Monday, July 31, 2023

Winchester Cathedral Close

Winchester Cathedral Close: Its Historical and Literary Associations by John Vaughan, 275 pages

This is not a history of the cathedral itself, but of the monastic enclosure that surrounded it for centuries prior to the Reformation, elements of which survive to this day.  John Vaughan, a resident canon in the early years of the 20th century, follows these traces through to his own time, covering not only the buildings but also the flora and fauna of the cathedral precincts, as well as the scriptorium and the library collection.

Vaughan's intimate knowledge of his surroundings breathes a special vitality into what might otherwise be a very dry work, at times suggesting the sweet odour of contemplation that once incensed the air here.  Few, perhaps, will care about details of the alterations to the undercroft, but anyone looking for a testament of love of place will be enchanted.

The Rainbow People

 

Shirley J.                 Juvenile Fiction                       20 Chinese stories teaching moral lessons     

The Rainbow People by Lawrence Yep  208 pages

I loved these stories.   20 stories that teach kindness for our fellow creatures and humans.   Told so well and imbued with grace, family honor, compassion and healing.   This book will leave you longing for more and appreciating the life lessons shared here.   Great stories.   I recommend these to listeners on up.

What's for Lunch? How Schoolchildren Eat Around the World


Shirley J.    Juvenile Non-Fiction       School Lunches in various countries & cultures around the world
What's for Lunch? How Schoolchildren Eat Around the World by Andrea Curtis  40 pages

Good book showing the differences in how children eat in various cultures and countries around the world.   There is a vast difference between the lunch American kids are familiar with to what is the norm for various cultures.    In France school lunches are meant to be enjoyed both by taste and presentation.   Served on china plates with actual cutlery and choices of excellent fare made by chefs, meals there are to be not just enjoyed but to be a pleasant time enjoyed among friends.    A stark difference from school lunches in the Peruvian mountains.    There are so many different ways school lunches are enjoyed.  Sometimes it is the bringing of food from home or in Somalia the World Food Program provides vitamin and protein enriched biscuits and porridge to schools for their student's in China fish and vegetables play a big part in student lunches.    Such vast differences, it was interesting to see how the rest of the world feeds its children.   I found this to be a fun read and study of other cultures.  I would recommend this to elementary school children on up.                                           

 

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Story of Canterbury

The Story of Canterbury by EF Lincoln, 156 pages

The Story of Canterbury is a brief history of the development of the city from the Cantii Gauls to the postwar years, through its time in the Roman province of Britain, the capital of the Kentish kingdom, the seat of the primate of England, a famed center of pilgrimage, a haven for Huguenot refugees, and a modest center of trade struggling to find a balance between past and future.  It is an interesting story simply and appealingly told, though with the inevitable Whiggish slant.

If the natural center of the story is the shrine of St Thomas, the focus of so much of the city's late medieval life, towards the end another shrine appears, that of the Invicta locomotive that first pulled a train from Canterbury to Whitstable, after a procession through the town center amid the pealing bells of the Cathedral and the cheers of great throngs of people.  Rarely has the unquiet ghost of Henry Adams been more invisibly and profoundly present.

Friday, July 28, 2023

King Divas

 


Shirley J.   Adult Urban Fiction          Female Leaders of Street Gangs, Gangster Disciples, Vice Lords

King Divas by De'nesha Diamond  (Divas Series Book 5)   384 pages

This book is the fifth in the Divas Series by author, De'nesha Diamond.   If you like urban fiction this series is loaded with action, hardcore gang members, rival gangs and woman who are street warriors just like the men in the gangs.    There is always so much going on in this series from rough childhoods to rough teen and adult lives if the characters live that long and so many don't.   Really good raw in your face stories with so much authenticity.   This story is set in Memphis, with OGs getting out of prison and taking the streets back from the young Kings running the show while they were doing time.   Wrongs and perceived wrongs deal street justice and so many people swayed by money, drugs and all that comes with and from that lead many down dangerous paths.   Excellent story and Lady Lucifer who is pregnant is not given any passes from the violence that is the lives of gangsters.   Good series, very violent, lots of blunt language and sexual situations.   I recommend this series to adults for all of that latter, though key lessons to be learned by the younger set here, too.

