MooseMom, I want to read that JFK Stephen King novel! My sister gave it to my brother-in-law for Christmas, and she gets to read it after he does. I don't think he's read it yet! I haven't read much Stephen King, maybe a novel or two. But anything JFK is probably worth a read for me.KarenInWA
My husband is a big Stephen King fan, and he keeps pushing me to read more of his stuff. A few years ago, I finally relented, and I hated hated hated it. I swore I'd never read another, but my husband just won't shut up about this JFK book. It is an interesting story, but the style is just so pedestrian and lacks art, in my mind. The older I get, the more I appreciate style and the use of language in fiction.
One of the most stylistically, poetically beautiful novels I've ever read is "Fugitive Pieces" by Anne Michaels. It took me over completely.
I've also finished "Unstrange Minds", written by a man with a PhD in cultural anthropology whose eldest daughter is autistic. So, he decided to write a book about how different societies around the world view and treat (or ignore) autism, and why.
I've been picking away at Temple Grandin's "Animals Make Us Human". She intersperses her thoughts on autism (she's autistic herself, and incredibly successful in her field) with a lot of research on animals and her perspective on what we're doing right and wrong with our pets. Most interesting thing so far - Wolves don't actually live in packs in the wild. They only form packs with an alpha wolf when wolves of different families are forced together into a group - like the relocated or zoo packs that are so frequently studied. In the wild, wolves live in family groups, and the dominance that exists in the group is no more than that of a human family that respects the mother and father. She correlates this with how we are raising our dogs - and discussing if the common "Be the Alpha" approach of the "Dog Whisperer" is actually the best way to deal with them in a family setting.I was disappointed in the chapter on cats, though. She gets really in depth on offering ideas for getting your dog to follow the house rules - but no helpful hints on training a cat NOT to do something. She stresses that negative reinforcement doesn't work for them - just clicker training and treats. Peachy. How do you give a cat a treat for staying off the table and get them to make the connection?
Temple Grandin is a fascinating person. I'll have to look for the film about her on Netflix, the one that played on HBO? I've only seen clips.She is widely criticized, though, I believe by other people with autism. The argument, which is a bit difficult to dispute, is "If you love something [animals] you don't perfect ways to KILL THEM." I do understand her reasoning, though. They are going to die anyway, so she may as well make it as non-traumatic as possible. I heard her on NPR a few months back and it was interesting how her career has shown this progression - I think she said she now is primarily in the business of advising the consumers of animal products, McDonalds and the like, how to pick the most humane suppliers. Jbeany, have you tried one of those sour apple sprays for your table? I had two cats once, a Himi and a 'street cat'. The Himalayan, AJ, was easy to train, hated the negative consequences enough to stop doing what we wanted him to stop doing. I trained him to stand up and beg for food just because I thought it was cute. He would eventually get to the point where he would walk into the kitchen, stand in front of the fridge, meow, then stand up on his back paws (just in case I was THAT stupid and didn't realise what he wanted.) The street cat, Barney, I swear he loved the challenge of doing something naughty then running full-speed at us as we wielded a spray bottle and were pelting him right in the face. He did this for an entire evening before we decided he must be enjoying it, so it was counter-productive.
I trained him to stand up and beg for food just because I thought it was cute.
CebuShan, what are the "between the numbers" novels?
I have finished All three Books of Shades of Grey.Does anyone want them? Free, you pay postage?