Saturday, May 30, 2020

A Song of Ice and Fire series

A Clash of Kings by George R.R. Martin  969 pages
A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin  1177 pages

It's impossible to summarize these books. So here's the Wikipedia entry.

I have been finding these books to be compulsive reads -- meaning, I cannot stop turning the pages. While these are long books and there are a lot of details to keep track of, I find I love the political intrigue, the back-and-forth in viewpoints, and the storylines that intersect (or threaten to intersect at some point).  I did watch the HBO series before reading these books, so I have an advantage in that I know some of the storyline and relative storylines, and can keep some of that in my head. The books do diverge from the series (which makes sense -- the HBO series had to condense a lot of the books to fit everything!!). So, I can't always predict what is going to happen, which makes the story a lot of fun.



The Doll Factory

The Doll Factory by Elizabeth MacNeal  336 pages 

"London. 1850. The Great Exhibition is being erected in Hyde Park and among the crowd watching the spectacle two people meet. For Iris, an aspiring artist, it is the encounter of a moment – forgotten seconds later, but for Silas, a collector entranced by the strange and beautiful, that meeting marks a new beginning.

When Iris is asked to model for pre-Raphaelite artist Louis Frost, she agrees on the condition that he will also teach her to paint. Suddenly her world begins to expand, to become a place of art and love.

But Silas has only thought of one thing since their meeting, and his obsession is darkening . . .
 "  (summary courtesy of Goodreads)

I found it was easier to use Goodreads than try to come up with a summary that didn't give away too much about the story. This book is a great combination of suspense and real-life details, with unforgettable characters. The author has a rich, evocative writing style and London really comes to life here. If you have familiarity with this time period, as well as some of the well-known artists of that time, this book is a real treat. I found this was a page-turner that stayed with me for a long time after I finished it.

All the Beautiful Lies

All the Beautiful Lies by Peter Swanson   285 pages

Right before his college graduation, Harry gets a call from his stepmother, Alice, with devastating news that his father has died. Returning to his father's home in Maine, Harry stays with Alice to help her and also figure out what happened to his father. He's always considered Alice to be sexy and beautiful, in a kind of otherworldly way -- which makes staying with her a little awkward. When Harry meets a mysterious young woman named Grace, he starts to suspect she knows his family. And, she's not the only one taking an interest in Harry; Alice has now focused all of her sensuality on him. Harry finds he's falling under the spell of both women, but also starts to fear both of them are hiding some dangerous secrets.

This is a story that's like a guessing game, where you learn details as Harry does - so while you may think you know who is telling the truth and what's going to happen, it's hard to really know. There's an obvious edge to this story with the sexy-stepmother angle. But, there's a hypnotic quality to the story and the taut pacing lends itself to the twists and turns here.

The Love Goddess' Cooking School

The Love Goddess' Cooking School by Melissa Senate   338 pages

When Holly Maguire inherits her grandmother's business and cooking school, she knows she has a lot to learn. After all, her grandmother, Camilla, was famous for her Italian cooking . . . and for her ability to tell fortunes and save marriages. Holly knows she needs to learn how to master Camilla's recipes, especially if she's going to take over Camilla's cooking school students, as well. As for telling fortunes? Forget about that.

But, of course, you can guess that the fortune-telling works its way into the story. The four students who sign up for Holly's cooking lessons are all looking for more than how to make Italian dishes. As the class gathers each week, friendships and romances blossom. This isn't the kind of book I read all the time, but sometimes it's nice to have a . . . nice story. The story is set on an island in Maine, which I find appealing. And, the story, while a little predictable at times, was a nice palate cleanser from the other books I've been reading lately.

Dear Child

Dear Child by Romy Hausmann     343 pages (galley)

Lena and her two children live in a windowless shack deep in the woods, prisoner to the rules set by their captor, the father. He says he is protecting them from the outside world, but when Lena manages to escape, she learns the nightmare hasn't ended. Instead, is she really "Lena," the girl who disappeared 14 years ago? Or is she someone else, scarred to look like Lena? And even though she has escaped, why does she feel like someone is still watching her, waiting to take her back into the woods?

