Fiber Fool

Follow the feats and foibles of a fiber fanatic.

Escape Tactics…

Filed under: Uncategorized, Books, Movies — Kristi at 8:57 am on Thursday, August 10, 2006

I’m terrible. I like to withdraw when things get tough. My mind just races and whirls around the negative. When it gets that way it seems the best way to combat it is to withdraw into worlds of fiction - books, movies, and television.

Purgatory Ridge by William Kent Krueger I finished Purgatory Ridge by William Kent Krueger last Saturday night. I swear his books get better and better. Then again it may just be that I feel more and more invested in the characters which each book. This is the third in the Cork O’Connor series so once again is set in the small town of Aurora, MN in northeastern Minnesota. A lot of this book takes place on Lake Superior and involves lots of action from scuba diving, to bombs, protests, and even kidnapping.

My mom finished this just slightly before I did and the one thing both of us have noticed is that the first half of his books are kind of slow, but once we cross that half way point, don’t talk to me, don’t call me, don’t ask me if I’m hungry. I *must* finish the book! LOL! It was kind of fun to have our own personal book club.

Speaking of book clubs, the library book club that I have attended three our of the past four years is starting up again next week. I’m undecided whether to go. It conflicts with SnB every 6 weeks. I didn’t go last year because of that conflict but also because for whatever reason I couldn’t make it to the first meeting where we nominate and vote on the six titles we’ll read and what got picked was of no interest whatsoever to me.

I’m all about book clubs stretching your boundary of reading tastes, but the books were all either very heavy tomes or political non-fiction. I like when there are one or two sprinkled into the mix, but last year’s listing was over the top. Plus, I have found that when the titles are ones that I don’t have much interest in they take me the entire six weeks to get through and I don’t have time to read any titles that I *want* to read. I’m tempted to go on Monday to see what gets chosen. That meeting nearly always results in a handful of titles to add to my “must read list” that maybe wouldn’t have crossed my path otherwise. But, if I do go I have to nominate a book and I’m not sure what to nominate.

Ritual Bath by Faye KellermanAnyway, SIL3 and DH patiently went to the library with me on Sunday afternoon and I came home with three more mysteries - another Diane Mott Davidson, a Stuart Woods, and my first Faye Kellerman. I decided to dive into the Kellerman novel that blogless Shelley recommended - Ritual Bath.

I only got the first chapter read on Sunday night before I had to give in to my nodding head. But I still got the book done yesterday morning. Now, it is a fairly slim book, but that was one of my fastest reads this summer. This one is a suspense/romance. There was a wonderful balance between the suspense and the romance and I loved that there were multiple mysteries in the book. That added a different element that you don’t often see in the mysteries. Part of me wanted to ignore the other two books I had checked out and go check out the next book, LOL! I can’t wait to see what happens with Peter and Rina and what sort of mysteries they find themselves wrapped up in next time.

I have to thank Chris profusely for pointing her readers to Stop, You’re Killing Me. I ended up copying down in my purse notebook the next several books in the series of some of my favorite authors so I can just browse the library shelves and choose whichever series has the next book that I need to read. I suspect it’ll come in handy when hitting the used book stores and/or thrift stores before my next trip Minnesota (I dislike traveling with library books for fear of loosing them and since they are often hard cover and heavier to tote around in a carry on). It has also been helpful for my mom as I can assist her in formulating her request list for the NLS for books on tape so that she can get the books in proper order. So, does anyone know of a similar sort of web site to SYKM that is for romance books??

Now I’m reading the third Diane Mott Davidson novel, The Cereal Murders.

There has also been some catching up on summer television series (The Closer, Psych, checking out the new Three Moons Over Milford etc.) and a little bit of movie watching going on. Last week we enlightened our friend, John, on the amusement that is Saved! It stars Jenna Malone, Mandy Moore, Macaulay Culkin, and Eva Amurri. It has a great supporting cast of Mary-Louise Parker and Martin Donovan as well. It is a humorous look at what self-righteousness gets you. I am always amazed at how well they walk the fine line between being anti-religion and just being anti-fundamentalist religion. It is very pro-spirituality.

This weekend we decompressed on Saturday night by watching The Bridcage on-Demand. I had forgotten how hillarious and brilliant Hank Azaria was. We had also forgotten that Calista Flockhart was in and was surprised to see Dan Futterman who later played Vincent in Judging Amy and more recently Danny in Related. It was a fun blast from the not too distant past.

What are your favorite ways to escape stressful events happening in your life that you have no control over?