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

The Very Fairy Princess Sparkles in the Snow





Shirley J.             Juvenile Fiction                       Holiday School Programs, Singing Superstar Fairy

Julie Andrews, singing superstar from the Sound of Music and Mary Poppins fame, along with her (grown) daughter, Emma Walton Hamilton have written a children's book series entitled, The Very Fairy Princess series.   The star of the series is Gerry who dresses in wings and tiara at most times, as all proper fairy princesses must, and goes through her life making things sparkly and jolly for herself and everyone around her.    In this particular story (there are 9 in the series so far), it is the holiday season and time for the Winter Wonderland Festival at school.   The highlight of the festival, amid ice sculptures, arts and crafts, a bake sale and sleigh rides is a concert!   Gerry has been showing her music teacher Mr. Higginbottom just how much she loves to sing and show him how great she would be doing the solo.  While he agrees she is certainly the most enthusiastic singer, he goes with an outside, professional singer to do the solo.   Gerry is hurt, afterall, fairies are at their most sparkliest when singing!  But, still happy to be singing she puts her feelings aside when the weather takes a turn and the guest soloist is unable to make it to the concert!  Guess who, Mr. Higginbottom asks to fill in?     A sweet story and I think I will follow the series just to see what all Gerry gets up to.   I recommend this book as a read-a-loud story for non-readers on up to third graders.   Cute story.

Forgiving What You Can't Forget: Discover How to Move On, Make Peace with Painful Memories, and Create a Life That's Beautiful Again

 Shirley J.           Adult Non-Fiction                          Forgiving Hurts, Betrayals, Trespasses & more

Forgiving What You Can't Forget: Discover How to Move On, Make Peace with Painful Memories, and Create a Life That's Beautiful Again by Lysa TerKeurst    288 pages

Lysa TerKeurst's husband had an affair with one of her friends.  It cut her to the quick.   Being a Christian she prayed and tried hard to get through the blow to her marriage, the rocking of her faith, the stretching of her ability to forgive and the shattered trust in her marriage and friendship.   She endured tense times and got through them, much counseling and therapy helped her come back from the dark place she found herself in along with spiritual counselling.   It was dicey for her at first as her husband and friend were not willing to give up their affair nor was there remorse for what went on.    Lysa and her husband did eventually arrive at reconciliation but there are still triggers to this day that send Lysa seeking counselling.  In this book she shares her experiences, her dealing mechanisms, the counselling she has benefitted from and how living day to day helps her become stronger, to let go of past resentments and to move on when the other person refuses to change.   She trusts in the Bible's teachings on forgiveness and  to trust in the good that is ahead.   While she comes mostly from the hurt she bore, she teaches how the principles she uses to cope can be used in other situations where people have been shattered and left to pick up the pieces of their lives and learn to continue living in spite of deplorable circumstances.   A good book with many good ideas.  The material is delivered to an adult audience but it might benefit younger people going through abusive situations as well though it doesn't specifically touch on that.


Tuesday, July 25, 2023

My Days: Happy and Otherwise

 Shirley J.    Adult Non-Fiction Auto-Biography      The Happy Days set, early Hollywood, family

My Days: Happy and Otherwise by Marion Ross     336 pages

From Midwest girl growing up in Minnesota to Paramount movie star appearing in films and t.v. series with some of Hollywoods biggest and brightest, Marion Ross has had a long and happy career, she shares wonderful stories about Bogie and Bacall, telling details on the less than kind way Claudette Colbet related to her, up to when she felt she finally arrived at where she wanted to be, "Happy Days."   Through Happy Days she received the fame, steady check and recognition she had always strived ever since childhood.   She always knew she wanted to be a star and Gary Marshall along with her warmth and talent on screen made that dream reality.   While most of the Happy Days cast were wonderful and family for a long time her on screen husband treated her with contempt and hatred.   It was years later in the show's history it was revealed Tom Bosely who was this wonderful Dad, Mr., C on every one's t.v. screen every week had been dealing with going home every night to an autistic child and a wife with stage 4 cancer.   His testy responses and habit of driving Marion to despair were at last understood.  She grew to love this cranky curmudgeon at last once she realized he was taking out his frustration on her for the things he couldn't control at home.   Being the bigger actor, she did not let her sorrow ever show and fans believed they were the consummate Mom and Dad and couple on screen.   An enjoyable read.   If you enjoy biographies (I do) and/or love to get background on film, t.v. shows or familiar actors this is your kind of book.   If you enjoy reading about the golden days of Hollywood, again, this book will please.  Given the times described here I will recommend this one to adults on up.


