Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Dead to Her


 Dead to Her by Sarah Pinborough  388 pages

"Being the second wife can be murder . . ."

Marcie Maddox has worked hard to get where she is, considering the illicit affair that started her new life as a second wife a few years ago. However, maintaining herself and her life isn't easy, no matter how hard she tries. And it's also not easy to keep her husband, Jason, interested in her. When Jason's boss brings home a beautiful new wife named Keisha from his trip to London, Marcie quickly learns that Jason definitely isn't that interested in her. Determined to make sure Keisha can't replace her as Jason's wife, Marcie sets out to undermine Keisha. However, there's more to Keisha than meets the eye.

As it turns out, there's also more to Marcie than you expect. This is a story that follows the "revenge is a dish best served cold" and as you might expect, Marcie and Keisha form an alliance. However, what happens next came as a surprise to me, which made the story more interesting than I had first expected. Not the best book in the world, but an entertaining read.

Recipe for A Perfect Wife


 Recipe for A Perfect Wife: A Novel by Karma Brown, Karma   322 pages

In the present, Alice finds inspiration found in hidden notes left by her home's previous owner, Nellie. In the past, Nellie seemed to be the perfect 1950s housewife. However, things aren't as idyllic as they appear and Nellie's life begins to unravel. However, cooking keeps her life running smoothly (or as smoothly as possible) and in the present, Alice is discovering these recipes and trying them on her own husband. However, as Alice begins to discover, while Nellie's recipes seem benign, Nellie's secrets were anything but.

I liked this story and enjoyed the dual perspectives. I liked how there was the 1950s perspective and the recipes (which sounded a lot like some I've seen in old church cookbooks). I liked Nellie more than Alice, and found at times that Alice had an unpleasant edge to her. But, the back-and-forth was interesting and ending had a twist I hadn't fully anticipated.

Cats for Dummies


Cats for Dummies by Gina Spadafori,  Lauren Demos and Paul D. Dion   400 pages

This book is filled with so much good information on cats, how to care for them, how to interpret their behavior, signs to look out for to keep them well and help them when you see these signs because they show that your cat needs help health-wise.   They teach you about a cat's body language,  they teach you what your cat needs to be fed - please be sure you are giving your cat wet food as well as kibble - it helps to keep them hydrated when they aren't drinking enough water.   The authors being veteranarians themselves and specialists in their fields and each is known for a major research finding that has changed how the industry of pet food and pet care does things.   It is a handy reference book for all things cat and includes at the end several cat-friendly charities that could use help to keep their doors open, be it through donations of money or volunteering your time or donating supplies.    I wish I had this when one of my cats gave birth, had I known then what I learned from this book, I could have been more helpful at that crucial time.   The book tells the pros and cons of cat ownership and the differences  between owning a cat or a kitten, and why animals should be spayed or neutered.   It discusses domesticated, feral and fereal colonies, the many breeds of cats that have been introduced over the years and what genetic tampering with breeds creates healthwise  (Persians have flat faces and this trait causes them not to live as long as some breeds due to breathing problems caused by the flat facial features similar to bulldogs and hence their short lifespan, too.   Fascinating book for all cat lovers, cat owners and anyone considering working for a shelter.   Also good for kids to read so they know how best to care for the new pet they want to bring home.   Great book.   I highly recommend it to middle-schoolers on up.


 - Shirley J.

Pretty Bitches On Being Called Crazy, Angry, Bossy, Frumpy, Feisty, and All the Other Words That Are Used to Undermine Women


 Pretty Bitches: On Being Called Crazy, Angry, Bossy, Frumpy, Feisty, and All the Other Words That Are Used to Undermine Women    284 pages

"Words matter. They wound, they inflate, they define, they demean. They have nuance and power. "Effortless," "Sassy," "Ambitious," "Aggressive": What subtle digs and sneaky implications are conveyed when women are described with words like these? Words are made into weapons, warnings, praise, and blame, bearing an outsized influence on women's lives -- to say nothing of our moods.

No one knows this better than Lizzie Skurnick, writer of the New York Times' column "That Should be A Word" and a veritable queen of cultural coinage. And in Pretty Bitches, Skurnick has rounded up a group of powerhouse women writers to take on the hidden meanings of these words, and how they can limit our worlds -- or liberate them.

From Laura Lipmann and Meg Wolizer to Jennifer Weiner and Rebecca Traister, each writer uses her word as a vehicle for memoir, cultural commentary, critique, or all three. Spanning the street, the bedroom, the voting booth, and the workplace, these simple words have huge stories behind them -- stories it's time to examine, re-imagine, and change. "

Copying and pasting the Goodreads description was the easiest way to give the summary of this book, especially since it's essays written by so many people. I found most of the essays to be thought-provoking, especially since language is something I've considered for a long time. And especially as it is used to describe women. Definitely an interesting read and something I'd recommend for anyone interested in linguistics and/or women's studies. 


The Art of Baking Blind


 The Art of Baking Blind by Sarah Vaughan   406 pages

In 1966, Kathleen Eaden was the wife of a supermarket magnate and writer of a bestselling cookbook, The Art of Baking. This book was the cornerstone for many home bakers and now in current day Britain, five amateur bakers are competing to become the "New Mrs. Eaden" for the supermarket chain. As these contestants get to know each other, they also find that their secrets rise to the surface, making this more than a baking challenge.  Like Mrs. Eaden before them, they will learn that while perfection is sometimes possible in the kitchen, it's much harder in life.