This is a chilling, page-turner of a thriller. A blend of psychological thriller with an edge of horror, the author gives us compelling characters and enough unreliable narrators to keep you guessing until the very end.

Good for readers who enjoyed Room, Gone Girl, and who like unreliable (yet relatable) narrators. You may sleep with the light on after you finish this book.

Nickel and Dimed

Nickel and Dimed: On (NOT Getting By in America by Barbara Ehrenreich     244 pages

I enjoyed this book.   People in America tend to lump all poor people into the "Get a job and get off welfare" idea.    Not true.    Barbara Ehrenreich actually goes under cover to investigate to find out if she could actually survive on minimum wage.    The big reveals here are that while people may work, at minimum wage - housing is not always available so many people though employed live in their vehicles because they cannot afford housing.   Most subside on a diet of potato chips or some such junk food obtained from a convenience store at an exorbitant fee because they cannot afford groceries.   The scathing reveal in these pages is a must read for everyone from middle school on up.  People need to be schooled in what they are facing, what they are up against and given the knowledge to discern whether or not they will be able to make it on their own.    This book is a wake up call for those about to go into minimum wage jobs and the employers expecting them to survive on such low wages.   It discusses the struggles deciding whether to eat, or shelter,  transportation, and how society looks down on service workers.   Excellent book   A must read.    We all surely need to tip folks way better than we do.   A good view into the stories behind the people that they don't as a rule tell you.

 - Shirley J.

From Here to Eternity: Travelling the World To Find The Good Death

From Here to Eternity: Travelling the World To Find The Good Death by Caitlin Doughty  248 pages

An interesting book with lots of information as the customs and rituals held in five other countries as well as information on the customs, rituals, history etc. of death handling in the U.S.    Told by author Caitlin Doughty the information is laid out (pun intended) in an entertaining way.   She  knows how to keep the reader's interest and while there are some cringe worthy sections for the most part the reader will come away with deeper insight on how different cultures view their dead.  I feel like giving away snippets here, but, I also feel like if you really want to know reading this book would be best.   I do recommend it.    The material is fascinating if macabre.   I think mature highschoolers could handle it, though, it might go a little too deep with the younger set. 

 - Shirley J.


Books in the Stephanie Plum series

I must confess: Janet Evanivich’s Stephanie Plum series is my feel good place. I didn’t realize how far behind on the series I was until I noticed that I had to catch up on the most recent three books. The characters are quirky and the plots are implausible and each story reeks of every literary trope
known...I love it! There is absolutely no depth to any of these books, which makes them a perfect escape - highly recommend if you're in the mood for silly and predictable.

To anyone unfamiliar with Stephanie Plum, know that what New Jersey bounty hunter Stephanie Plum lacks in skill and experience, she makes up for with tenacity, luck, and her true talent... the ability to attract disaster, killers, and general nut jobs. If she needs help there is always her mentor, Ranger, a security expert with a dark past, and Trenton P.D.’s Joe Morelli, a homicide detective who shares a past - and sometimes a present - with Stephanie. Family and romantic partners, friends and colleagues, memeses, and supporting characters - human and otherwise - are all shake-your-head, laugh-out-loud, over-the-top additions to each story. 
Posted by: Regina C.  
by Janet Evanovich   285 pages

Trouble comes in bunches for Stephanie Plum. First, professional grave robber and semi-professional loon, Simon Diggery, won't let her take him in until she agrees to care for his boa constrictor, Ethel. Stephanie's main qualification for babysitting an extremely large snake is that she owns a stun gun - whether that's for use on the wandering serpent or the petrified neighbors remains to be seen.
Events take a dark turn when headless bodies start appearing across town. At first, it's just corpses from a funeral home and the morgue that have had the heads removed. But when a homeless man is murdered and dumped behind a church Stephanie knows that she's the only one with a prayer of catching this killer.
by Janet Evanovich   311 pages