How to Sell a Haunted House

 Shirley J.              Adult Fiction                            Creepy, Freaky Puppets and Dolls, Family Secrets

How to Sell a Haunted House by Grady Hendrix     432 pages    

This book should be made into a movie.   It has all the creepiness of the best scary films, a good family story that fleshed out will be crazy weird and totally full of drama and the piece de resistance creepy killer puppets and dolls which are always terrifying.   That inanimate to animate factor is so chilling and Grady Hendrix knows just how to make the words on the page rise up into your psyche.   I had to put this book down several times and come back to it, because it was just that scary.   If you love horror you will love this book.    And it ain't over till the horrifying ending.   It has possession, it has family secrets buried on top of family secrets.   It has over the top characters, it has sibling rivalry and love and death.   Insane want to kill you dolls and an underbelly of puppeteers with puppets out the ying yang that will have you biting your nails and wishing you could let this story go and get out of that house!   You will be so glad you can that is as long as your dreams let you.   Whew!   Very scary.   Go Grady Hendrix!  Spot on with there horror.    All horror fans you'll love it.     If you were traumatized as a child by creepy unblinking dolls whose eyes seem to follow you wherever you go stay away from this one.   If puppets sort of freak you out stay away from this one.   I do not recommend this one to anyone under adult though I know horror fans of all ages will want it.

For the Sake of the Game: Stories Inspired by the Sherlock Holmes Canon

 Shirley J.             Adult Fiction                        Sherlock Holmes themed stories for today

For the Sake of the Game: Stories Inspired by the Sherlock Holmes Canon by Laurie R. King and Leslie Klinger     272 pages

Stories told by authors other than Sir Arthur Conan Doyle telling tales in various genres, times and forms all about Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson and characters associated with the famous duo.   I have to say I was a bit skeptical at first but this book does not disappoint.   Every story here is a good one.   Imagination flows freely and like a group of witnesses sharing their takes on a situation you will be surprised and amused by what comes of it.  I highly recommend this one to all Sherlock and Dr. Watson fans.   Fans of mystery and artistic bent readers who love to see a work of art come from an idea.   All writers should give this one a look too.    So many minds here trying their hand at established characters and they do marvelous well at it.  No matter how young, I think all want to be writers will come away with inspiration.

The Swedish Art of Aging Exuberantly: Life Wisdom from Someone Who Will (Probably) Die Before You

 Shirley J.                            Adult Non-Fiction                       How to keep alive and vibrant as you age

The Swedish Art of Aging Exuberantly: Life Wisdom from Someone Who Will (Probably) Die Before You by Margareta Magnusson         299 pages

This is the second book I have read by Margareta Magnusson.   The first was, "The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning" which gave a new perspective to decluttering one's life and house so others aren't stuck with your detritus after your demise.   This is the companion book to that eye opener.   This book is a gentler travail into that vast span between aging and gone.   This book tells you practical things like making your space safe for yourself because you do not want to fall.   It tells about enjoying reading, walks, chocolate and friends.  Zoom is so practical when friends are too far away to go out for a bite, but, still love visiting and hanging out.   It talks about the ease and help of "walkers" when it is time for one and how not to let your vanity cut your mobility.   There is humor and tales told on self and kids, there is reminiscing and joy and times to face reality.   She wrote this during the pandemic and the words still ring true now on the other side of it.   So many gems to be found here.   I hope this dear lady writes another.  Probably not as interesting to the younger set, but, a good read for those of us coming up on our middle to later years.   It is never to soon to prepare for the inevitable nor to learn how to make what we have enjoyable.

More to Life

 Shirley J.                      Adult Fiction                       Girl's trip, Finding Oneself, Taken for granted, GONE

 More to Life by ReShonda Tate Billingsley   409 pages

45 year old Aja James has a great husband who takes her for granted, who expects her to be there, who orders her meals when they go out, who tells her the way things will be without taking her opinion into account.    Her children are raised well, grown up and on their way to their new chapters in life but ungrateful and expect her to do for them without so much as an acknowledgement of gratefulness.   Their home is spectacular, but, it doesn't bring Aja pleasure.  Her girlfriends know just what she needs.   A girl's trip to get away from all that is homelife and kick up her heels and live a little on a tropical vacation.  The trip is so good for Aja.   Fun, free, she feels like she has escaped a prison.  Her unlived dream of being an artist nags at her, her dead spirit she drug along from home has opened up and soared in the tropical climate.   She has taken care of everyone from her siblings to her husband to her kids even to her mother-in-law.    She has been the glue holding everything and everyone together for decades and in all that time she never asked to be the fixer, the chief cook and bottle washer, the dutiful wife, daughter-in-law though her mother-in-law clearly still rules her husband and he prefers to spend time with his mother when it comes to Aja and her.  Aja feels she has lost herself along the way, just going through the motions while everyone else gets to live the good life.  But clarity comes in the sun and sand and Aja knows she is not going home and continuing that used to be life or lack thereof.    When she goes home changes come with her but so does an awful dose of fate.    Excellent story with characters so good they step off the page.  For all gals looking to get their groove back, find their groove or to be there to support she who might be in flux.   Mature teens on up will understand the message here but adults will take it home.   