I liked this book because there were multiple perspectives. You get the original Kathleen Eaden and you get several of the baking contestants, so the stories go back and forth until they converge. As a fan of The Great British Baking Show, I got a real kick out of this book and it was easy for me to imagine all of the different characters. There is a bittersweet tinge to Kathleen Eaden's storylines and some of the contestants also have less than happy lives. So, easy to get caught up in their stories along with the contest. Not an outstanding read, but a nice way to spend some time reading on a Sunday afternoon.

The Book of Eating


 The Book of Eating: Adventures in Professional Gluttony by Adam Platt  258 pages

Food critic Platt was the son of a diplomat and grew up in places like Japan, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Because of this, he never had the chance to become a picky eater and instead, grew up relishing all kinds of interesting and exotic foods and developed an eclectic palate. Platt takes the reader around the world, retracing his steps in his lifelong culinary education.

I had expected a bit more about his life as a food critic, and at times felt this book lagged a bit. But it was still interesting to read about his childhood and eating adventures, as well as his first encounters as a food critic. I knew who Platt was before I read this and had read some of his reviews, but I really didn't know anything about his background. Interesting read, but won't be worth a re-read.

How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men's Feelings


 How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men's Feelings
by Sarah Cooper  209 pages

"Ambitious women are so scary. In this fast-paced business world, female leaders need to make sure they’re not perceived as pushy, aggressive, or competent. In How to Be Successful Without Hurting Men’s Feelings, Sarah Cooper, author of the bestselling 100 Tricks to Appear Smart in Meetings, illustrates how women can achieve their dreams, succeed in their careers, and become leaders, without harming the fragile male ego.

Chapters include, among others, “9 Non-threatening Leadership Strategies for Women,” "How to Ace Your Job Interview Without Over-acing It," and “Choose Your Own Adventure: Do You Want to Be Likable or Successful?” It even includes several pages to doodle on while men finish what they're saying. Each chapter also features an exercise with a set of "inaction items" designed to challenge women to be less challenging."

Obviously, this is a humor book -- this isn't real advice. Or is it? The not-quite-funny thing is that there are things in this book that I think a lot of women identify with. Like suggesting something in a meeting which gets ignored . . . until the guy next to you suggests the same thing and gets all the credit. Or being called "emotional," and a number of other adjectives that are positive until they're applied to describe a woman in the working environment.  I admit I snickered at several of the chapters and appreciated Cooper's snarky take on women and work.

If It Bleeds


 If It Bleeds by Stephen King   436 pages

This is a collection of four long stories, including a stand-alone sequel to The Outsider (which I did read, but remembered almost nothing about). I found the collection to be really good, even without remembering The Outside. Mr. Harrigan's Phone is a bittersweet story that has some disturbing elements to it, but it's more an exploration of a younger self. The Life of Chuck was hard to follow at first, and then I got caught up in the story.  Rat was truly the strangest one -- -I kept expecting something worse to happen, so it kept me on edge.

I enjoy King's later works and find that with each new book, I continue to like his stories. While I read Christine as a kid and some of his other early books, I've never wanted to re-read them, unlike his somewhat more recent work.  Count this one in with the good ones.

The Perfect Wife


 The Perfect Wife by JP Delaney   412 pages

Love is eternal . . . especially if there's AI.

Abbie wakes up with no memory of who she is and can't figure out why she feels so strange. The man in the room with her claims to be her husband. A titan of the tech industry and the founder of an innovative start-up, he tells Abbie she is a gifted artist, mother to their young son and his perfect wife. And that five years ago, she had a terrible accident. Now, with an amazing technological breakthrough, she's back.  Or is she?

What she is is a miracle of science, an amalgamation of brain waves and memories in a synthetic body. Horrified at first, Abbie is then curious to learn more about her accident, and then why she can't access any of those memories. As the story continues, and we get her perspective and the perspective of an unknown character, it becomes clear that her husband isn't telling her everything. Definitely not the whole truth. And just who is it that keeps contacting Abbie and telling her not to trust him?

I found this book to be a slow starter and almost put it down and then it was like something clicked, because I started reading it quickly to see what was going to happen next. Having the different points of view, especially from an outside person, as the story becomes revealed layer by layer made for an intriguing story and it was difficult to predict what would happen next.  

Calypso


Calypso by David Sedaris   272 pages


I love David Sedaris' books.  I find his last book and this one a little darker than his prior ones, though still absolutely hilarious.   The man can find the funny in anything.  In this one, he talks about his and his boyfriend, Hugh's house in Sussex, the beach house he bought for the family to share on the North Carolina coast, his sister Tiffany's suicide and how his sister Amy had a session with a psychic who channeled their mother and their sister Tiffany and the strangely spot on information she gleaned.    There are loads more topics Sedaris shares his ingenuos wit and humor on,  how his boyfriend's mother contradicts everything he says, "Oh that didn't happen!" and funny phrases heard when the family is together that they adopt as their own and use every chance they get in conversations with one another.   Such funny stuff I want him to continue sharing his views with the world because I love his stories so much.   I would recommnend this and every book by David Sedaris to middle-schoolers on up.   Some things are a little abover their grade level, but, so funny they might as well learn.    10 Stars in the reading galaxy.