There's nothing like a good deli and the Red River Deli in Trenton is one of the best. World famous for its pastrami, cole slaw and for its disappearing managers. Over the last month, three have vanished from the face of the earth, the only clue in each case is one shoe that's been left behind. The police are baffled. Lula is convinced that it's a case of alien abduction. Whatever it is, they'd better figure out what's going on before they lose their new manager, Ms. Stephanie Plum.
by Janet Evonovich   306 pages

Grandma Mazur is a widow...again. This time her marriage lasted a whole 45 minutes. The unlucky groom was one Jimmy Rosolli, local gangster and heart attack waiting to happen...well, the waiting is over. When Jimmy’s former “business partners” are convinced that his widow is keeping the keys to their financial success for herself, Stephanie Plum has to find them quickly.

Millennium series

I really enjoyed the Millennium series created by Swedish crime writer Stieg Larsson. In 2013, the publisher awarded author David Lagercrantz the contract to continue the series with these three books (rumored to be the end) since Larsson died in 2004. There is much debate whether Lagercrantz’s continuation respected Larsson’s legacy, an analysis beyond this simple review, but I do believe that the spirit of the Lagercrantz stories is quite different than the original author intended.  
The (new) Millennium books don't necessarily follow Larsson’s part blistering espionage thriller, part riveting police procedural, and part piercing exposé on social injustice formula. Larsson also introduced readers to Lisbeth Salander, one of the most original inventions in popular fiction. Although Salader remains a vengeful, homicidal, self-destructive love rat (yet surprisingly admirable because of Larsson’s careful attribution of her psychological wiring to survival instincts developed during a terrifying early life), her emotional depth is diluted in Langercrantz’s portrayal. Does this mean that these books are not as good as the originals? Not necessarily; the style and characterization is just different, but that translates into a death knell for purists. 
Posted by: Regina C.  
The Girl in the Spider’s Web by David Lagercrantz   399 pages

Lisbeth Salander is Sweden’s answer to Wonder Woman, Stephen Hawking, and Mike Tyson all rolled into one five-foot, 98-pound package. She can debate the finer points of quantum mechanics and number theory with the world’s top physicists and mathematicians, hack her way into the most secure computer system on the planet, punch out a gang of the meanest, nastiest bikers you can imagine - and she has an evil twin. In other words, Lisbeth Salander is completely unbelievable. Yet this novel, and the three that preceded it, are crafted with such skill that you’ll probably get so caught up in the sheer complexity and suspense of the story that you won’t even think about how unlikely it all is.
The Girl Who Takes an Eye for an Eye by David Lagercrantz   347 pages

Lisbeth Salander has never been able to uncover the most telling facts of her traumatic childhood, the secrets that might finally, fully explain her to herself. Now, when she sees a chance to uncover them once and for all, she enlists the help of Mikael Blomkvist, the editor of the muckraking investigative journal Millennium. And she will let nothing stop her -  not the Islamists she enrages by rescuing a young woman from their brutality; not the prison gang leader who passes a death sentence on her; not the deadly reach of her long-lost twin sister, Camilla; and not the people who will do anything to keep buried knowledge of a sinister pseudoscientific experiment known only as The Registry.
The Girl Who Lived Twice by David Lagercrantz   347 pages

Lisbeth Salander has left Stockholm, seemingly forever, and gone to Russia on a mission to finally hunt down, ruin, and kill her sister and nemesis Camilla. Meanwhile, Mikael Blomkvist, suffering from a slump due to a lack of interesting news stories, gets roped into a case involving a homeless man who may have been murdered and who had Blomkvist's phone number on him.
--

