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-   -   Best beach read for 2004 (https://www.fodors.com/community/united-states/best-beach-read-for-2004-a-404233/)

buckeyemom Feb 27th, 2004 01:29 PM

Second, "The Wedding," by Sparks. I also liked "The five people you meet in heaven," by Mitch Albom.

Kal Feb 27th, 2004 01:43 PM


I like to read the insides of my eyelids.
I-)I-)I-)I-)

kimamom Feb 27th, 2004 01:49 PM

Nicholas Sparks has a website, www.nicholassparks.com There is a message board also. I have every novel he has ever written. Anxiously awaiting the next one!! ***kim***

cactushugger Feb 28th, 2004 04:44 AM

Am I the only one who reads Janet Evanovich? If you like quirky, hilarious characters a la TV's "Six Feet Under" or "Northern Exposure" you should love her mysteries. The best ones are the those that have numbers in the titles. Just a warning though...if you start with "One For The Money" you'd better pick up the next one as well. They're addictive!

makai1 Feb 28th, 2004 06:40 AM

Last year while relaxing in Abaco, Bahamas, I loved reading "Step Ball Change" by Jeanne Ray...
a light hearted, quick read... laughed histerically in the hammock...
a great book to pass on.

kimamom Feb 28th, 2004 09:02 AM

Has anyone read the new Ann Rule book? I've heard it is about Oregon and Hawaii. Sounds interesting? Any opinions on this book? ***kim*** :)

mona Feb 28th, 2004 02:44 PM

I also love the Janet Evanovich books. Perfect for a vacation. Also the Anne George mystery series. It features two sisters -- just hilarious. The Harry Potter books are great as well, if there is anyone left who hasn't read them. They are definitely to be enjoyed by adults as well as kids.


Loisde Feb 28th, 2004 07:30 PM

Kimamom,

I read the new Ann Rule book and it was just as good as her others. For every other author, I wait until the book comes out in paperback, but Ann Rule I buy the hardback. I was not disappointed in her newest.

I just finished "Da Vinci Code," "All He Ever Wanted," and "Plant Life," which I would recommend, especially "Plant Life." This is a novel by Patricia Duncan, a NC writer, about a small town in NC in which the main place of employment is a textile plant. It is infinitely insightful and enjoyable and even if you have never had the 'southern experience' you will be able to relate to these generations of women. A great read. I could hardly put it down.


Maggi Feb 28th, 2004 07:43 PM

Hey jlb, all your books are in my library as well! Last trip I took to Florida I had fun reading "A Trip to the Beach" by the Blanchards. It's about their trials and tribulations opening a restaurant in the Caribbean. Great recipes too!

Tess Feb 28th, 2004 07:55 PM

Love this thread and look forward to it every year. I snap up anything and everything by Marian Keyes--especially 'Watermelon' and her newest, 'Sushi for Beginners.' Fannie Flagg's 'Standing in the Rainbow' makes me nostalgic for a time and place that I never knew. Isabel Wolff's 'Out of the Blue' is a good read. Jane Heller writes some of the best beach books around and I'll miss Olivia Goldsmith's humor but look forward to her last book coming out posthumously (can't remember the name).

bennie Feb 29th, 2004 06:30 AM

Tess,

Sounds like we have similar taste in books. I love Marian Keyes - haven't read Sushi for Beginners yet. I'll have to order it from the library consortium. Standing in the Rainbow was wonderful too. I wish Fannie Flagg was more prolific (sp?). Welcome to the World Baby Girld was terrific too. I never knew there was such an issue as what was described there. I didn't guess the main character's "secret" at all.

ncgrrl Feb 29th, 2004 07:56 AM

I love these book recommendation threads. Thanks to Loisde especially for "Plant Life" I'm going to check out that book.

My recommendation is to head to the local thrift shop and buy a bunch of paperbacks that you won't mind leaving behind. Tons of best sellers from not too far back there.

mcgeezer Feb 29th, 2004 06:58 PM

I loved, The Woman's Number One Detective Agency & Tears of the Giraffe. The books are based in Africa, a warm and sunny read for the beach.

jasper Mar 1st, 2004 06:07 AM

kimamom...ann rule is great. i read "heart full of lies" and it was very interesting. it's a true story about a couple, based in oregon and hawaii. maybe that's the one you meant.

Tess Mar 1st, 2004 06:15 AM

Bennie,
lol--your post sent me to the library to check out Welcome to the World Baby Girl. It's been a few years so it's time for a re-read. I'm with you--wish Fannie Flagg would publish books more often.

bennnie Mar 1st, 2004 06:54 AM

Tesws - it looks like Flagg has a new book coming out in Nov - you can pre-order it on Amazon. Looks like a Christmas book a la Skipping Christmas by Grisham.

Something else you might enjoy is Cold Sassy Tree- life in the south at the turn of the century and Leaving Cold Sassy. Not new books but very interesting and well written.

Sara Mar 1st, 2004 05:45 PM

I'll second the recommendation for "Cold Sassy Tree" - I read it several years ago, and loved it. I just finished reading "Tepper Isn't Going Out" by Calvin Trillin, and found it very funny and entertaining.

dancer47 Mar 1st, 2004 05:50 PM

the queen bee of mimosa branch by haywood smith is an easy read with humor and great characters.

Tansy Mar 2nd, 2004 08:31 AM

I also love Janet Evanovich for beach reads, very funny. Kind of like Sue Grafton's Kinsey Milhone books, but funnier and a bit raunchier.
I just finished "Last Car to Elysian Fields," a New Orleans murder mystery which was great. "Fay" by Larry Brown is a wonderful southern novel, not exactly uplifting but a very meaty story.

kimamom Mar 2nd, 2004 02:18 PM

All of these sound great!! I'm off to Costco tonight to stock up on around six different novels for the next couple of weeks!! Keep the suggestions coming!! ***kim***


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