Lucky Day


Lucky Day by Mary Higgins Clark   68 pages


I've always thought that the worst thing you could do if you won the lottery was to let anyone know before you turned the ticket in to get your winnings.   This short story by Mary Higgins Clark just spells that out.   The guy who won is so excited that he won he is telling everybody about it.  It's his lucky day!   Not so much.   Yes,  A quick read,  I would recommend this as a cautionary tale to everyone.   Don't tell everything you know.  It is a case of counting your chickens before they hatch.   Turn in the ticket, get your money, then move, leave no forwarding address, change all your phone numbers and become a ghost otherwise you will have folks climbing out of the woodwork to take what you have.  I know its a joyful moment and the childlike enthusiasm that bubbles to the surface just wants to share such happy news with every person you meet, but, word of warning - everyone is not your friend - not everyone cares how long and hard you have struggled to finally become a "winner,"  and they will steal everything including your joy from you and walk away with your joy in their pocket and think nothing of it.   Think smooth jazz - quiet joy so you reap the benefit not some undeserving meanie.

 - Shirley J.

The Cradle Will Fall


 The Cradle Will Fall by Mary Higgins Clark    336 pages

Start out with a cheating husband and his pregnant wife who turns up dead from a cyanide poisoning, or did she?   Did her cheating husband do it?    Then at the autopsy another clue comes in to play, wait did the husband do it or were both the husband and the wife cheating ?   What????   A head scratcher, sometimes just disgustingly gross when you think about it.  Where does this gal come up with this stuff?   Did she set up the premise for the film, "Centipede?"  Oooh!  The writing is good, the premise is gross.   Not a book I want to long think about but if you like murder mysteries with twiests you will like this one.

 - Shirley J.

Loves Music, Loves to Dance


Loves Music, Loves to Dance by Mary Higgins Clark    336 pages


Just another reason not to go out with every one you meet online.   YIKES!!!    As a favor to her friend,Darcy, who works for a tv talk show, Erin agrees to go on a bunch of blind dates with guys met online and what a mixed bag she gets.   Not to mention one fellow she met in person.   You won't know till the end which one is the murderer.   Is it the freaky guy with a sister fetish?  Is it the angry guy you just know deep down hates women and wants them to pay for something he is still carrying around.    There are sooooo many choices, it could be any one of them or could it possibly be someone random?   Then there is the dancing shoe clue.    Ladies be careful what you wish for a sensitive guy who loves to dance may be better left alone!      A good dose of creepiness and a lesson in being vigilent before putting yourself out there.   I would recommend this one to middle-schoolers on up.   Learn the lesson early, ladies!

 - Shirley J.

Where Are the Children?


 Where Are the Children?  by Mary Higgins Clark   223 pages


While living in California a woman's two kids go missing.   She is later brought up on charges of murdering them and serves time in the penitentiary for it.   When let out on a technicality she decides to run away from all the sorrow her life in Cally brought her and goes completely across country to start a new life in Cape Cod.   Some years pass and she meets a new man, falls in love, marries and eventually has two more kids.   Life is good no one including new hubby knows about her dark past and the murders but on the anniversary of the deaths of her first two children an article appears in the local newspaper about her case complete with her picture while the same day finds her present two kids missing!     Is she mental?   Is she a serial child killer or a victim of circumstance?   What the heck is going on?   The law and the town are closing in on her, she is freaking out!   Where are the children?????   A nail biter - this one.   I would recommend this book to middle-schoolers on up.   Learn to keep an eye on your little ones at all times - you never know what is in the mind of a person.

 - Shirley J.

All Around the Town by Mary Higgins Clark

 All Around the Town by Mary Higgins Clark   341 pages

Whew!  If you are going to commit a crime it is helpful to have a sister who is a lawyer.  Well, even if you aren't going to commit a crime having a sister who is a lawyer would still be a good thing - you never know when you will need legal assistance.   And when you were abducted as a child, have multiple


personalities that enabled you to cope with the memories of the horrendous experience and in your 20s go all obsessive over your very married college English profesor so much to the point one of your personalities is writing him extreme love letters, oh yeah, and he turns up dead - then you are really going to need that sister who just happens to be a lawyer.   Another good plot line.   I would recommend this book to middle-schoolers on up.   Learn early to be mindful of strangers - STRANGER DANGER!!!    And this one takes a lot of twists and turns too.   Lots of baddies to choose from and that old adage about a woman scorned?  Yeah.  .


 - Shirley J.

