already in my wish books.
Oh, the world is too big, cultures so fascinating and live too short to read so many great books! 📚
Oh, the world is too big, cultures so fascinating and live too short to read so many great books! 📚
47BuecherDrache
Now in a parisian hospital, recovering from a fall into the Seine. A car bumped Jean-Pierre out of the street, straight into the water. Now he has a lot of time to think about life and to open to all strangers who live close to him. All this happens in Das Leben ist ein listiger Kater by Marie-Sabine Roger .
48BuecherDrache
Middle in the daily life of a spanisch family in the 70ties, looking over the shoulder of the penultimate child and getting astonished about his ingeniosity, in El principe destronado by Miguel Delibes
49BuecherDrache
Travelling from Nordeast to Northwest Portugal through the eyes and pen from José Saramago in Die portugiesische Reise. Just marvellous!
50BuecherDrache
In Wahlheim, where Werther suffers, enjoys nature and philosophizes about people, human behavior, God, love, etc in Die Leiden des jungen Werther by Goethe
51jveezer
I don't know who Juja is yet but I've got enough problems tracking down Jeanne Saré in the bohemian Paris of the '50s and wondering why she caused so many copycat suicides.
52BuecherDrache
Somewhere in Switzerland, getting astonished about a strange tradition: The coffins of all living family members are stacked in front of the house until they are used by their respective owners. And young men (12 years) are washed in front of the whole community in the church. In Das Buch des Vaters by Urs Widmer. No doubt: "Andere Länder, andere Sitten".
53AnnieMod
Getting lost in the labyrinthine palace in Tenochtitlan while You Dreamed of Empires.
54labfs39
After reading two history books on the 1958-1962 famine in China, I have started the novel Half of Man is Woman by Zhang Xianliang, author of Grass Soup, which I read earlier this year.
55thorold
Since Lisa reminded me that this thread exists, I’d better post something here. I’m on an unexpected diversion to 14th century Kyoto, after a copy of Donald Keene’s translation of Kenkō’s Essays in idleness happened to catch my eye.
56jveezer
I'm in the Negev learning all the dehumanizing minor details that Palestinians have had to live with since 1949, along with the major details of, well, you know...
57labfs39
>56 jveezer: I read that recently and thought it excellent.
58Selliers
I've been stuck in the highlands of Scotland drinking free coffee with Hamish Macbeth.
59labfs39
Instead of Half of Man is Woman, shouldn't it be Half of Woman is Man? Nonetheless enjoying my sojourn in China.