Thursday, December 30, 2021

Diaries of David Sedaris

A Carnival of Snackery: Diaries 2003-2020 by David Sedaris
5 stars

To be perfectly honest, I am a  selective fan of David Sedaris.  I sometimes find his essay collections over the top but think his diaries are hilarious and so readable.  This is probably the opposite of most readers, I know.  I loved this collection and was extremely excited to see what he had to say about the 2016 election, about COVID and everything else that the world has been slammed with these past several years.  This may be one of my favorite books that I read this year.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Lonely Island Life

The Women of Pearl Island by Polly Crosby
Publication Date - December 7, 2021
3 stars

This novel follows two timelines; one in the early and mid 1900's and one current day both on the same isolated island.  A family has lived on this island for decades with an obsession with moths and butterflies.  In the current day, a grieving young artist comes to the island to serve as a personal assistant to an elderly woman.  This book has some beautiful descriptions of nature and the island.  I didn't feel completely attached to the characters and that somewhat affected my reading experience.  I would definitely check out further work by this author but this one was just okay for me.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Not Politics as Usual

There is Nothing For You Here by Fiona Hill
3.5 stars

Fiona Hill grew up in the North East of England in an area devastated by coal mine closures and the change in industry.  Although she grew up in poverty, she was able to go to good colleges through hard work, perseverance, and good mentors.  She uses her experiences growing up, along with time spent in Russia and the US to compare the rise of Populist politics in all three countries.  I was interested in reading about her experiences overcoming adversity in her hometown and as a woman in a field dominated by men of a certain class and enjoyed those parts the best.  The last part of the book focuses on her work in the National Security Council under Trump and her eventual testimony in his impeachment trials. Personally, I would be happy if I never had to read another word about former President Trump so this part hit a lower note for me.  This is an fascinating look, though, at the political similarities between three seemingly different countries from someone who knows what she is talking about.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, November 1, 2021

The Christmas Escape

The Christmas Escape by Sarah Morgan
4 stars

When Christy's marriage looks to be in trouble, she sends her daughter with her best friend, Alix and her husband's best friend on their vacation to the Swedish Laplands.  There are several complicated relationships and complicated personalities but the setting takes center stage and I could have read descriptions of the snowy wilderness for days.  This is a great beginning to my holiday reading.  I received a digital ARC of this through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, October 18, 2021

Wartime Drama

Sisters of the Great War by Suzanne Feldman
Publication Date - October 26, 2021
3.5 stars

This books is about two American sisters who volunteer during World War I and their experiences as they try to break boundaries.  One sister is volunteering as a nurse but really wants to be a doctor, during a time when women doctors were unusual while the other sister is exploring her sexuality.  The writing in this book is weirdly uneven.  The dialogue and interactions between family are not very well don and read really awkward yet the war scenes are incredible and richly drawn.  It made for a strange reading experience but overall, I enjoyed it.  I received a digital ARC of the book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Perfect (Early) Holiday Romance

Duke, Actually by Jenny Holiday
Publication Date - October 26, 2021
5 stars

I read this book in 24 hours and I needed this reading experience (so much) right now.  Max is a future Duke with a wild reputation.  Dani is an English professor going through an ugly divorce.  They only know each other through their friends engagement but Max decides to randomly text Dani when he is in New York and it leads to a beautiful friendship and slow burn love story.  This book is so sweet, I loved it and now I want it to be the holidays.  I received this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, October 4, 2021

Life of a Bookstore

Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Nadia Wassef
4 stars

This is a fascinating inside look at the inception and evolution of a bookstore in Cairo, Egypt.  The author, along with two others, opened Diwan bookstore in Cairo.  Here, she explores the bookstore, section by section, as she also discusses the tangles with bureaucracy,  the people who worked there, running a business and her own personal life.  I have read bookseller chronicles from the UK and US but never from Egypt.  I was fortunate enough to receive a digital and audio version via NetGalley.  I liked listening to the narrator of the audio version and preferred to listen to this one.  