A Dragon's Guide to Making Perfect Wishes

 Shirley J.                                       Juvenile Fiction                   Dragons, elder ancestors, time-travel

 A Dragon's Guide to Making Perfect Wishes by  Lawrence Yep    240 pages

What could be more fun that having a dragon for a friend?  Time travelling with your dragon friend!  In this last installment in a Dragon's Guide Series Book 3, Winnie and Miss Drake go back in time to the 1915 World's Fair occurring in San Francisco.   As usual Winnie gets in over her head following mysteries best left to the experts - Miss Drake and friends.    Also in this one, Winnie finds a particular annoying boy named Rowan to be a bitter pill to have to endure during the trip until he actually proves to be a valiant hero if a bit arrogant.   A good story by Lawrence Yep.   Leaves the reader loving the characters and wishing they could go on and on.   I recommend this story for the very young listeners on up.   A great story to be shared with cookies and hot chocolate, siblings and friends.  





Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law

 

Shirley J.             Adult Non-Fiction                                             Bears, elephants and stoats oh my!

Fuzz: When nature Breaks the Law by Mary Roach     336 pages

Mary Roach is one of my favorite authors willing to go above and beyond to get the facts for her books.   This was another exceptional read as only Mary Roach can tell it.   She goes into actual cases from over the last few hundred years of animals being charged through the legal system for their alledged crimes against humanity to today's scientific solutions where scientists, animal behaviorists, and unfortunately for the animals in some cases and some countries the law.   Back in the day, Ex-pats who moved to Austrailia and New Zealand missed going rabbit hunting (Sounds innocent enough) so the bright idea was to bring rabbits to the area.   However, rabbits are an invasive species when there aren't enough predators to keep their numbers in check, not to mention plenty of the correct food growing naturally.  The cute little buggers came in and ate up the grass the sheep in New Zealand had been feeding on, proliferated with phenomenal alacrity and ended up hitting the sheep industry with the wallop of Thor.  Millions of grassland acres were virtually swallowed up and lost due to Bugs and his buddies.   The govt. was pissed and fought back bringing in Norway Rats and Skotes.   O.K. this made a big dent in the the rabbit population but it also made a big dent in the local native bird population.   And these species populated the area uncannily fast and furiously, too!  Things got way worse.   They were wiping out birds and local small creatures faster than they could even land on the endangered list, they were GONE.   Next big idea - bring in cats - worked for a while then this, too, became such an issue that now cute little cats have posted bounties on them.   Electric fences are put up in the outback areas to electrify cats, rabbits and all other vermin and of course Aborigine people are more than welcome to eat as many as they can.  There are groups squalling for no one to be able to own a cat or rabbit as a pet without earning jail time and huge fines.   And that is just down under.   The Americas have their own issues with moose, bears, wild cats/pumas/mountain lions, and world over there are squabbles with monkeys of varying species, rats, Eurasia and Africa with elephants having road rage issues with their right to passage on their centuries instinctual homelands, along with leopards, etc. eeking out their own existence in the shrinking land available to them as humans encroach more and more on what was once wilderness free of human intervenion.    Mary Roach tells it all and tells it well.  I recommend this and all her books to highschoolers on up.  

A Literary Holiday Cookbook: Festive Meals for the Snow Queen, Gandalf, Sherlock, Scrooge, and Book Lovers Everywhere


Shirley J.    Adult Non-Fiction Cookbook      Dishes plucked from the stories of meals being enjoyed by our favorite fictional characters to savor through eating and reading the stories and enjoying our own families as though we are right there with the literary characters sharing a meal.                                                                  
These recipes are sublime!   You will be absorbed in the story and the deliciousness of the grandeur of such mouth watering treats as are to be found in this book.    You will immerse yourself in the sights, sounds and tastes of each of these delectable passages from your favorite books and your most beloved characters.   The recipes and ingredients here are so delicious sounding you won't know which to try first and you will want to try them all.    And how fun to read or watch the video of forever favorite stories and feel as though you are living it right along with them as you taste and smell the good times described and shown.    Like stories come to life and you get to be the star of the occaision and glean the goodies!    I truly love this book and the whole idea of literary and culinary immersion.   Now that is a happy holiday!   I recommend this for all who love to read and cook.