Dawn of Infamy: A Sunken Ship, A Vanished Crew and the FInal Mystery of Pearl Harbor


Dawn of Infamy: A Sunken Ship, A Vanished Crew and the Final Mystery of Pearl Harbor by

Stephen Harding    280 pages

The day that will live in infamy, December 7, 1941 as FDR said, holds  horrendous memories for  military personnel, their families and also Americans everywhere.   The surprise attack on Pearl Harbor that Sunday morning by Japanese pilots led to the United States entering WWII.   But just prior to that attack from above, an American cargo ship was attacked by Japanese submarine I-26.   Had there been clearer lines of communication the radio disc jockey from San Francisco who heard the cargo ship, "Cynthia Olson's" S.O.S. might have been able to change the course of the war, but, sadly by the time he got the message to the appropriate people,  Pearl Harbor was in flames.    The Japanese commander and his crew of I-26 were celebrating their victory in sinking the first American ship that would start the war with the UlS.    The cargo ship was hauling a shipful of lumber to Hawaii and was half-way between Seattle and Honolulu when it was struck.   They had no idea why an American vessel would be fired upon other than ,maybe the Germans didn't realize they were American (and therefore neutral to the war at that time).   They immediately hoisted the American flag only to be continually fired upon.    The lumber buoyed the cargo ship so it did not sink immediately.   The Japanese crew went to breakfast to celebrate their good luck thinking the ship would be on the bottom of the ocean when they were done.   When they returned and checked they were astonished the ship was still afloat (not knowing the cargo inside it).   They then fired two torpedos.  The first torpedo causing the ship to list the second taking it down in a fiery death.    The Japanese commander had jumped the gun a bit because they were told not to engage in fighting until after the bombers had hit Pearl Harbor.   The Japanese Emperor wanted it to be a total surprise attack and didn't want the Americans to go on alert ahead of their attack.   Documents were fudged to put the time as happening just after the Pearl Harbor ambush so the original shooter did not go down in historical documentation as being the shot that began the war with the U.S.    THe Japanese claimed to have assumed the Americans had time to get in their life boats and get away.   They did not claim to have captured anyone alive and taken them prisoner.   They did not claim they shot all survivors found as was done thereafter.   But, no survivors in lifeboats nor bodies were found floating amid the flotsom when retrieval efforts were executed.   None of the American civilian crew working with the military to deliver the lumber to the base were ever heard from again after the initial SOS.    Harding tells what he has found out about the event.    A WWII mystery finally getting some light shed on it.   Good book.   WWII buffs will really enjoy it.   It makes me wish I had talked to my Dad more about his time in the Aleutian Islands.   Good book.  I highly recommend it.   .  

  - Shirley J.

Most Wanted


Most Wanted by Lisa Scottoline   438 pages


You know how some people just rub you the wrong way?   That is how I feel about the main character in this book.   She is bossy, self-centered, attention seeking and bulldozes everyone she comes in contact with until she can't and when another character gives her back the same treatment she bestows on others, she backs up, she cries, she clamps down and won't tell them anything though she bullies others into giving her information constantly.   By mid book and all the way to the end I was hoping she would be the murderer's next victim.   The story was well-written as all of Lisa Scottoline's works are and the story line was a good one and I was caught up in it until the lead character began to grate on my nerves with her OCD attitude and behavior.   While the book lets the reader believe alls well that ends well, I still think her husband should have left her.   I can't recommend this book because I don't like people who treat others this way and I found it frustrating wishing for the book to end but was committed to the story.   The story itself really is a good one, though, despite the b*tch narrating it.   It is just hard to recommend a book I was gritting my teeth hoping something awful would happen to the main character.

 - Shirley J.

Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim by David Sedaris


 Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim by David Sedaris  257 pages

David Sedaris is one of my most favorite authors.   His take on life is the  stuff behind the closed door in your house with all that junk hiding that he throws open the door and tells everything about with such wit and truth.   He could make the telling of anything funny and does it with such joie de vivre.   He can find a funny way of sharing anything and often does so with his family as his topics, or his lover, or basically anyone and anything including being the butt of his own jokes in such a hilarious way, I hate to come to the end of his books.   He is fabulous!  No matter what he is talking about the story comes out in such a way that you will find yourself laughing out  loud.   Be it tales of his younger brother, Paul, who out of all the siblings turned out to be a redneck but may just have the most normal family life of them all.   From giving directions to a Norwegian group of seniors while at the same time trying to eradicate a mouse, to the fellow who while David was cleaning his house insisted on David letting him take his blood sugar to so many other stories.  David lifts up the rug to show all the stuff that has accumulated there then stops to discuss the stories attached to each,, all of which are worthy of a stand-up routine on Comedy Central.   Bravo, David Sedaris for another wonderful book.   Yes, I recommend this book to middle-schoolers on up.   Even the iffy parts are funny and not as bad as you might think.  Another best seller for David Sedaris.


 - Shirley J.

The Secret Life of Bees


The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd   352 pages


A most excellent book telling the stories of Lily Owens a 14 year old girl who has grown up in a home without the comfort of love.   Lily's parent, T. J. offers no love, only criticism and punishment.  Her mother died many years prior to the beginning of the story from a tragic accident.  You get to know Lily so well as she narrates the story.   It is set in South Carolina in 1964 and racial equality is at its beginning in town when black people are finally allowed to vote.  This causes big waves among the racists in town when Rosaleen, Lily's best friend and surrogate mother goes into town to register to vote.  All hell breaks loose with Rosaleen being hospitalized waiting for sentencing to jail and T. J. being called to take Lily home.   Lily musters her courage, sneaks away from home and convinces Rosaleen, though Rosaleen  is hurt bad to get out of bed and go on the lam with her.   There are incidents with bees in the walls of Lily's room and flying out around her room from time to time that seem a signal, sign or message from her dead mother.and that along with the few items Lily found stashed that had belonged to her mother, a photo of her mother, a wooden block of a black madonna with Tiburnum on the back and a pair of gloves that she hides then buries in the yard so T. J. won't know she has them all are leading Lily to where she is meant to be.   Luck is with Lily and Rosaleen during their getaway and they end up on the doorstep of 3 amazing bee keeping sisters.  The story really blazes from here on.   A wonderful tale of redemption and love, acceptance of both what is and what was, good, bad, painful, learning to live with regrets and how to forgive oneself and others and how regardless to keep going on.    A beautiful story.  I recommend this book from middle-schoolers to octogenarians.    