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Interesting New Fantasy Series

The Girl Who Belonged to the Sea: the Azantian Trilogy, Book 1 by Katherine Quinn
3.5 stars

Margrete is kidnapped on her wedding day by an attractive, non human, pirate and is whisked away to a mythical island where she learns that there are magical forces within her world and within herself.  It has been a while that I have been as into a fantasy read.  I really like the story and the world.  At times it veered a little into being overly dramatic but I enjoyed the interactions between all of the characters.  I think this is listed as Teen and YA but it is fairly explicit with its love scenes so it felt more New Adult.  I thought this an interesting first book so I will definitely check out the next in the series.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Friday, September 24, 2021

Sweet Historical Romance

The Brightest Star in Paris by Diana Biller
Publication Date - October 12, 2021
4 stars

An American Civil War veteran and a Parisian ballet dancer have a brief romance before he returns home and she is thrown into a violent city.  Over a decade later, Ben returns to Paris and seeks out Amelie but the trauma of what she has endured makes her defensive and cautious.  This is a sweet romance with fantastic side characters and a lot of heart.  There is an additional element to this book that I won't spoil because if I had known in advance I might not have read it, and it ended up being my favorite part of the book.  This is a great fall and winter read.  Received through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Land Destroyed

Damnation Spring by Ash Davidson
4.5 stars

I was in the mood for a meaty story and that is exactly what I got with this book.  It centers around a logging community in the seventies as they desperately try to hold on to their way of life while grappling with environmental destruction, chemical poisoning and small town mindset.  The characters in this book are complicated and the plot constantly contains an eerie sense of foreboding.  The setting becomes a character on its own and the descriptions of big tree forests are beautiful and make me feel as if I know this place in which I have never visited.  As with any book, there are flaws but overall this was a satisfying reading experience.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Friday, September 17, 2021

A Walk in Strange Lands

Outlandish by Nick Hunt
Publication Date - October 26, 2021
3.5 stars

The author visits areas within easy distance of his home that are other worldly and don't seem to belong to the locale.  An arctic tundra in Scotland, a desert in Spain and more are the places he walks through.  This is nature writing at it's best, however, you do need to be in the mood for it and unfortunately I wasn't at the time.  I did enjoy his assertion that climate change makes it less desirable to take planes to visit far away areas when you can enjoy the extreme closer to home.  The writing is beautiful if a bit too detailed in parts.  If you are in the mood for a slow, picturesque examination of geography then this is a great book to dive into.  I received a digital ARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Preparing for the Apocalypse

The Next Apocalypse by Chris Begley
Publication Date - November 16, 2021
4 stars

The author is an archaeologist and instructor of survival classes who uses his expertise in both to discuss the future apocalypse, what it will look like and how we can prepare.  From the very beginning, Begley insists that any sort of societal collapse isn't going to happen overnight and might even take hundreds of years and we won't know that we are in the stages of an apocalypse until we are looking back in hindsight.  And we will look back, because by studying past events, he asserts that there will be survivors. They will survive, not by owning bunkers, firearms and individualistic attitudes but by living in a community and adapting to the new world. This felt to me like a realistic take on how apocalypses happened in the past and how they might happen in the future.  At times, this book became very repetitive and even for a short book, I think it could have been cleaned up a bit.  It is also very critical of far-right politices so may not be for everyone, however, I really appreciated the tone and the message that it conveyed.  I received this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.     


Monday, September 13, 2021

Search for the Third Pole

The Hunt for Mount Everest by Craig Storti
Publication Date - October 5, 2021
4 stars

I have read so many (so many) books about attempts to climb Mount Everest but this book actually delves into the fact that they had to find the tallest mountain before they could climb it.  While surveyors could see the high peak and assume that it may be the world's tallest, they couldn't actually get to it because the countries it borders, Tibet and Nepal, were closed to foreigners.  This book details the politics of the region, the early expeditions to survey and climb the Himalayas and the interesting characters involved in the process.  This ends at the end of the 1921 Mallory expedition which means that it covers the history that I have never read about before. Overall this was an incredibly interesting read.  I received a digital ARC through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Graphic Novel Fun

Oddball (Sarah’s Scribbles #4) by Sarah Andersen
Publication Date - November 30, 2021
4 stars

I enjoy the “Sarah’s Scribbles” graphic novels.  They are quick to read and always incredibly relatable.  These books are a lot easier to read digitally, too, than many other graphic novels because the pages usually have just four boxes.  I received this book through Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.


