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What Are We Currently Reading?


Rick Kitchen

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(edited)

On Monday, we’ll learn the winners of the 2025 Pulitzer Prizes. It looks like there are several categories/genres for books.  Many are predicting that Percival Everett, author most recently of James, will receive the award in one of those categories. That book really was exceptional, by an author with a long and notable backlist. 

JAMES WON in the Fiction category.  For the first time in a very long time, I've read a Pulitzer Prize-winning book.  Congrats to Percival Everett, a fantastic contemporary author, with many books I will now explore.  I'm over the moon.  Edited to say that, for this award, the books win, unlike the Literature Nobel Prizes.

Edited by LBC Me
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(edited)

I finished Climbing in Heels by Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas. 
The story is basically about women breaking into the talent management arena. Since it seems semi-autobiographical, it was an interesting read as well as some juicy bits…nothing graphic. 
 

A I would have written this a week ago, but for the life of me I couldn’t find this thread. That seems to be my problem. I read a lot and then when I’m done I have trouble finding all of you. 

Edited by Mindthinkr
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From 1978: Nurse, by Peggy Anderson (the exploits of Mary Benjamin, R.N., over eight weeks in a huge metro hospital; because this was written by Peggy Anderson, and was what happened with Nurse Benjamin over those eight weeks, what I wonder is, did Nurse Benjamin write these exploits in a diary, and then provide them to Anderson to write and publish?).

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On 5/14/2025 at 5:47 AM, bmasters9 said:

From 1978: Nurse, by Peggy Anderson (the exploits of Mary Benjamin, R.N., over eight weeks in a huge metro hospital; because this was written by Peggy Anderson, and was what happened with Nurse Benjamin over those eight weeks, what I wonder is, did Nurse Benjamin write these exploits in a diary, and then provide them to Anderson to write and publish?).

Anderson interviewed a nurse (Mary Fisher) who didn't want her identity revealed. Mary Benjamin was a pseudonym

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(edited)
8 hours ago, Schnickelfritz said:

Anderson interviewed a nurse (Mary Fisher) who didn't want her identity revealed. Mary Benjamin was a pseudonym

Ah! Didn't understand it at first, but after seeing the author's note up top, now I understand; it's a pretty intriguing book so far.

BTW, this one I have is a 1979 paperback edition; the original hardcover was from 1978.

Edited by bmasters9
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Ahoy everyone. I’m currently reading Nesting by Roisín O’Donnell. It was long-listed for the 2025 Women’s Prize for Fiction and I’m working through those books, the ones I find intriguing anyway.  This is the story of a woman who flees her controlling husband and their home with their two young children. Pregnant and scarily low on money, she is navigating Ireland’s housing system and her own self-doubts, as well as her manipulative husband’s “relentless campaign to get her to come back. Because leaving is one thing, but staying away is another.”

I’m about 1/3 through the book and it’s so very good. Propulsive, with a strong undercurrent of suspense and fear. 

My next book will probably be something on my Kindle. I often forget about those books and I have many great titles there. 

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Recently purchased from EBay: Mother Love, Deadly Love: The Susan Smith Murders by New York Post columnist Andrea Peyser (1995 deep-dive into the story of one of America's most infamous murderers, Susan Smith, and what she did that for 9 days, held America in suspense about how a Black man had supposedly kidnapped and ransomed her children [3-year-old Michael and 14-month-old Alexander], only for America and the community of Union, SC to find out that Smith had done in her children by sending them down into the murky depths of John D. Long Lake in Union, and then pretended that that Black had done what she claimed; the police over time put the pieces together and figured it out); book ends before her 1995 trial, but so far, is a very readable account of Smith and what she did in 1994.

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Edited by bmasters9
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I'm currently reading Kyla Zhao's novel The Fraud Squad, and I'm liking it so far. I read and positively reviewed Ms. Zhao's book Valley Verified last summer, so I was happy to find The Fraud Squad (her first novel) while perusing my local library.

And something pretty amazing happened. Last week I posted my review of Milwaukee journalist Meg Kissinger's memoir While You Were Out: An Intimate Family Portrait of Mental Illness in an Era of Silence. I decided to email a link of my review to Ms. Kissinger, and she loved it! Awesome!

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