 - Shirley J.

Monday, September 28, 2020

Bone Rattler

Bone Rattler 



Bone Rattler by Eliot Pattison, 456 pages

I was interested in this series and wanted to start with the first title. There are 6 books currently in this series, known as the Duncan McCallum series. I found this book a bit too dense for my current attention span, but I really don't think it was the author's fault. I think I just couldn't focus on the mystery as Duncan McCallum worked to solve it.

The events take place on a convict ship to the New World and upon arriving in the New World. Duncan McCallum is being shipped from Scotland to the New World against his will. He is forced into solving a series of murders on the ship and on land and is desperately trying to find the actual culprit; not just pin the murders on any available Scot as his captors suggest.

There were parts of this story I enjoyed quite a bit: descriptions of the French and Indian War, along with McCallum's evolving attitude towards Indians, from abject terror as he considers them all violent at the beginning to slowly coming to respect them as individuals and not savages. A few of the earth-shattering revelations with characters and events I anticipated - I'm not sure if the reader was meant to catch on to these so quickly or if I was a good guesser (I'm usually not so I'm assuming it's the former). And because my focus just wasn't there for this book, I had a difficult time following the thread of the mystery as McCallum spoke to a multitude of characters and made quick conclusions from just one line of dialogue. I'm purposefully choosing a lighter book to follow this one, as I think that's about all I can handle at the moment. I won't write off this entire series and will give the second book, "Eye of the Raven" a chance in the future.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Warrior of the Altaii

 Warrior of the Altaii by Robert Jordan, 352 pages      

This is Robert Jordan's first novel that was  unpublished until now. The Altaii keep herds and raid. However, the watering holes on the Plains they roam are drying up. The warrior, Wulfgar, discovers that the Altaii could be destroyed if they don't change. 

They must take on the walled city of Lanta who has allied itself with the Morassa people (who also keep herds and raid).  

Near the end, you find out that there is a lot more to this world than meets the eye. It is intriguing but a tease that doesn't get explored further.

It is pretty good for a first novel. You can see glimpses of Jordan's Wheel of Time series in this book. The dynamic between women and men and a past that was better among other things.

I enjoy it a lot and wish it had been the beginning of a series. I would recommend it to fans of Robert Jordan and people who like fantasy. 

The Chanel Sisters

The Chanel Sisters by Judithe Little    352 pages

I have to admit that I’ve never given any thought to whether or not fashion icon Coco Chanel had siblings.  It’s just not something I think about when it comes to icons and celebrities.  However, turns out that she had four---two sisters and two brothers. In birth order, they are Julia-Berthe, then Gabrielle (who became Coco), Alphonse, Antoinette and Lucien.  This story is narrated by Antoinette, about whom history knows little,

Their mother died from bronchitis, abandoned by their father and not wanted by any other family member, the girls were sent to a convent/orphanage.  When we first see them in 1897, they are practicing their sewing. In 1898, the girls had been at the convent for three years. It is then that they receive a visit from their grandmother and learn that they have an aunt, Adrienne, who is close to their ages.

After she leaves the convent when she becomes of age, Gabrielle is hired in specialty shop where lace and other fashionable trimmings are sold to the wealthy women.

Adrienne takes them under her wing and begins to guide them through Parisian society---from the bottom to the top. Silly behavior ensues, with the girls interest boys escalating. On Sundays, Gabrielle takes a job at a tailor’s shop in order to meet officers and other wealthy men. It becomes clear that this book is more about finding a man to appease their need for a father figure rather than the girls rise to fashionable society. 

Readers even learn how Gabrielle received her nickname, Coco. Coco wants to sing and dance, but she hasn’t much talent.  It’s when she decides to start creating hats that the world of fashion calls.  With her sister, Antoinette, they start making hats for the rich and famous that they once envied.

The book fictionally documents Coco’s rise to fame as a hat designer, her love life, her marriage to Boy Chapel, her move into clothing and ends as Antoinette wants to bring the Chanel brand to the United States.

“The Chanel Sisters” was a good read. On occasion it dragged. I enjoyed the second half much more than the first.  “The Chanel Sisters” receives 3 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world. 

 

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

The Blossom and the Firefly

The Blossom and the Firefly by Sherri L. Smith    320 pages

 This blurb from the dust jacket is what drew me to this novel: “Japan 1945. Taro is a talented violinist and a kamikaze pilot in the days before his first and only mission. He believes he is ready to die for his country . . . until he meets Hana. Hana hasn't been the same since the day she was buried alive in a collapsed trench during a bomb raid. She wonders if it would have been better to have died that day . . . until she meets Taro.