Monday, August 16, 2021

New Releases - August 17, 2021

The Merchant and the Rogue by Sarah M. Eden 
4 stars













This is a sweet (clean) historical romance with not a duke, earl or lady in it.  Vera runs a printer shop with her father and Brogan is the author of a popular penny dreadful series that is sold in the shop.  Brogan also works undercover for a secret “do-folder” society and goes to work at Vera’s shop for a case.  Included are excerpt from the fictional penny dreadful (which I didn’t actually read and I’m not sure if that makes a difference).  I really enjoyed this book a may check out the rest in the series.  I received this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.





Monday, August 2, 2021

New Releases - August 3, 2021

The Ambassador: Joseph P. Kennedy at the Court of St. James's 1938-1940
by Susan Ronald
4 stars









I have always been fascinated by Joseph Kennedy, mostly because of the great triumphs and tragedies of his children.  This book mostly just covers his time as Ambassador to Britain during the important years leading up to World War II.  He wasn't really a great fit for an ambassadorship and made many gaffes during his time in the position.  It is an interesting time in Europe and I think this book captured the maneuverings of the people in power at the time.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Teen Girl in the Nineties Loves the Beatles - It could be my auto biography!

Nowhere Girl by Magali Le Huche
4 stars

A teenage girl growing up in France in the nineties is dealing with severe school anxiety and learns to deal with it by immersing herself in the world and music of the Beatles.  I could definitely relate to this, I also was teenager in the nineties dealing with (a milder) anxiety and an obsession with the Beatles.  I loved the art in this graphic novel which went from detailed to abstract, black and white to very colorful.  The font was somewhat hard to read at times, but that in no way distracted from my enjoyment.  I received a digital ARC through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, July 12, 2021

New Releases - July 13, 2021

It Happened One Summer by Tessa Bailey
4 stars 

I don't usually read and review book so early (this doesn't come out until mid-summer 2021!) but I really just needed a book like this so I cheated on my own rules.  Piper is a rich,  beautiful influencer who is living a rather vapid life when she is dumped by her longest relationship (3 weeks) who had some very harsh words for her.  In retaliation she throws a big, illegal party and gets sent to a small fishing village to run her deceased father's bar.  Of course, she meets a man, Brendan, right off the bat.  This is a story of opposites attracting but I really enjoyed the story of Piper finding out there's more to herself than she ever realized.  Piper is really funny and I loved her character and found the romance charming.  I think this will probably be a big release and I don't regret finishing it way early.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.



Monday, July 5, 2021

New Releases - July 6, 2021

Books Promiscuously Read: Reading as a Way of Life by Heather Cass White
3 stars



I adore books about reading and normally manage to pick up any new releases on the subject.  I was especially excited about this book due to the intriguing title.  I just really couldn't get into it though.  I think I was expecting something more personal, which means that I probably should have read the description of it more closely.  This is fairly dry and very academic, which is sometimes very useful, but just not what I was in the mood for at the moment.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic by Jessica Hopper
4.5 stars





I love works of non-fiction in which the author's passion for the subject is so apparent.  This (re-issued) collection of essays and articles by music critic, Jessica Hopper, is so infused with passion for the music that it is infectious.  A lot of the time, I didn't even know of the musicians that were discussed but it didn't matter one bit.  She discusses super stars and local legends, feminism in rock and artist making their way.  This is one of the best collections of music writing that I have read.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  




Monday, June 28, 2021

New Releases - June 29, 2021

To Sir, with Love by Lauren Layne
3.5 stars


This book contemporary romance is a cute take on You've Got Mail with likable main and side characters.  I found myself wishing that we had some chapters from Sebastian's point of view, or at least maybe more scenes with him, because while he was perfectly nice, I don't feel like he is very well fleshed out.  Overall, this is a fun read, though.  I am appreciative to NetGalley and Gallery books for a complimentary digital ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review. 