Circe

Circe by Madeline Miller   393 pages

I liked The Song of Achilles and cried many tears over it, so it saddens me to share that I did not enjoy Madeline Miller's Circe as much. The novel follows Circe, daughter of the sun god Helios, who possesses the power of witchcraft and a heart kinder than most who dwell with the gods. When Zeus learns of her abilities, he banishes her to a deserted island where she develops her craft in isolation. Over time, Circe learns that she must stand up and fight for what she believes in, lest she be struck down by the same gods who raised her.
Miller tries to give Circe a back story by name dropping the most famous figures in Greek mythology: Hermes, Prometheus, Daedalus, Minotaur, Odysseus. But in this retelling of well known mythology, the characterization feels static and the episodes are disconnected. For those who have already read Homer, Hesiod, Euripides, and everyone else, there’s little new information.
Additionally, I was disappointed by the pacing of Circe. The story line played out at a super slow speed. Once Circe got exiled to the island Aiaia, very few important or seminal events happened across the span of the following 300 pages, and I became unsure of her character's main motivation. I also found it confining that the majority of Circe's growth and passion came from her relationships with men and her role as a mother. I wish that more of her development happened before or in addition to the men in her life, as opposed to the men motivating a lot of her character's trajectory. Overall, a good read I would recommend to fans of Greek mythology and those who do not mind a book with a slower place. 
Posted by: Regina C.  

The Song of Achilles

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller   378 pages

Miller manages to mix the greatest events of the Iliad, including various interpretations of events, and imagine the blanks to create a believable and captivating story. Miller has a way with words and imagery and figurative language in a classic (yet modern) style. Yes, modern. This is not some stodgy read favored by readers steeped in the ancient classics. In fact, its narrative reads like a modern novel, even if the trappings are all ancient. In that sense, believe the hype: Miller breathes new life into old classic!  
Miller’s writing, if often prosey, stays compelling and flows smoothly, capturing these great characters in an honest light. Truth be told, most of the story is dull, but this is not a story of great battles and honors, this is a story of the men behind them; stripped of the sparkling lights of fame, they remain flawed people whose lives were as ordinary and mundane as the rest of ours.
Starting during his childhood, the book revolves around Patroclus as he befriends Achilles, who is fated to be the greatest fighter of all time. Telling the story from the secondary character's perspective was a brilliant choice. Not only was the protagonist relatable, but as Patroclus slowly learns more about Achilles, so do we. The ending was a beautiful gut punch, all the more so since it happened quickly after the meandering story that it had been up to that point. I wish the climax had a few more pages so I had time to process what was happening before it was over.
Students of the classics, of the Trojan War,  of convention, risk disappointment with this retelling because it is, above all else, a love story.
Posted by: Regina C.  

I Was Anastasia

I Was Anastasia by Ariel Lawhorn   332 pages

For those unfamiliar with the controversy that surrounded the basis of this novel, this book will be very interesting. It is a bizarre and fascinating story. I found this fictional version entertaining, but it was difficult to follow. 

This novel follows two characters. Anastasia's story is told chronologically from start to finish while Anna's story is told in reverse, making it very difficult to understand where in the story I was and how exactly the two connect. Perhaps I was just waiting too hard for the connection to happen that I was distracted from the story?

Overall, the descriptions and characters were decent and the story line is entertaining. If you have read other books about the Romanovs and know the outcome of this debate (no spoilers), then this book probably isn't for you. 
Posted by:   Regina C.  

The Great Zoo of China

The Great Zoo of China by Matthew Reilly   392 pages

It is a secret the Chinese government has been keeping for forty years. They have proven the existence of dragons—a landmark discovery no one could ever believe is real, and a scientific revelation that will amaze the world. Now the Chinese are ready to unveil their astonishing findings within the greatest zoo ever constructed. A small group of VIPs and journalists has been brought to the zoo deep within China to see these fabulous creatures for the first time. The visitors are assured by their Chinese hosts that they will be struck with wonder at these beasts, that the dragons are perfectly safe, and that nothing can go wrong. Of course it can't.