 

Hello Sunshine

 


Shirley J.         Adult Fiction          Reality cooking show, having it all, losing it all 
Hello Sunshine: A Novel by Laura Dave      272 pages   

This is the story of Sunshine Mackenzie who is "discovered" and given a reality cooking show, who's background is "created",  whose recipes are "supplied", whose cookbooks "manufactured" she seems to have it all until she doesn't.   One day someone hacks her and the information put out goes viral - a tell all of an illicit affair, the fact her background is not the midwestern farmgirl portrayed nor are the recipes hers though there have been several cookbooks published under her name.    So many possible hackers each with many reasons to want to bring her down it is hard to know who the real person with  the most reason to bring her down and out her is.   A good story with a moral of keep it real.    I recommend this story to middle schoolers on up.     A teaching tale to keep it real and not to let become something it shouldn't.                                                                                                                                  
                                                                                   


                                                                               


Monday, July 24, 2023

Short Timers

The Short-Timers by Gustav Hasford, 180 pages

"The Marines are looking for a few good men."  So the young man we know only as Joker enlists.  He soon learns more.  "The Marine Corps does not want robots.  The Marine Corps wants killers.  The Marine Corps wants to build indestructible men, men without fear."  If he never quite reaches that ideal, he pursues it, never alone, but always in the company of his fellow Marines, through the narrow hell of boot camp on Parris Island and the wider hell of war on the banks of the Perfume River.  "I understood that my own weapon could do this dark magic thing to any human being.  With my automatic rifle I could knock the life out of any enemy with just the slightest pressure of one finger.  And, knowing that, I was less afraid."

The Short Timers is no doubt best known as one of the two semi-autobiographical novels on which the film Full Metal Jacket is based (the other being Dispatches by Michael Herr).  The book is significantly different from the film - more brutal, more repetitive, and also more obvious.  Questions of credibility arise at certain points - how many Stars and Stripes photojournalists dabbled in cannibalism?  Perhaps more than one might think, but at times the reader will be very conscious that this is a novel and not a direct factual account, a problem that is compounded by some surreal sequences and others which are ambiguously unreal.  If the writing is uneven, however, there are certainly more than enough unforgettably visceral passages to justify the trouble.

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Disraeli

Disraeli by Robert Blake, 766 pages

Benjamin Disraeli was born into a Jewish literary family, baptized into the Church of England at an early age, and educated at a second-rate school (or one he evidently felt was second-rate).  He was in turns a failure as a journalist, a middling success as an author, a greater success as a dandy, and then a brilliant success as a politician, twice serving as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and dominating the Conservative party during its first half century.  He was a romantic both by upbringing and inclination, undeniably an adventurer, disliked by the British establishment and yet an icon of Victorian Conservatism.

The definitive biography of Disraeli, begun by WF Monypenny in 1910 and finished by GE Buckle in 1920, runs to six volumes.  Robert Blake begins his biography by apologizing for its length, but pointing out that it isn't as long as Monypenny and Buckle.  Fortunately, his light touch makes even the intricacies of parliamentary politics amusing, if not always interesting.  This complements his subject, for as Blake demonstrates, throughout his career Disraeli approached politics as something of a game.  This playfulness has its attractive aspects, but also raises questions as to what, if any, principles he actually held, especially as the ideas he expounded in his political novels seem to bear little relation to the practical politics he pursued.  Yet Blake insists that despite - and, indeed, through - his flexibility, Disraeli consistently upheld the traditional, "irrational" divisions and institutions of England against the spectre of "centralizing Benthamite bureaucracy, however 'democratic'."  In this view, the central element of his playfulness was his rejection of the cant and cliche of "a society which has mistaken comfort for civilization."

Saturday, July 15, 2023

Casalvento (House of the Wind)

Casalvento (House of the Wind) by Gudrun Cuillo 312 pages

 

I love novels set in Italy; it is such a beautiful country with rich, varies and wonderful traditions; As soon a I knew Gudrun Cuillo’s book, Casalvento, was set in Italy, it became a must-read. Like any good novel, it sent me down the Google rabbit hole of researching the “House of the Wind.”  I learned that it is set in the real Casalvento (House of the Wind) of Radda and Livernano in Chianti Siena, Italy. I am especially appreciative that the publishers include a small map on the inside cover to help me understand exactly where it is located.

 

The protagonist, Erika Germoglio, is so unhappy that she doesn’t know that she is unhappy. Oh, she has a successful consulting business, a high-profile fiancé, an exquisitely decorated Manhattan Upper Side apartment and she finally has se a wedding date. Erika’s life is black and white, literally. The apartment she shares with Craig is decorated in black and white, and the only two colors in her closet are black and white.

 

She has never been busier when she is notified that her grandfather has passed away and left her “Casalvento, a house and a vineyard, and Livernano, a medieval village turned bed-and-breakfast, both in the Chianti region of Tuscany.”

