READING L.A.
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Kevin Credle, traffic school instructor:
“Desperation” by Stephen King (Signet Books).
“King must be bored. I’m a big fan and I’m half-way through ‘Desperation,’ but I’m starting to lose my patience. He’s recycling his characters. The setting may be a little different, but I’ve read this all before. I wish he’d just get back to his Dark Tower series.”
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Richard Clark, student:
“The Man Without Qualities” by Robert Musil (Vintage).
“The best thing about this book--the story of a rather amoral man--is completely unintentional. The author died before he could finish it, so the last portion, which features his conflicting notes for what would happen, shows a fragmented fictional reality.”
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Ruth Sultzbach, retired public information officer:
“Blackbird” by Dorothy McMillan (Signet Books).
“This novel takes us inside the mind of a psychopathic microbiologist, intent on righting perceived wrongs with deadly bacteria. McMillan arouses sympathy for the young woman even as we recoil from her appalling acts.”
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Robert S. Lapiner, educator,
“The Wealth and Poverty of Nations” by David S. Landes (W.W. Norton).
“This is a history book with a purpose, essential for anyone concerned about the endemic poverty that plagues much of the world.”
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