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Thursday September 9th 2010

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Women’s Fiction Weekend Forum

WFWFpink-flowerHi, everybody -

We’re on to Week 3 of the forum and so far, it’s been a great success. I’ve found books I definitely want to read thanks to your comments and books I absolutely need to read again.

This weekend I thought we might talk about setting because I love books where I feel like I can walk right into a place and imagine it in all its sensual details.

What books do this for you? And why?

I’m ready to add to my list!

Kate

Reader Feedback

4 Responses to “Women’s Fiction Weekend Forum”

  1. Teresa says:

    The first name that jumps into my head is Susan Wiggs. I started reading Wiggs’ Lakeshore Chronicles series and couldn’t stop. It wasn’t just the stories. I fell in love with the town, Willow Lake, the summer camp. She makes it all come to life.

    I recently read JUST BREATHE, which is set in an area of California I visited often as a child. I felt like I’d returned. I love that–a book that combines a great story with a vacation. :-)

  2. Teresa says:

    Oh–forgot to say–my favorite in the Lakeshore Chronicles series (so far) Snowfall at Willow Lake. If you like to start at the beginning of a series, the first book is Summer at Willow Lake.

  3. CurtissAnn says:

    Strangely enough, the setting for the ‘Ladies #1 Detective Agency’ books–Botswanna– makes me feel right at home. It is the characters and their view of the land; in the South, the reverence of land is the same.

    Love all of Fannie Flagg’s books for this reason. Just started re-reading ‘A Redbird Christmas’ and feel right at home. The setting of the book is so much like where I am from in North Carolina, and now I actually live in south Alabama, so it is like, well being here, which I am. :)

  4. CurtissAnn, I agree that The Ladies’ #1 Detective Agency has an excellent sense of place. I’m from South Africa, right next door to Botswana, and I really feel like I’m there with the characters, but the popularity of the series makes me think the setting and the strong sense of place come across to everyone.

    I also got that same sense of place in C.J. Sansom’s Shardlake series set in Tudor England.

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