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 Avid Reader Book Club -  Vote for May's Reading notify me whenever anyone posts in this discussionSubscribe  
 
From: HeatherB  Staff 3/17/2008 10:15 am 
To: ALL  Poll (1 of 16) 
 16895.1 
Vote for May's Reading
King Solomon's Mines by Richard Haggard   
52 votes (37%)
Kim by Rudyard Kipling  
57 votes (40%)
Vince and Joy by Lisa Jewel   
32 votes (23%)
 

141 people voted in this poll

You did not vote in this poll.
This poll expired 3/31/2008 3:31 pm
 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 3/17/2008 10:16 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (2 of 16) 
 16895.2 in reply to 16895.1 

Hi Everyone,

We are now voting for May's book to read. Vote will stay open until March 31. I'll follow this post with descriptions of the books.

We have our first member-suggested book this month. Vince and Joy by Lisa Jewel was suggested by a Book club member and I'm excited to include it in the mix.

The three books are from three different centuries. I hope you find one that suits your fancy!

Cheers
Heather

Edited to change date vote will stay open until



Edited 3/25/2008 3:25 pm by HeatherB
 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 3/17/2008 10:17 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (3 of 16) 
 16895.3 in reply to 16895.2 

King Solomon’s Mines by Richard Haggard

Touted by its 1885 publisher as “the most amazing story ever written,” King Solomon’s Mines was one of the bestselling novels of the nineteenth century. H. Rider Haggard’s thrilling saga of elephant hunter Allan Quatermain and his search for fabled treasure is more than just an adventure story in its vivid portrayal of the alliances and battles of white colonials and African tribesmen.

Kim by Rudyard Kipling

Filled with lyrical, exotic prose and nostalgia for Rudyard Kipling’s native India, Kim is widely acknowledged as the author’s greatest novel and a key element in his winning the 1907 Nobel Prize in Literature. It is the tale of an orphaned sahib and the burdensome fate that awaits him when he is unwittingly dragged into the Great Game of Imperialism. During his many adventures, he befriends a sage old Tibetan lama who transforms his life. As Pankaj Mishra asserts in his Introduction, “To read the novel now is to notice the melancholy wisdom that accompanies the native boy’s journey through a broad and open road to the narrow duties of the white man’s world: how the deeper Buddhist idea of the illusion of the self, of time and space, makes bearable for him the anguish of abandoning his childhood.”

Vince and Joy by Lisa Jewel

Back in the 1980s, teenagers Vince and Joy met, fell desperately in love, and never quite said good-bye. Now nearly twenty years later they've both begun to ask themselves if that long-ago romance was the enduring love that they've been searching for.

For Vince and Joy, finding your destiny is easy. Following it isn't. From teenage love in an eighties holiday park to apartment shares, relationships, career crises and children, Vince & Joy is the unforgettable story of two lives lived separately but forever entwined; and asks the question: how do you know when something is really meant to be?

 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 3/25/2008 2:58 pm 
To: ALL  Poll (4 of 16) 
 16895.4 in reply to 16895.3 

Hi again everyone,
Since we had a long long weekend here, the book club email to everyone was delayed in being sent out. So it will be sent out tomorrow to the book club members. Therefore the contest will remain open for another week until March 31st.

Thanks!

Cheers
Heather

 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 3/28/2008 1:36 pm 
To: HeatherB  Poll (5 of 16) 
 16895.5 in reply to 16895.4 
Vote will remain open over the weekend and closed morning of the 31st. Have a great weekend!
 
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From: poethunter  3/29/2008 3:03 pm 
To: HeatherB  Poll (6 of 16) 
 16895.6 in reply to 16895.2 
Surely you mean Sir Henry Rider Haggard as author of King Solomon's mines?

 

PH

 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 3/31/2008 11:22 am 
To: poethunter  Poll (7 of 16) 
 16895.7 in reply to 16895.6 
Oops! Where did I get Richard from? haha. Ah well, it's correct everywhere else. Thanks for the catch!
 
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From: deb_reader  4/2/2008 7:51 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (8 of 16) 
 16895.8 in reply to 16895.5 
OH!! if either Kim or King Solom's Mine is to be read I'll join in the fun!

Deb :o}

 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 4/2/2008 10:52 am 
To: deb_reader  Poll (9 of 16) 
 16895.9 in reply to 16895.8 
Yay! You're in luck then as we'll be reading Kim in May. :)
 
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From: brainiac4  4/2/2008 11:25 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (10 of 16) 
 16895.10 in reply to 16895.9 
Great news. I'll conveniently order a copy of Kim at the same time as the Count of Monte Cristo for Libby's discussion.
 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 4/2/2008 11:34 am 
To: brainiac4  Poll (11 of 16) 
 16895.11 in reply to 16895.10 
That is definitely handy. The Count of Monte Cristo is a good book too. So many choices to read!
 
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From: brainiac4  4/2/2008 11:40 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (12 of 16) 
 16895.12 in reply to 16895.11 
I have a feeling that "Kim" may turn out to be the more rewarding of the two, but we may be able to argue that out in due course. It's certainly shorter.
 
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From: HeatherB  Staff 4/2/2008 2:12 pm 
To: brainiac4  Poll (13 of 16) 
 16895.13 in reply to 16895.12 
Yes Kim is shorter. Are you reading the unabridged version of the Count? If so, that is indeed a long read.
 
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From: brainiac4  4/2/2008 4:16 pm 
To: HeatherB  Poll (14 of 16) 
 16895.14 in reply to 16895.13 
Well, I think so. It's the fairly new Penguin translation. Not keen on abridgement.
 
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From: deb_reader  4/22/2008 9:49 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (15 of 16) 
 16895.15 in reply to 16895.9 
Terrific, its a favourite.

Deb :o}

 
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From: Bicyclette  4/23/2008 2:47 am 
To: HeatherB  Poll (16 of 16) 
 16895.16 in reply to 16895.13 
I read the unabridged 'Monte Cristo' when I was 15 and off school having my appendix out. I did enjoy it, but it is terribly long, and I remember some passages dragged terribly. I don't think I could have managed it as a 'spare-time' read.

'lette
 
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