100 Books #6 - The Man Who Loved Books Too Much

Jan 08, 2013 23:23

Iiiiit's back! I know I've spent way too much time away from this challenge, but RL has slowed down...I think.

Anyway, today's post is The Man Who Loved Books Too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett, by special request for inkvoices because she asked me about it and I hadn't finished reading it yet.

Also, I don't have a book trailer for this one. :(

The Man Who Loved Books Too Much )

meme, 100 books, journal, 100 things

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Comments 6

cookielaura January 9 2013, 07:43:21 UTC
This sounds really interesting, I'm definitely putting it on my to-read list!

And yay, you are now the same amount through 100things as I am lol! I should really get onto no.7!

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book_junkie007 January 10 2013, 06:02:00 UTC
*laughs* We should. :)

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inkvoices January 9 2013, 21:33:46 UTC
That...is not what I thought it would be about when I heard the title. (I guess I was thinking something along the lines of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.) It does sound interesting, but far from light-hearted and maybe, yeah, I can imagine the uncomfortable. Is it non-fiction?

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book_junkie007 January 10 2013, 07:12:46 UTC
I have not heard about either of those titles.

It is non-fiction, which is part of the reason why parts of it made me feel uncomfortable. It almost feels like the author is enabling the criminal in his crimes/helping soothe his mind about things he has done at certain points.

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inkvoices January 10 2013, 12:23:07 UTC
The Guernsey and Literary Potatoe Peel Pie Society is a about a female journalist/writer in post-WW2 England who starts writing letters to a bunch of people on the isle of Guernsey, in the English channel. They chat to her about their lives during the war and after, about books, and how they accidentally formed a book club to hide something they did under the German's noses... The whole book is written in letters, the characters have great voices, and whilst there's some sad it's definitely a feel good story, one of my favourites :)

Yeah, I think that sounds like something you'd have to be in a mood for and morally awkward :/

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book_junkie007 January 11 2013, 05:43:09 UTC
Ooo, that sounds really good! I'll have to check it out some time.

The book was good until about two-thirds of the way through. Before that point, it was an objective look at why some people collect rare books, some people sell rare books, and why some people steal rare books, although the author frequently places her opinions and memories about books into the narrative. She also doesn't consult a psychologist about the criminal and why he may be stealing books; she just creates her own hypotheses and reasons as to why he steals books without consulting a professional on the matter.

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