A Duke in Time (The Widow Rules #1) by Janna MacGregor

3 stars
















Kat is a widow with a secret past and Christian is a duke with a scandalous family history, they meet under unusual circumstances and form an unmistakable bond.  I enjoyed this historical romance and found the main characters sweet.  There wasn't a lot of slow burn to the relationship, which I prefer, but instead just a sweet story of two people who need love.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, June 14, 2021

New Releases - June 15, 2021

She Memes Well: Essays by Quinta Brunson
4 stars













I had never heard of the author before I picked up this book (I'm probably too old to know internet sensations) so I wasn't sure what to expect.  Quinta Brunson is a comedian who is best known for her internet content such as memes, Instagram stories and BuzzFeed videos.  This is a collection of essays about her life which are both funny and incredibly charming.  I was thoroughly entertained the entire time reading this book.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  



Monday, May 31, 2021

New Releases - June 1, 2021

The 2000s Made Me Gay: Essays on Pop Culture by Grace Perry
3.5 stars
 













I adore books on pop culture, they are always entertaining and cause lots of nostalgia.  While I am a decade older than this author, it just means that I watched a lot of these shows at a later age.  Intermingled with discussions of pop culture are stories from her own gay experience.  I thought this was a good exploration of how these moments in entertainment history affected her life.  At times, it was a bit repetitive but overall an entertaining read.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 





After the Fall: Being American in the World We Made by Ben Rhodes
4 stars















What happens when the world's super power falls from grace.  What happens to all of its influence and past international actions?  This book examines the United States in the years leading up to Donald Trump's election and what the meant for the country and what that means for the world.  Using a parallel example of Hungary and the descent into authoritarianism that eerily mirrors occurrences in the U.S., this somewhat depressing book takes a hard look at the geopolitical situation.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 




Monday, May 24, 2021

New Releases - May 25, 2021

The Day the World Stops Shopping:  How Ending Consumerism Saves the Environment and Ourselves
by J.B. Mackinnon
4 stars


When lockdowns happened in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic, a curious thing happened, cities that were covered in smog noticed clearer air.  It is no secret that the level of consumption that occurs in the world today cannot possibly continue.  There are only so many resources and there is only so much space for the amount of waste this level of consumption requires.  This book examines what it would mean if, as a whole, the world consumed much less than it does.  What would happen to the environment and how would the economy adapt.  It looks at case examples of countries that were forced to consume less due to recessions and at businesses that are making sustainability a cause.  This book had some interesting ideas but also showcased just how overwhelming the problem actually is.  At times a bit repetitive but overall this is an enlightening book.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

 

Monday, May 17, 2021

Historical Romance - Summer Review

The Bachelor Bargain by Maddison Michaels
4 stars


I can usually tell if I am going to like a historical romance novel within the first couple of chapters.  This one, I wasn't quite sure until a little later on as it moves fairly quickly in the beginning.  I came to really like the main characters, though, especially Livvie.  Lady Olivia is considered a "spinster" at the age of twenty-five and has used a cane for her limp since childhood.  Sebastian is the uber successful bastard of nobility whose rough childhood has made him ruthless and violent.  They connect when Livvie approached him about funding a gossip sheet she and her friends want to print in order to find another friend's killer.  I enjoyed this story and the relationship between the two main characters.  I will say that hero's with a rough past is a trope, but this is somewhat taken to an extreme.  Sebastian has had a very violent past, and it is given in detail.  The author's trigger warning page at the beginning should be read if you have concerns.  I'm very interested in seeing what this series does next, as several interesting side characters were introduced.  I received an electronic ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  


