
I checked back in with my reader's from the Summer Reading Series. Here's where they are and what they said-
An Aesthete's Lament

The one I am reading right now? I just finished (last night) "Rage for Fame," a biography of Clare Boothe Luce ... The next book I shall read is "Conversation Pieces" by Mario Praz ...
theHouse of Beauty and Culture
There is a growing stack (In House,  More is More - Tony Duquette, and  the  new book on David Hicks among them) that I have not even had a chance to look  at. This is a very bad habit. I still haven't yet read  Pat Montadon's book  (2007) or Kevin Sessum's Mississippi  Sissy (2007). And, the books I ordered last week (Divas on Screen being among those) are due in  on Tuesday! But I digress, in answer to your question I am currently  reading: Madeleine Vionnet by  Pamela Golbin (new), Wallace Neff and the Grand  Houses of the Golden State by Diane Kanner (2005), and Mother of Sorrows by Richard McCann  (2005) 
There is a growing stack (In House,  More is More - Tony Duquette, and  the  new book on David Hicks among them) that I have not even had a chance to look  at. This is a very bad habit. I still haven't yet read  Pat Montadon's book  (2007) or Kevin Sessum's Mississippi  Sissy (2007). And, the books I ordered last week (Divas on Screen being among those) are due in  on Tuesday! But I digress, in answer to your question I am currently  reading: Madeleine Vionnet by  Pamela Golbin (new), Wallace Neff and the Grand  Houses of the Golden State by Diane Kanner (2005), and Mother of Sorrows by Richard McCann  (2005) JCB
Oh, I am never reading just one book! Right now: Angela Davis-Gardner, Plum Wine.
"A mystery that unfolds as beautifully, delicately, and ceremoniously as a lotus blossom. One of the most memorable novels I have read in many years." —Lee Smith, author of The Last Girls& Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romance. I am organizing my book week for next month...and will finally write that little piece on seasonal reading you suggested (inspired by the Paris Review interviews).le style et la matiereBooks? You do mean books, don't you?
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins  (rereading - inspired by a certain LA post); The Art of Arts by Anita  Albus profound reflections on painting, art, symbols of human life through an  examination of Dutch art and thinkers of various cultures;  Decorating is  Fun by Dorothy Draper (I understand Jennifer Boles' inspiration; they are  both light and breezy but get down to important brass tacks in an original way);  Ghost Stories by Edith Wharton (seasonal yes, but I'd never read these  and they are worth reading at anytime)...  Mrs BlandingsI am reading the Cecil Beaton biography by Hugo Vickers  &
Emily Evans  Eerdmann’s Classic English Design and Antiques.  Can’t wait to see what else is  on everyone’s bedside tables!& MeIf nothing else-checking back in with all makes me know I am not alone. As HOBAC says of his growing stack-And undoubtedly next week I will look at the bookcase with all my  unread books and think, but, there is nothing  to read! Oh, the caprice of it all.
Currently reading- Clarence John Laughlin Prophet Without Honor by A.J. Meek, along with reviewing his published photography books.  When I want to switch it up- I go to Ottoline Morrell: Life on the Grand Scale by Miranda Seymour.
On my groaning bedside table, next up- Journey Into The Mind's Eye by Lesley Blanch and The House of Life by Mario Praz. Both books recommended by AAL and the Lesley Blanch book by Lucindaville. On the book's  jacket, Blanch writes "My book is not altogether autobiography, nor altogether travel or history either. You will just have to invent a new category."  In the fiction category-Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel the 2009 Booker Prize winner..