 

A grandfather? She never knew that she had a living relative! And why did he never try to contact her, especially when her parents died? Those answers await willing readers!

 

She heads to Italy, intent on selling everything so she can get back to her real life. However, there is a clause in her grandfather’s that “to keep or sell Casalvento and Livernano, she must live there and learn the business of the two estates for five months.”

Furious and agitated agrees to wait out the will’s terms, then sell it and move on with her life. Especially her long-awaited marriage to Craig.

Unable to relax enjoy the scenery, Erika helps in the winery and the vineyards as the days go by and Erika comes to know the people who worked for her grandfather, she finds herself increasingly drawn to the slower pace of life that Italy offers. Plus, she is drawn more and more to “Paolo, Casalvento's intelligent, compassionate, and strikingly handsome estate manager and wine maker.”

As her feelings for Paolo intensify, she knows she must make her choice between the two men, and the life each has to offer. While Erika struggles to make plans, her grandfather’s lawyer gives her letters, four in total, that he left behind explaining his reasoning.

Although the novel is predictable, there were a couple of gasp-worthy twists that made me keep reading., Casalvento (House of the Wind) receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

Starring Adele Astaire

Starring Adele Astaire by Eliza Knight 400 pages

 

I’m sure that most people who read this know who Fred Astaire is. But just in case, he was one of the world’s greatest dancers, in vaudeville, the silent movies and the grand sweeping musicals from MGM during the Golden Age of Hollywood. But few recall how he started out, dancing with his sister, Adele (or Delly as she was nicknamed off-stage). She was the older of the dancing duo, and they began dancing together since they were barely out of diapers. This novel covers the years from 1923 until 1945, with an Epilogue from 1954.

 

Adele wasn’t only a dancer; she was a consummate comedian/actress who was deeply loved by her fans. And while Freddie is a major part in the first two-thirds of the book, his role dwindles as time goes by, and they grow up. Fred believed in practice, practice, practice. Adele believed in being prepared, but she also liked to have a good time. More often than not she and her friends would hit the clubs after the show, dancing ‘til dawn.

 

Adele also had different dreams than Fred. Her heart’s greatest desire was to be a wife and a mother. Oh, how she longed for motherhood. She meets the man of her dreams; Lord Charles Cavendish and her life is never the same. However, like most of us, life doesn’t turn out like we expect.

 

Adele and Fred received the adoration of the States they were also a HUGE hit in the UK. Londoners wanted nothing more than to see them dance or hang out with them. 

 

I’m a huge fan of Freddie’s (Will I ever be able to call him Fred again after reading this book?), but I have never seen Adele dance. Thank God for YouTube.  I enjoyed going down that rabbit hole. There isn’t much, but what there is, well it’s amazing!  Compared to Adele, Ginger Rogers, Freddie’s most famous dancing partner, had two left feet.

 

Although there isn’t much tension in this novel, it’s a solid work of biographical fiction that kept this reader’s interested through the entire 400 pages. Starring Adele Astaire receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

 

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Her Heart for a Compass

 

Shirley J.      Adult Fiction Historical Romance          Victorian Society, A Woman of Independent Thought

Her Heart for a Compass by Sarah Ferguson, Duchess  568 pages

The book Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, worked on for 18 years.   It is a pleasing story of an independent woman who stands up for herself against her father and the suitors who would ask for hand.   She did not want to be under the rule of a man but wanted to live her life equally respected in her own right during the Victorian Age when this was certainly not the norm.   The Victorian Age is a special favorite of Sarah Ferguson and in doing research for her novel, she learned a lot of her family's history and even added some of the family member's stories to this one.  A well done story that will keep you interested and maybe introduce you to an insider's view to what life at court is actually like.   I will be reading Sarah's next book.    I recommend this one to middle schoolers on up, to all who enjoy historical romances and all things royal.    

Sunday, July 9, 2023

The London Seance Society


 The London Seance Society by Sarah Penner 352 pages

When I teach fiction writing, one of my classes is devoted to the first sentence. If the author doesn't grab the reader's attention right away, there is a slim chance the reader will continue.  I love the first sentence in this book: "At an abandoned chateau on the outskirts of Paris, a dark seance is about to take place, led by acclaimed spiritualist Vaudeline D'Allaire."  That a beaut, isn't it? However, that was the best part of the book.

D'Allaire is the toast of Paris and London when spiritualism is at its height. Her specialty is conjuring murder victims to tell her who killed them. 

Lenna Wickes is mourning the death of her younger sister, Evie. She has come to Paris to enlist Vaudeline's aide. Lenna becomes Vaudeline's understudy.