Does this sound familiar? That’s because as much as The Great Zoo of China tries to be something extraordinary, it is Jurassic Park with dragons. Simply changing the country, species, and purpose doesn't make the adventure any less predictable. Not one of the best novels I've read, but it was an easy to read, action-packed experience. This novel would be better appreciated by people who haven't read Jurassic Park
Posted by: Regina C.  

Thursday, May 28, 2020


In the Pink: How I Met the Perfect (Younger) Man, Survived Breast Cancer, and Found True Happiness After Forty by Susan McBride 128 pages


I’ve known Susan McBride since her first book, “And Then She Was Gone,” was published in 2000. She is one of the sweetest, smartest and funniest people I know. Not to mention one of my favorite authors. She’s talented too. She can write in a variety of genres: police procedurals, young adult, cozy mysteries, magical realism, mysteries and nonfiction.

In this short memoir, she takes the readers on a journey, like she does in all her books, through some of the best times, and worst times, of her life.  (That can be the title of this review, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…”  I don’t think Dickens will mind.) I remember when she met her husband, Ed, celebrated with them when they married, cried when she was diagnosed with  breast cancer, and attended almost every book signing when she published a new book. How she was able to write while undergoing cancer treatments still amazes me to this today.

Reading her words to describe those times was like reliving them all over again. She remembered them the same way I did. That’s one of the reasons I waited so long to read her memoir. 

Busy lives have gotten in the way, and I don’t see her very often. Thank goodness for Facebook and Christmas poems so I can stay on abreast of her busy life with writing, Ed, and their beautiful daughter, Emily, born in 2012. Where has the time gone?

I found her story uplifting and her attitude courageous.  I hope anyone who reads In the Pink: How I Met the Perfect (Younger) Man, Survived Breast Cancer, and Found True Happiness After Forty will find the same courage to forge ahead as Susan had done.  In the Pink” receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.



Friday, May 22, 2020

The Secrets of Love Story Bridge


The Secrets of Love Story Bridge by Phaedra Patrick 336 pages

 At first, I thought this story took place in Paris, as I’m familiar with the bridge where couples place locks to symbolize their love. Never been there, but I’ve heard about it.  However this contemporary story takes place in a suburb of London, Upchester.

Former architect Mitchell Fisher now spends his days cutting locks off the infamous “love story” bridge. The bridge is now more famous than ever since a famous boy-band, Word UP, filmed a video for their latest hit there.

Mitchell hates the job, but it’s a job that can give him more time with his 10-year-old daughter, Poppy.  She’s his only ray of sunshine in a life that if grief-consumed after the death three years earlier of his wife, Anita. Mitchell cannot forgive himself not being able to get to the hospital in time after Anita’s accident. 

One afternoon, Mitchell sees a young woman in a bright yellow dress fall over the bridge into the icy river waters below. Thanks to his quick thinking, he is able to save her, and somehow connects with her, although when he gets to shore, she is whisked off to a hospital.

Enter Liza, Poppy’s music teacher, Liza, who sees the dramatic rescue on the news. That woman in the yellow dress is her sister, Yvette---a sister who has been missing for over a year. Mitchell, Liza and Liza’s family join forces to find her. Mitchell, subconsciously, feels that although he couldn’t save Anita, maybe he can save Liza’s family.

“The Secrets of Love Story Bridge” is a sweet read. It’s one of those books you know it’s going to end happily ever after. Perfect for the beach or the need to escape during the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic.

 “The Secrets of Love Story Bridge” receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

Thursday, May 21, 2020

A Star is Bored

A Star is Bored by Byron Lane 342 pages (galley)

When Charlie gets the chance to become the personal assistant of a famous Hollywood actor, he's over the moon. After all, she was Priestess Talara in one of the most important movies in history! And, while she has a reputation for being eccentric, Charlie thinks she can't be all that bad, right? He thinks he's in for the experience of a lifetime and then discovers it's so much more than just a job.