The Devil and the Heiress by Harper St. George
3 stars









Most historical romance series can be picked up in any order without taking too much away from the story or the enjoyment.  I wonder if that is just not the case with this one.  I decided not to read the first book in this series, and I felt as if I spend more time catching up on the plot and felt less connected to the characters.  The author described her characters as being one way without really demonstrating it on the pages, so maybe the first book set up these characters personalities more.  I did like the plot tremendously, and liked the evolution of Christian's feelings for Violet over the course of their journey.  People who read this series in order may end up liking it more than I did. I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


The Extraordinary Lord by Anna Harrington
4 stars


Veronica lives a rough life with criminals in the back alleys of London and she has a secret past that she keeps well hidden.  Merritt is a barrister and newly minted Baron who hunts the night for criminals in order to banish his past demons.  Sparks fly between the two but is there a future between and upright barrister and an woman who escaped from prison.  This book has so many elements that I love.  The heroine is tough and independent and not an innocent.  The hero is a bit damaged but definitely intrigued by this interesting woman.  I really enjoyed this book and these two characters.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



New Releases - May 18, 2021

Unsettled Ground by Claire Fuller
4.5 stars


Jeanie and her twin brother, Julius, are in their fifties and still living with their mother in the dilapidated cottage in which they grew up.  When their mother dies early in the book, the twins are left in a tailspin as they attempt to piece together their mother's strange decisions in her final months.  Claire Fuller has become one of my favorite authors.  Her characters are always kind of strange but completely alive on the page, and Jeannie may be one of my favorites.  Her life is such a constant struggle but she remains full of pride and fights for every small scrap that she gets.  This is a beautifully written novel, and one that will stick with me.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


Monday, May 10, 2021

New Releases - May 11, 2021

Katherine Parr, the Sixth Wife by Alison Weir
3.5 stars





I found this entire series to be a comfort read.  They are long, easy to read and gossipy accounts of the six wives of Henry VIII written by a historian very familiar with the time period.  I liked this one mostly because out of all the queens, Katherine Parr seemed the one with the most common sense in her relationship to the king and other royals and Weir does a good job of bringing his last queen to life.  Many thanks to NetGalley and Random House Publishing for a complimentary digital ARC.  


brat: an 80's story by Andrew McCarthy
4 stars







The brat pack movies were about a decade before my time so I don't quite have the nostalgia for them that some people do, but I still found this book completely entertaining and absorbing.  Andrew McCarthy is a good writer and his self awareness of his detachment from the people and the scene of the eighties is interesting to read about.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  


Heartwood: the Art of Living with the End in Mind by Barbara Becker
4.5 stars










In 2019, we lost three close family members to tragic deaths.  Following closely behind that year, of course, was the beginning of the pandemic and it felt like death was greatly on my mind.  This book was a therapeutic read.  The author talks about her own losses along with her time volunteering on the Hospice floor of a hospital.  She discusses different philosophy and beliefs on dying and coming to accept that all life ends in death.  This was written in a peaceful and soft way (I don't know how else to describe it) and reinforces the notion that everyone will die, and it is our acceptance of that fact that makes life and love all that much more worthwhile. I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


Word for Word: A Writer's Life by Laurie Lisle
4 stars










The best memoirs are written by those old enough to be able to thoughtfully look back and examine their life.  Laurie Lisle is a distinguished writer in her seventies who explores the writing life of her earlier years and what it means to be a writer when married or when considering whether or not to have children.  This is a beautifully written, if slow, book about writing biographies and memoir and the ways her life has evolved in order to embrace the writing life.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  


New Girl in Little Cove by Damhnait Monaghan
4 stars










Rachel went through several bad events that caused her to leave Toronto and accept a teaching position in a small village Newfoundland.  This book is filled with lovely and unforgettable characters and lots of pure coziness.  It also sent me down a rabbit hole of pictures and information about Newfoundland, its history, its dialect and its beautiful setting.  This book was a fantastic escape.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