Hana is 15 years old; Taro is 17. The war is starting to wind down with Japan not on the winning side.

Hana is one of the local school girls who work at the airbase. Their job is to support and companionship to the latest batch of kamikaze pilots.  The girls cook, wash and mend their clothes, talk with them, and when it’s time to takeoff, the wave goodbye with cherry blossoms.

Hana has watched her heart; she has never even learned any of their names…that is until Taro arrives from training.

Both are musicians, Hana plays the koto while Taro plays the violin.  They are instantly drawn to each, which makes both of their jobs very difficult.

 I haven’t read any novels before that were from the perspective of Japanese young adults.  For me, the plot dragged and there was little tension. Every time I ran across a Japanese word, I was pulled out of the story.  Much to my chagrin, when I finished the book, I found a glossary in the back.  If I had known it was there, my feelings might be different. Alas, “The Blossom and the Firefly” receives 2 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world. 

 

Monday, September 21, 2020

The Dowerless Sisters

The Dowerless Sisters 

The Dowerless Sisters by Valerie Anand, 529 pages

This was the final book in "The Bridges Over Time" a 6 book series set in England. The series begins during the time of William the Conqueror and follows members of the family throughout the ages as their fortunes rise and fall. Most of the characters in the series are women, so it's very interesting to see how they experience the times, from field work as "villeins" to surviving the plague, to flourishing (or not) in arranged marriages.

The characters in this final installment are born in the late 1800s and the story ends in the 1960s, a time period I've always loved. Charlotte and Vicky find their fortunes change with the death of their father, who mismanaged their finances. Their mother can't bear to see them accept the help of their conventional uncle, who believes women shouldn't be educated or make decisions of their own. Charlotte and Vicky agree with their mother and do their best to make their way in the world without any financial help from their uncle. They are fortunate to have the mentorship of another relative, who teaches them his trade in the textiles industry. Although Charlotte and Vicky never marry (an unforgiveable offense in the eyes of their uncle and other male relatives), they find fulfillment in their work and extended family.

I loved the history contained in this entire series and this book had a great ending, with a satisfying conclusion tying together attributes and events from the previous books. Valerie Anand writes a mystery series set during Elizabeth I's reign using the pen name Fiona Buckley.

-Kathy CB

The Black Swan of Paris

 The Black Swan of Paris by Karin Robards   480 pages

Fans of  Kate Quinn’s “The Alice Network” and Pam Jenoff’s “The Lost Girls of Paris” will love Karen Robards’ latest novel, “The Black Swan of Paris.”

Paris 1944.  The French Resistance is in crisis. One of its leaders, Baron Paul de Rocheford is dead following an air raid and his wife, Lillian, has been captured and sent to Germany. The Nazis are certain that Lillian knows the exact time and date of the upcoming Allied Invasion and will stop at nothing to get the information out of her.

British officer Max Ryan has been given the assignment to rescue Lillian…or kill her if a rescue cannot be carried out. No matter what, Lillian cannot give the information to the Nazis or the world is doomed.

 Max is working undercover as the show business manager of Genevieve Dumont, the singing toast of Europe, known for long black hair.  The Nazis adore Genevieve. But what no one, not even Max, knows who Genevieve’s people are as she has been estranged from them for a dozen years. Genevieve is the daughter of Paul and Lillian de Rocheford, and she may not have had contact with them, she cannot allow the Nazis to have their way with her mother.

Genevieve reaches out to the Resistance, and she joins their efforts without Max’s knowledge. The Resistance puts Genevieve in contact with her sister, Emmy, and the two plot on how to free their mother.

The first half of the novel didn’t flow as fast as I had wanted it to, but something told me to keep reading.  And I’m glad I did!  The second half ripped and roared to a stunning conclusion. Therefore,  “The Black Swan of Paris” receives 4 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world. 

 

Sunday, September 20, 2020

The Bazaar of Bad Dreams


The Bazaar of Bad Dreams by Stephen King   512 pages


I loved this book!  Stephen King at his finest.   Many short stories about horrifying monsters, people in love,  families competing to the point of destruction, this Stephen King compilation has it all.   And the utter joy in every word is worth millions in my estimation.   The last couple of King books I read left me feeling like he had lost his joy in writing and was only doing it for the money but this jewel restores my faith that he is in love with the written word and exudes that love to the reader in every story.   Treat yourself and read this one - it is so worth your time and if you are a Stephen King fan already you will adore it as much as I did.   If you are new to King's writing and process feel free to begin here you will become a life long member of the Stephen King fan club.  My very favorite story is the last one!   You will laugh, you will gasp and you will be glad you did.   Stephen King's dialogue is as great as his visions of horrors that keep us from sleeping at night. BRAVO!!!!

 - Shirley J.

The Secret Garden


The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett     288 pages


I so enjoyed this book.   I knew the story to some degree but this read really took me there inside that mystical place with Mary, Dicken, Colin and the menagerie of critters Dicken charmed.   Really fun read of the Yorkshire accent, too.    I never realized how truly delightful and almost Gaelic it had seemed way back when.   That just endeared the book to me more.   How beautiful and strong things can grow from slim beginnings.   An endearing story for any age and worth the read even if you have already read it once or twice.   A gem.   Just goes to show how the unlikeliest of people and the most diverse of circumstance can lead to personal and spiritual healing and lend strange combinations to become the best of friends and adventures.   Highly Highly and more Highly recommended a spot of joy in a COVID world.