Based on the author's real-life experiences working for Carrie Fisher, this is a funny novel about working for someone who is larger than life. If you have ever read anything about Carrie Fisher, or read any of her books about her own life, you'll recognize her in this book. While there are a lot of crazy moments, there are also some heartwarming parts to this story.

Good for readers who like Hollywood stories (especially if they are fans of Carrie Fisher and want to see if they can tell what may be real or not in this story).

I finished this book pretty quickly because it's a fast read. Admittedly, I wasn't a huge fan of the book, though. The humor sometimes felt forced and I found I became impatient with some of the over-the-top behavior of both Charlie and his employer. I have read one of Carrie Fisher's own books, and actually spent more time wondering what details in the book were based on reality more than I spent time really caring about the characters.

Spinning Silver

Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik   469 pages

I’m always willing to give an author a chance to challenge my first impressions of their work, so I tried a second title by Naomi Novik. Spinning Silver holds all the ingredients of a magic spell, but the execution leaves one cold and unsatisfied
Novik introduces three daring female protagonists in this clever re-imagining of Rumpelstiltskin. Here is a realm of magic and mysticism, of cruelty and heartbreak, fringed with glittering ice and populated with creatures carved from the wildest corners of the imagination. The initial chapters titillate with high stakes, compelling characters, and enchanting descriptions and details, but the narrative is soon bogged down by several ruinous flaws.
Despite encountering wondrous and unexpected forms of magic, Novik's characters are neither astonished nor surprised. Their flat response evokes a perpetual sense of apathy, a problem that's exacerbated by glacial pacing, further compounded by two of the female protagonists having such similar plot lines as to feel redundant.
The final nail in the coffin - or icicle in the heart - is the inclusion of multiple Points of View. Novik opens with two primary voices, but more characters are introduced as the story progresses. A change in POV is indicated by an icon of a spinning wheel, but the speaker is not identified and new character voices are dropped without preamble. Not only does this create extra work and confusion, Novik elects to recount scenes from varied perspectives, resulting in even more redundancy.
Overall, Spinning Silver holds all the ingredients of a magic spell, but the execution leaves one cold and unsatisfied. 
Posted by: Regina C.  

Uprooted

Uprooted by Naomi Novik   438 pages

This book has been highly reviewed butI felt the only thing that has been uprooted is my interest. The hype hooked me:  a fairytale retelling with a spooky forest and a mysterious castle and an enigmatic wizard and a village with a  creepy tradition of gifting a young woman to said  enigmatic wizard every ten years. I don’t know if it’s the incessant foul weather or stay-at-home tedium, but I am struggling to appreciate the books I’m reading during this pandemic hiatus, and this one failed to live up to its hype. I really love the idea, but it almost feels like a rough draft that I would better appreciate when a final copy is polished.
The heroine, Agnieszka, a perpetually filthy klutz, the epitome of the overused clumsy heroine trope, has no explored personality or depth and never becomes  more interesting than her flaws. So when this character transitions from “Who, me?” to “I know all the magics!” her triumphs seem sudden and unearned and  out of character. All other characters were equally undeveloped and reduced to one dimensional stereotypes. 
I’m hesitant to mention the ‘romance’ element, if that’s what it can even be called. There was no emotional undercurrent, no physical attraction, no sexual tension. The Dragon’s role as a romantic interest can only be described as classic Stockholm Syndrome; verbal and emotional abuse is not alluring, no matter how it is delivered or for what reasons. It’s as if the author was putting in scenes to check off a prescribed formula of story requirements: awkward heroine ✔, mysterious wizard ✔, evil archetype ✔, capricious romance ✔.
Overall, I really like the premise of the story, but it almost feels like a rough draft that I would better appreciate when a final copy is polished. Maybe fantasy lovers can overlook the mediocre writing, but it’s not a book I would recommend above others.
Posted By: Regina C.  