The Plot by Jean Hanff Korelitz
3.5 stars









Jake is a writer with one quasi-successful book and a career in a downward trajectory.  While teaching at a low-residency MFA program in Vermont, he meets with a student who has the plot for a book that seems like a certain bestseller.  When that student dies, Jake decides to use the plot for a book of his own that sets off a chain of events that spurs the action forward.  I did guess the ending (in a way) but that didn't take away from book as I was curious how it would all play out.  Jake is not the most endearing main character, but his actions did make for an entertaining read.  I'm not a huge fan of thriller's but I did enjoy this one.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, May 3, 2021

New Releases - May 4, 2021

The Secret to Superhuman Strength by Alison Bechdel
5 stars















I have enjoyed all of Bechdel's work but I don't think that I have connected to it as much as I connected to this.  She chronicles her relationship to exercise, the outdoors and transcendentalism throughout the years of her life.  How it has helped with anxiety, created an escape or made her feel close to superhuman.  But it is not just about exercising, it is about figuring out what works to get through this life successfully or sometime not so successfully.  Bechdel is two decades older than me but I related to so much of what she relayed here and found it to be a useful blueprint for the future.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



Great Circle by Maggie Shipstead
4.5 stars















I haven't read any of Maggie Shipstead's other books but in looking over the reader review,  I noticed that several said that her stories could easily be 200 pages longer in order to add depth.  Well, in what may be her magnum opus, she has written an epic story of over 600 pages.  Marion Graves is a twin, woman pilot, survivor and definitely her own woman born in the years of World War I.  She is such a fully fleshed out character that I feel that I know her down to her bones.  There are other perspectives in this book as well, including Marion's twin brother, Jamie, but it is Marion who comes to life on the page.  This book also has a current day timeline, narrated by the young actress who is playing Marion in a movie about her life.  I was torn about these sections, while it does add to the historical mystery of Marion's life, Hadley herself is a sometimes grating character.  I look forward to when more people are talking about this book in the month to come.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  




The Nine: The True Story of A Band of Women Who Survived the Worst of Nazi Germany
by Gwen Strauss
4 stars


















This is a well written account of nine European women who were part of the resistance during World War II.  Mostly following their time in concentration camps and a daring escape, it is a good addition to the nonfiction works about the war.  For some reason, I had trouble keeping the women and the individual backstories straight but that didn’t seem to distract from the reading experience.  Many thanks to NetGalley and St’Martin’s Press for a complimentary digital ARC of this book.




The Bookshop of Second Chances by Jackie Fraser
Publication Date - May 4, 2021
4 stars

Thea's husband destroyed their marriage by having an affair with one of her friends.  Bereft and at a loss, her sudden inheritance of her great uncle's stately home has her fleeing to Scotland.  A trip that is supposed to be temporary turns more permanent as she makes new friends and finds a job at a used bookstore owned by a grumpy ex-aristocrat.  I loved Thea and found her funny and full of common sense.  She deserved to have a happy ending and while Edward didn't seem very worthy at times, I ended up rooting for them in the end.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
3.5 stars




When Andy Weir's first book, the Martian, came out, I inhaled it.  I literally sat down one evening and did not stop reading until it was done.  Since then, I have eagerly picked up his books wanting the same experience, which may or may not be fair.  This book definitely came closer.  Ryland Grace is a scientist whose controversial work cause him to leave academia and become a middle school science teacher.  When an alien organism arrives in the solar system to drain energy from the sun, he is recruited to help solve the problem.  As a result, he is thrust into a coma for a long term space mission that leaves him with amnesia when he wakes up.  As he attempts to recover his memory and save humanity, he also deals with alien beings and catastrophic space emergencies that put his science to the test.  This was a fun book with lots of science and an amazing friendship.  At times, the science was way too detailed (an honestly, just way too skimmable)  but I enjoyed it enough to keep picking up Weir's books in the future.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  




