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Old 05-09-2011, 11:30 PM   #36
apbschmitz
Lord of Frogtown
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Posts: 149
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Join Date: May 2011
Location: St. Paul MN
Device: Kindle
A couple suggestions — Embers, by Sador Marai. Description: Two very old men Konrad and Henrik, "the General" once the closest of friends, meet in 1940 in the fading splendor of the General's Hungarian castle, after being separated for 41 years, to ponder the events that divided them. This 1942 novel by a forgotten Hungarian novelist, rediscovered and lucidly and beautifully translated, is a brilliant and engrossing tapestry of friendship and betrayal, set against a backdrop of prewar splendor.

And, by David Mitchell, Ghost Written and Cloud Atlas. The New Yorker on Cloud Atlas: Mitchell's virtuosic novel presents six narratives that evoke an array of genres, from Melvillean high-seas drama to California noir and dystopian fantasy. There is a naïve clerk on a nineteenth-century Polynesian voyage; an aspiring composer who insinuates himself into the home of a syphilitic genius; a journalist investigating a nuclear plant; a publisher with a dangerous best-seller on his hands; and a cloned human being created for slave labor. These five stories are bisected and arranged around a sixth, the oral history of a post-apocalyptic island, which forms the heart of the novel.

Unfortunately, all of these are a little pricey in the Kindle editions. But still cheaper than taking the kids to McDonalds.
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