The Irish Game

The Irish Game by Matthew Hart   205 pages

This is an occasionally entertaining true recounting of a series of heists of the Beit art collection at Russborough House in Ireland. In addition to gangsters, Matthew Hart gives us a rogue English Heiress, the IRA, the FBI, Interpol, Scotland Yard, and of course, the Irish Garda. 
In the annals of art theft, no case has matched-for sheer criminal panache-the heist at Ireland's Russborough House in 1986. The Irish police knew right away that the mastermind was a Dublin gangster named Martin Cahill. Yet the great plunder -including a Gainsborough, a Goya, two Rubenses, and a Vermeer- remained at large for years. Cahill taunted the police with a string of other crimes, but in the end it was the paintings that brought him low. The challenge of disposing of such famous works forced him to reach outside his familiar world into the international arena, and when he did, his pursuers were waiting. 
One criticism about the book is that Hart distilled all the artistic facts, multiple biographies, Irish history, and police procedure into a single story that ultimately confused with too many narratives and tangents. In his effort to lay bare the minutia, he created a story that rambled and was bogged down by too much information to be entertaining. One such example is the inclusion of chapters on two other major art heists, one at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and the theft of Edvard Munch's The Scream from the National Gallery of Norway. Although they are great heists with tenuous relevance to this story, they distract from the narrative flow, especially near the end of book as the sting operation to take down Cahill plays out.
Posted by: Regina C.  

Park Avenue Summer

Park Avenue Summer by Renee Rosen   338 pages

Told from the perspective of fictional Alice Weiss, this is an account of Helen Gurley Brown, the first female editor of Cosmopolitian. Alice lands the secretarial position to Helen Gurley Brown and is privy to Helen's frequent crying jaggers, obsession with her weight and fashion sense, but most of all...her strength and singularity of vision in the future of Cosmopolitan magazine. As Helen's right arm, Alice also finds herself rubbing shoulders with successful entertainment industry at parties. Alice navigates the rough terrain of romance, alcohol and sex, work intrigue, and career growth opportunities in this delightful historical romp through sixties NYC. Although parts of the book lagged, it ultimately resolved itself to a satisfying present day conclusion.
The true portion of this story explores how the failing Cosmopolitan magazine was reimagined by new editor Helen Gurley Brown, in defiance of the direction dictated by owning Hearst Corporation, to become a resource for the modern, single, career woman. Before being hired as editor of the magazine, Helen Gurley Brown had written Sex and the Single Girl, a groundbreaking advice book that encouraged women to become financially independent and experience sexual relationships before or without marriage. So when she became responsible for Cosmo’s content, Brown transformed the literary magazine famed for its high-toned content into the racy, contentious, popular, and successful magazine that espoused her particular feminist views.
Posted by: Regina C.  

The Library of Lost and Found

The Library of Lost and Found   by Phaedra Patrick   348 pages

When library volunteer Martha Storm discovers an unique collection of fairy tales dedicated to her by her grandmother, Zelda, predeceasing the woman's death, her journey to investigate the origins of the book leads her to discover what caused a rift that nearly tore her family apart years ago.
The pithy title does not redeem the content within. Much of the action is predictable, the dialogue stilted and unnatural. Everything about this book is old-fashioned, so when the author inserts a couple of contemporary notes - a subplot involving a lesbian couple, a reference to Spotify - it feels jarring. The book is longer than it needs be; for example, an eleventh-hour plot turn involving the old fisherman Siegfried could have been condensed or cut. Though the novel peripherally celebrates libraries and storytelling, the story it tells is too implausible.
By implausible, I mean the extreme contrivance of its central plot. The only way the entire story functions is that we believe the narrative conceit that Martha has never bothered, as an adult, to be suspicious of the fact that she couldn’t find her grandmother’s gravestone, and never bothered to search for it years later as an adult. It also expects us to believe that she never did a cursory Google search about her own family history, which could have easily dug up the details of a certain spoilery plot point...seriously, isn’t this an affront to anyone who works in a library?!!  
Posted by: Regina C.