Monday, April 26, 2021

New Releases - April 27, 2021

The Life She Wished to Live: a Biography of Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Author of the Yearling
by Ann McCutchan
4 stars













Marjorie Kinnan Rowlings is the author of the Pulitzer Prize winning The Yearling.  That book and her others are mostly based in the northern Florida scrub and swamps in which she made her home.  Her life and work was centered around her adopted home and much of this book discusses her time there.  She was an entertaining correspondent and this biography relies heavily on her letters to family, friends, other authors and especially her editor, the renowned, Max Perkins of Scribner.  This is a comprehensive biography that does a good job of grappling with the more unsavory parts of her personality, fueled by a reliance on alcohol, as well as her evolving yet still problematic, depictions of her Black neighbors and employees.    It's been a long time since I have read her seminal novel, but I still really enjoyed this extensive glimpse of her life.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  




The Killer of the Princes in the Tower: A New Suspect Revealed by M.J. Trow
Publication Date - April 30, 2021
3.5 stars













This book takes a forensic look at the mysterious disappearance of the two child princes (Edward V and Richard) from the Tower of London in the fifteenth century.  The history is fascinating and the author does a good job of laying out all of the facts.   The case against the murderers being Richard III or Henry VII is also convincing and believable and my favorite part of the book is when all of the possible suspects are described and then eliminated.  I'm not sure that there is a convincing case presented against the person the author believes is responsible and it felt a bit like a huge stretch, but we'll never really know so it is possible, I guess.  Overall this is a fun look at an extremely cold case.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  



All You Need is Ears: the Inside Personal Story of the Genius Who Created the Beatles
by George Martin
3 stars















I have read most that has been written about the Beatles, so it is surprising that I did not know about this autobiography written by Sir George Martin himself.  My reading experience of this book was definitely uneven.  The chapters concerning his work with the Beatles were fascinating, and an perspective of the Beatles that I have not read.  Those chapters alternate, though, with extremely technical writing about the creation of records in the 1960's, his negotiation of contracts and his work with other artists.  I have a feeling that there is an audience that would find this information interesting,  but alas, I probably am not that audience.  I definitely don't regret reading it, if only for the new Beatles insight, but this may not be for everyone.  I received a digital ARC of this reprint from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Monday, April 19, 2021

New Releases - April 20, 2021

The Last Bookshop in London by Madeline Martin
5 stars













I adored this book and it was the perfect balm for unpredictable times.  It is about Grace who is young woman who is braver than she thinks.  It is about war and the importance of literature and about found families.  It is heartbreaking and a little bit sappy and a complete pleasure to read.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



The Next Everest: Surviving the Mountain's Deadliest Day and Finding the Resilience to Climb Again
by Jim Davidson
4 stars













For someone who has never climbed a mountain, I read a ton of mountain climbing memoirs.  It is the surest sign of armchair travel, and a really good one can make you feel the cold winds of mountain peaks.  And this is definitely a good one.  Jim Davidson has been climbing mountain since he was a young man, with the eventual goal of the biggest one.  He finally gets a chance to climb Everest in 2015 but that was the year a tragic and deadly earthquake hit Nepal, killing 19 climbers and many more Nepalis.  He went home sad, shaken and not sure if he would ever go back.  He did go back two years later and did end up reaching the summit.  This book details both expeditions and the whole climbing life.  It also talks about what it means to find that next goal and to persevere past fear and trauma and loss.  I thought this was a fascinating read and probably ranks near the top of the Everest memoirs that I have read.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  



World Travel: an Irreverent Guide by Anthony Bourdain
4 stars

This book was started before Anthony Bourdain's untimely death and his voice is included in the form of introductory narration on each place.  I'm not sure this book could ever be used as a travel guide.  There is not enough information about each place and Bourdain had a fondness for five star accommodations but there are some wonderful recommendations on places to eat.  I read this entirely for the soothing, mouth-watering descriptions of food dishes and Anthony Bourdain's self-deprecating wit.  Something that I was pleasantly surprised comes across in this book.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 