Meanwhile, back in London, a powerful men's organization is also trying to uncover the murder of their president.  Oddly enough, the two murders happened on the same night, October 31.

The novel is interestingly told by two voices, but it's odd.  Lenna's story is told in third person, while their contact at the Society, Mr. Morley, is told in first person. I found it jarring. It takes a while for the reader to figure out exactly what the connection between the two dead people are, but the story does finally come around to a smooth conclusion.

Vaudeline and Lenna go back to London and try to solve the cases. Sometimes the plot was intricate, sometimes simple. There were times the story was a page-turner and times the story plodded along. Many times, I was able to figure out what was going to happen well before t did.

I was disappointed in this second outing by novelist Sarah Penner of The Lost Apothecary. Here's hoping that her third book returns to the skillfulness she displayed in Apothecary.  The London Seance Society receives 3 out of 5 starts in Julie's world.







A Dangerous Business

A Dangerous Business
by Jane Smiley 224 pages 

I'm a big fan of Pulitzer-Prize winning author Jane Smiley; I'm not sure how I missed this 2022 publication. But if perusing the perusing the reviews on Amazon is any indication, well, it was not a huge commercial success. I didn't hate this novel, but I didn't love it either. It was okay. 

Set in the 1850s in Monterrey, California, this book had a lot of layers. When readers join Eliza, she has gone to work in a brothel after her abusive husband is killed in a barroom fight. Readers are never sure if the man who shot her husband was punished or not. This is the most freedom that Eliza has ever experienced.  And thanks to the wages she earns at Mrs. Parks and the tips the men leave, she has achieved what the majority of women in this era cannot: financial security.  

Eliza becomes best friends with Jean, another prostitute whose brothel services women. This astounded me. I've never heard of brothels for women, but why not?  Smiley did not go into as much detail here, but Jean's customers mostly came in the daytime whereas most of Eliza's customers were at night.

I was also surprised that the majority of women in this novel were educated and could read and write and do math. Eliza and Jean share a love of reading Edgar Allen Poe's short stories, and when the dead bodies of young women begin to be found, the two amateur sleuths use Poe's Detective Dupin's investigative techniques to get involved with the quest to find the killer. That part of the story lacked tension.

The story is rather plodding, educating the reader on the lives of the prostitutes, the brothel and the men who frequented them, the gorgeous locale, and sometimes more graphic descriptions of the deceased women. 

A Dangerous Business receives 3 out of 5 starts in Julie's world.








 

Friday, July 7, 2023

what Remains Of Me

 

Shirley J.         Adult Fiction                 Celebrities, Questionable Paternity, Pedophile, Murder

What Remains of Me by Alison Gaylin   512 pages

This book deals with the behind the glam lives that are affected by the Hollywood lifestyle.  Celebrities and famous directors, and celebrity stunt folk create a very sordid bunch in this book filled with misdoings, mistrust leading to lives of broken celebrity children self-soothing with drugs, alcohol and fast expensive sportscars.   This is definetly not a feel good book.   Every character is fighting a legion of their own demons.    It is a good book if terribly sad, since, no one has a happy life, every character has skeletons they are hiding no one seems to tell anyone the truth and two murders occur and the time lines constantly jump back and forth so at times it is like, huh?   But for some reason the book does hold your interest maybe because you keep hope alive that someone will eventually come out of this o.k.   It is pretty harsh - what is said and also what is implied.    While younger kids need to know what can happen and not to trust everyone just because they say they are your friend or trying to help you, this book has such heavy drug use I am inclined to recommend it to mature teens on up or even adults.  There are many takeaways from this story.  It is sort of a Valley of the Dolls for the minor set, but...

Thursday, July 6, 2023

June Totals

 



In June, four people read 31 books with a total of 9564 pages.  Shirley was the winner with 22 books and 6467 pages.  Great job everyone!

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

The Way of Nagomi: The Japanese Philosophy of Finding Balance and Peace in Everything You Do

 


Shirley J.                        Adult Non-Fiction                                      Finding balance in life

The way of Nagomi: The Japanese Philosophy of Finding Balance and Peace In Everything You Do by Ken Mogi    208 pages 

Nagomi is finding the balance and harmony of all things.   This philosophy reminds me of the Chinese Feng Shui though to a more laid back interpretation.   The book covers the nagomi of:

Food, Self, Relationships, Health, Lifelong Learning, Creativity, Life, Society and Nature with the goal being to enable you to:

Maintain happy relationships, learn new things, find peace in everything you are doing, blend unlikely things to find a harmonious balance and gain a greater understanding of the Japanese philosophy of life.   There are interesting parts and some very slow ones that seem to drift off the page, but, there are ideas to learn here so given the ethereal blithe spirit like pages, I will recommend this book to adults, I don't think it offers enough to keep the younger sets attention.