 - Shirley J.

The Road Home

The Road Home by Richard Paul Evans   336 pages



Wow!  I didn't realize when I began this book that it was part of a trilogy and more than that this was the third book in the trilogy.   I found this book could stand on its own easily.   The characters refer to so many things from the past that it seems as though the story catches you up to present with no feeling of loss for what you have missed and the story is so good and the wisdom this character shares throughout that he learns along the way is incredible.   I honestly thought this was a true story or at least based on a true story - it is that realistic in its tone and quotes from the guy's road diary.   What a great book and storyline.   Now that I know the end and enjoyed all that took place to get there just from this juncture, I kind of want to read the beginning just because it is there, but, this part of the journey is so priceless and who he starts out as is a big jerk and now he is filled with so much savvy and understanding whereas he has learned many valuable lessons and shared many valuable things, I don't really feel the need to go back.   It feels like meeting a friend when they are in their 30s maybe 40s and you think, "Man, I wish I would have known you in your 20s," but they recount such great stories about their life, you feel connected to that time in their life just through their telling of what happened.   It also kind of has the feel of that t.v. show where a billionaire or a CEO of a company goes undercover and meets regular people/first line employees and finds out what all they go through and how their understanding may be very different from the corporate Mount Olympus.  And most importantly seeing people dealing with their own lives and multi-stresses and also seeing how as CEO or billionaire you could do wondrous things to improve your fellow human being's life and circumstances.    Great book.   The entries is the main characters diary are pearls of wisdom to be committed to memory.   Excellent for read for Middle-schoolers on up.   A good life manual, before and after, how a rough beginning can prove a diamond in the rough.

 - Shirley J. 

The Queen's Secret: A Novel of England's World War II Queen

The Queen's Secret: A Novel of England's World War II Queen by Karen Harper     384 pages

An exquisitely excellent book.  OMgosh!   You will feel as though you are going through the air raids right along with them.   The juicy secrets that will be told will make your jaw drop, it did mine.  The writing will carry you back to the 1930s and 40s and give you insight into so many venues - political, social and social politics.    You will feel as though you can hear the planes overhead you will be that captivated by this story it is riveting and you will not be able to put this one down.   I had to make myself stop reading and sleep but you won't want to.   This book is a delicious blend of the lives of the Royals, Winston Churchill, FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt, Hitler's Blitzkrieg and the Allies retaliation along with some very human emotions and frailties and some of the boldest happenings and yes, slap your face because you won't see it coming secrets that will have you telling everyone you know about this book.  Highly recommended.   A good showing of no matter how high one may seem to be in life there is always a skeleton or several in every closet.  Teens to adults,  I keep forgetting that tweens are the new 20s so maybe mature Middle Schoolers, too, though, I would hope that youngsters would keep the secrets with the decorum they call for.   Great book.

 - Shirley J.

2019-2020 Challenge Year-end Totals for SLPL Team


 Now that we've finished a Challenge Year (August 31, 2020), it's time to look back at how we all did.  While not everyone added posts through the entire year, we still welcomed their reviews (and their books/pages).  

Over the Challenge year, SLPL Team's info was:

13 people
read 484 books
for a whopping total of 147,431  pages
and 49 books tagged with the tag of "Author Name Double Letter"

!!!!!

Some more notable things from the Challenge year:  Two of our members added reviews every single month, even in some of the early months of COVID when some of us just didn't quite get anything written for the month.  So BRAVO to Julie E-C and Shirley J. who kept going and logging every month!!!!

And I know some people like to know the big totals, so our Super Readers this challenge year were:

Shirley J. logged 144 books and 48379 pages
Julie E-C logged 62 books and 19444 pages
Jen O. logged 60 books and 24840
Dennis M. also logged 60 books and 17379 pages


And onwards to the next year!!!  We welcome some new members and encourage all past members to join us again.   

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

The Red Lotus


 The Red Lotus by Chris Bohjalian   400 pages

He writes! He scores!  Author Chris Bohjalian hits another one out of the park!

In his twenty-second novel, Bohjalian writes of deadly pathogens that seem to mirror today’s daily headlines. If I didn’t know any better, I’d swear that he had a crystal ball that told him about the Coronavirus. It takes too long to research, write and publish a book that is somewhat related to the pandemic that has its grip on the world.

Anyway, in this taut thriller, Bohjalian takes us to Vietnam. Alexis and her new boyfriend, Austin Harper, are on a bicycle tour of the country.  Austin takes off alone one day near the end of the tour, supposedly in search of where his uncle was killed and his dad injured in to pay his respects. Alexis, an emergency room in New York City, begins to panic after several hours have passed since he was to return.

Other than the touring company and the people who have been riding alongside Alexis and Austin, no one is that concerned….at first. As the hours creep by, Alexis gets more frantic and begins to search. The police are not helpful and the Consulate doesn’t seem to have time….neither do Austin’s parents, who don’t return Alexis’ calls.