11 Comments »

Comment by Imbrium

August 10, 2006 @ 9:40 am

Like you, books are always a good escape for me. Really, reading of any sort - I’ll get on the internet (Wikipedia, Straight Dope, blogs, whatever) and lose myself for a few hours. And then there’s computer/console games, of course. If my life sucks, I can always go boss my Sims around and give them perfect(or miserable) lives.

Comment by Chris

August 10, 2006 @ 9:59 am

You’re welcome! SYKM is an amazing resource, isn’t it?? And I just put The Ritual Bath on my request list at the library… :)

Comment by Hillary

August 10, 2006 @ 10:26 am

Reading and knitting are my stress releases. Knitting calms me down and focuses me. Reading provides an escape. I loved The Ritual Bath and the rest of the series. Thanks for the link to Stop You’re Killing Me. I love mystery series and I can never figure out the order. One series I loved was the JP Beaumont books by JA Jance which are set in Seattle. Every time I started one I felt like I was there.

Comment by Rebekah

August 10, 2006 @ 10:31 am

Favorite way to escape, a movie. I really like to go by myself and then go to a sit-down meal at a rrestaurant by myself and just be alone. I don’t get to do that very often though.

My other way is just watching Anne of Green Gables or State Fair at home, on my couch, and knit.

Comment by Carrie K

August 10, 2006 @ 11:39 am

Favorite stressful escapes? Books, knitting, TV, sitting outside listening to the wind in the trees or the ocean (if I drive).

That book by Wm Krueger sounds great. I’ll have to check it out. And thanks for the Stop You’re Killing Me site! I haven’t read Chris today.

I like the idea of Book Clubs but other than Knit the Classics, I don’t participate much. But I’d go Monday if I were you just to see what they pick. Nominations are easy.

Comment by Julia

August 10, 2006 @ 11:50 am

I second Rebekah’s idea about going to the movies alone. I like to go in the middle of the day in the middle of the week when no one else is there - I ride my bike to the theater and see something “girly” that my husband wouldn’t want to see. I sit up fairly close so the screen can completely fill my field of vision and just get lost in the movie. Afterwards, I ride my bike home and think about the movie. I always feel like I’m getting away with something when I go to the movies alone - it’s like playing hooky!

Comment by lisa Co. Springs

August 10, 2006 @ 12:40 pm

Seems you and I were on the same “page” yesterday….needing an “escape” myself, I dove into a fluffy bit of fiction as well.
Have you read the Outlander series? I was completely useless until I had finished them all (the ones available to that point).

Comment by hannah

August 10, 2006 @ 4:07 pm

I’d be interested in going with you to the book club, or maybe we could even start our own? I used to belong to one back in CT and loved it.

Comment by April Bangert

August 10, 2006 @ 8:20 pm

I too am an avid reader and when I’m needing escape I return to Agatha Christie or Martha Grimes. Then when I am in a mood needing some humour thrown in with the adventure/mystery I turn to my best friend Elizabeth Peters and her series “starring” the Emersons. Diane Mott Davidson’s good too! Let me know if you’re needing another author. (Every once in a while I crave a Clive Cussler novel..the Dirk Pitt series especially!) I hope you know we’er all here with you in this time of “stress” and that if we could all gather around you…there’d not be a room big enough!

Comment by Lizzy B

August 11, 2006 @ 7:09 am

A walk in the woods with a picnic lunch is my favorite escape. It recharges me in a way that nothing else does.

Pingback by Stumbling Over Chaos :: Of yarn and keychains

September 5, 2006 @ 5:41 am

[…] Reading Proven Guilty by Jim Butcher. The most recent Dresden Files novel. This series about Chicago PI and wizard Harry Dresden continues to be enjoyable, funny, and unpredictible. Definitely recommended. Danse Macabre by Laurell K. Hamilton. The most recent Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter, novel was ok. The bit about unpredictible being good re: the Dresden Files? The Anita Blake books are seeming awfully predictible these days. I ripped through the book, but I can’t say that I really enjoyed it. The Ritual Bath by Faye Kellerman. Kristi recommended this book so highly a few weeks ago that I had to check it out. This is the first book in a series about LAPD Detective Peter Decker and Jewish widow Rina Lazarus and I already have the next book on my library list. For a more eloquent review, head on over and read Kristi’s. China Trade by S.J. Rozan. MrsPao recommended this book to me and I’m very glad she did! Another enjoyable read that’s also the first book in a series about PI Lydia Chin, based out of NY’s Chinatown, and fellow PI Bill Smith. […]

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>