Meet Me in the Margins

 

Shirley J.              Adult Fiction                Romance writing,  Conflicting Publishing Houses, mentoring       Meet Me In the Margins by Melissa Ferguson   384 pages

A good read, the characters are strong and likeable, the story told amusingly.  Savannah Cade works for a publishing house whose owner and hates romance novels and refuses to print them, however, Savannah has been secretly writing a romance novel of her own and is dying to get it in print.   Through a chance encounter she meets Claire Donovan, the editor-in-chief of the most successful romance publishing company in the country and is able to pitch her book idea to her.  Claire likes it and invites Savannah to submit it to her.   The owner of Savannah's publishing house brings her son in as CEO.  Savannah submits her idea to Claire, who likes it but feels it needs polish in several places to be print worthy but assures Savannah she is on to something, its just many of her ideas have been so overdone by the Hallmark Channel.  Desperately trying to edit and enhance her story she has her manuscript with her at work, drops it and is almost found out by her colleagues.   She quickly grabs the manuscript and stashes it in a supply room.   When she goes back for it, she finds someone has added comments in the margins!  Almost the exact things Claire said.  Who the heck did that?  Freaked but also curious she ends up leaving all her updated manuscripts in the room coming back to find critical yet helpful remarks on it again and again.  Who is her mentor?   Why are they helping her?   A good read.  I recommend this to middle schoolers on up.                         

Forgotten Language

The Forgotten Language: How Recovering the Poetics of the Mass Will Change Our Lives by the Rev Michael Rennier, 196 pages

It sometimes seems that never before in human history has so much poetry been written and so little read.  Indeed, even the ability to recognize, still less to comprehend, poetry seems to have almost completely atrophied.  The modern mind demands solutions, while poetry requires understanding, the modern world celebrates pride, but true beauty cannot be received without humility.  Great poetry draws the audience beyond a superficial knowledge into deeper and deeper layers of meaning, towards beauty that is transcendent and truths that are mysteries.  As William Hazlitt explained, "Poetry is the universal language which the heart holds with nature and itself.  He who has a contempt for poetry cannot have much respect for himself, or for any thing else... all that is worth remembering in life is the poetry of it."

The greatest poem of all is, of course, Creation itself, which cannot be rivalled but only participated in.  The second greatest is the Divine Liturgy, that prayer in which the human is joined to the Divine, which likewise is not a work of man alone but of the Man who is God.  It is impossible to enter meaningfully into either without a poetic imagination.  There is no way to learn a language, however, without practice.  This is the genius of The Forgotten Language: it is not only a prescription, but also a primer.  Fr Rennier alternates between liturgical commentary, spiritual reflection, literary appreciation, conversion story, and personal anecdote in a way that may initially seem confused and off-putting, until the reader begins to perceive how they rhyme, and a new world opens or the old world is made explicit.

Monday, July 3, 2023

Every Fifteen Minutes

 


Shirley J.                   Adult Fiction Murder Mystery                      OCD,  mental facility/patients    

Every Fifteen Minutes by Lisa Scottoline   464 pages

Excellent Story!   This one will keep you guessing all the way to the end.  Is Dr. Eric Parrish, chief of the psychiatric unit at Havemeyer General Hospital, all he is cracked up to be?   Is he truly the benevolent caring doctor who puts his patients first?  Or a stalking brutal killer?   Afterall, didn't he have some mental issues he was dealing with as a teenager?   Great story!  I recommend this one to mature teens on up.



 











Saturday, July 1, 2023

Early History of Glastonbury

The Early History of Glastonbury by William of Malmesbury, translated by John Scott, 83 pages

The Early History of Glastonbury is a translation of William of Malmesbury's 12th century history De Antiquitate Glastonie Ecclesie, accompanied by the Latin text as well as commentary and notes. William undertook this project at the behest of the monks of Glastonbury, at least partially as a supplement to four Lives of Glastonbury saints he had written (of which only the Life of Saint Dunstan survives), but the primary aim seems to have been a catalogue of the various charters and bequests associated with the monastery.  Indeed, the short book is generally more of a legal record than a conventional history, as rights and privileges awarded to the abbot and monks are thoroughly documented - in the uncertain period following the Norman conquest, this was a necessity.

For a modern reader this focus proves something of an obstacle, as it does not make for particularly entertaining reading.  To the kind of reader who is likely to even consider reading a 12th century monastic history, however, the rewards will almost certainly be worth the price.