While Alexis is searching, Bohjalian turns the narrator’s attention to Austin, giving readers some insight as to what is happening with him. 

While searching, Alexis finds Austin’s energy gel packs lying on the roadside. It seems these little, innocuous packets---the size of a fast-food ketchup packet---contain a deadly pathogen that makes the Coronavirus seem like a bout of hay fever.

I didn’t always get the science behind the pathogens, but thankfully, Bohjalian provides only what is necessary to the story.  Other who get it, will appreciate the second-layer of depth he delves into.  But that didn’t stop me from loving this novel.

And now the sad part returns---waiting on the next Bohjalian novel.  Normally I would give a book I liked this much six stars, but due to the science, “The Red Lotus” receives 5 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

 

 

Monday, September 14, 2020

Poems

Algernon Charles SWINBURNE / Poems 1925 | eBay

 Poems by Algernon Charles Swinburne, 231 pages

He offers his tithe.

     The sea gives her shells to the shingle,
          The earth gives her streams to the sea;
     They are many, but my gift is single,
          My verses, the first fruits of me.

Swinburne has been called the "last of the giants", and indeed he stands tall at the end of Romanticism and the beginning of Decadence, willing to be damned for love's spite or sake.

     But you would have felt my soul in a kiss,
          And known that once if I loved you so well;
     And I would have given my soul for this
          To burn forever in burning hell.

Death has closed the circle on Swinburne's world of flesh, but delight has not yet yielded wholly to disgust, nor heartache to horror.

     Is it worth a tear, is it worth an hour,
          To think on things that are well outworn?
     Of fruitless husk and fugitive flower,
          The dream foregone and the deed forborne?

Thursday, September 10, 2020

The Queen of Tuesday: A Lucille Ball Story

The Queen of Tuesday: A Lucille Ball Story by Darin Strauss   336 pages


 
With the tagline of “A Lucille Ball Story,” I was under the impression that this novel would be a factual/fictional account of the Lucy and Desi’s rocky marriage, their triumph of making television history, and what it was like to co-own a television production company in a male-dominated industry. I’ll admit that while I’m not the hugest fan of Lucy’s comedy, but I have always admired her shrewd business acumen.

But upon getting my hands on this novel, I quickly learned that it, really, has nothing to do Lucy’s real life. It is a smash-up of memoir and fantasy based on a “what if” scenario. Granted that is what writing fiction is based on, but author Strauss takes such liberties with timelines (Desi Jr’s birth year is wrong) and events that the whole concept is outlandish.

The novel is based on a Strauss family myth that the author’s grandfather had a torrid affair with Miss Ball. The writing is convoluted, with multiple plot lines showing up in almost every paragraph. I was looking for some shred of evidence that Strauss’ ancestor’s story was true, but found none. 

Avoid this novel at all costs. “The Queen of Tuesday” receives 1 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.

Thursday, September 3, 2020

SLPL Team August totals

 This month was interesting ---- 3 of the 6 people read 6 books each!  

In total:

6 people
read 23 books
for a total of 8351 pages

Shirley J. was the SuperReader this month with 3496 pages, and out of the three people logging 6 books each, Julie E-C. had the highest total, logging 2048 pages.

Great job, everyone!!!

Wednesday, September 2, 2020

The Prisoner's Wife


 The Prisoner’s Wife by Maggie Brooks   400 pages

 It’s hard to imagine that with the plethora of World War II historical novels on the market that an author could stumble upon something new.  Luckily for readers everywhere, author Maggie Brooks has done just that. She first heard about it from an elderly man, Sidney Reed, in an elevator of all places. He told her he “had been in a Nazi prison camp where they sheltered a Czech woman disguised as a British solider.”  Brooks was hooked and met with Reed a few days later for the whole story. Reed wasn’t able to give full details, like the woman’s name, but the things he did tell her---like the names of the camps—were verifiable.  That information alone was enough to set Brooks on a research journey like no other.

It seemed that a British soldier, whom she called Bill, had been captured by the Nazis, in Czechoslovakia. He and other prisoners were sent to work on a farm, helping bring in the crops and other assorted jobs. Only an old woman, her daughter and her young son were left to do the work. The daughter was given the name of Izabela, or Izzy. The two fall in love. Izzy helps Bill escape, they marry. Izzy disguises herself as a British soldier so that if they are captured, they can stay together.

Of course, they are captured, bur her disguise works. The main focus of the story is how Bill and some of the other prisoners guard her. How they help and guard her during her periods, showers and using the latrine leaves little detail to the imagination. Horrifying reading, but this reader was unable to put the book down.

While the details of everyday life in the camps is nothing when it comes to the Long March West  they are forced to endure from Eastern Europe to Germany---500 miles with little clothing and even less food---in January through March of 1945. The weather is horrifyingly cold, snow falls almost all the time, and sometimes they are forced to sleep outdoors. Again, the descriptions of the cold, the hunger pains, the walking with frozen feet, the dysentery, the stomach cramps, the bare clothing are not left to the imagination.

I’ve read an enormous amount of World War II historical fiction, but this is the most detailed about the atrocities the POWs faced. I highly, highly recommend this book, and “The Prisoner’s Wife” receives 6 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.