Three Martini Afternoons ad the Ritz: The Rebellion of Sylvia Plath & Anne Sexton
by Gail Crowther
4 stars








Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton were poets at a time when poetry by women, or really any women's work, was not taken seriously.  They both suffered from mental illness and the pressure of being the perfect housewife and mother on top of trying to fulfill their creative line of work made it much worse.  This book reconstructs their brief friendship and the parallels between their lives.  This really consisted of biographies of both writers side by side so if you have already read heftier biographies of these women, this probably won't be anything new.  If, like me, you only have the vaguest outline of their lives then this is a good place to start.  Since this book is about two individuals who struggled with their mental health and ultimately took their own lives, it might be a good idea to be aware of triggers.  I received digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


I Am a Girl from Africa by Elizabeth Nyamayaro
4 stars











Elizabeth grew up in a village in Zimbabwe with her loving grandmother surrounded by family and a close nit community.  When drought comes to the village, she is saved from starvation by a kind woman from the United Nations, which begins her dream of someday working for the U.N. as well.  When the droughts cause the situation to become dire, her grandmother sent her to live with her parents in a suburb of Harare from there she moves around to different situations as she still holds onto her dream of working for the United Nations.  This book alternated between her life growing up, her time trying to make it in London and her experiences and triumphs working for the United Nations and World Bank.  The best parts are her descriptions of Africa which are so lovingly depicted.  This is a beautiful memoir written by a woman who is doing absolutely important work.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  



The Unfit Heiress: The Tragic Life and Scandalous Sterilization of Ann Cooper Hewitt
by Audrey Clare Farley
3.5 stars




Ann Cooper Hewitt was born to a wealthy and successful father and a social climbing mother in the early 1900's.  Her life should have been cushioned and easy but her devoted father died early and her mother was horrible, neglectful, abusive and later had her daughter incorrectly deemed mentally unfit and sterilized in order to take her inheritance.  I had never heard this story and it is crazy and very sad.  What I found most unsettling were the chapters on other (from lower classes and different races) women who were also forced into sterilizations by doctors who believed they shouldn't reproduce.  It all started with eugenics and racism and it is a horrible, horrible chapter of our history.  In the author's note, she admits to "creative nonfiction" in order to recreate some of the more personal scenes, which I understand but am also not personally a fan.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  



Why She Wrote: A Graphic History of the Lives, Inspiration, and Influence Behind the Pens of Classic Women Writers by Hannah K. Chapman and Lauren Burke, Illustrated by Kaley Bales
4.5 stars




I absolutely adored this graphic novel introducing the lives of classic women author's and the why's and how's of their writing life.  Each biographical section begins with a one to two page introduction and the a multi-page snapshot from their lives in graphic form.  It was so interesting that I read it in one day, and now have a list of books to add to my TBR.  The artwork is beautiful and the colors arresting.  My only (small) quibble is that the font used for the speech bubbles was a little hard to read, but that could have been just due to the digital copy that I was reading from.  Many thanks to NetGalley and Chronicle Books for a complimentary digital copy. 




Monday, April 12, 2021

New Releases - April 13, 2021

Jackpot: How the Super-Rich Really Live - and How Their Wealth Harms Us All
by Michael Mechanic
3.5 stars













I feel as if this book has two parts.  The first details the lives of the ultra wealthy.  How they earn (or inherit) their money, how they avoid paying fair taxes, how they spend it, how they keep it and how they give it away.  To be honest, I personally find rich people pretty boring so I struggled to get through this part.  The second part, however, talks more about wealth inequity and why it exists and how it is getting worse.  The author does a good job of laying out the issues and I found the information absorbing yet infuriating.  While I wish the book was more focused on the information in the second part, I still found it informative.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  

Monday, April 5, 2021

New Releases - April 6, 2021

The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams 
4.5 stars













This beautiful novel follows one woman who's life revolves around her work on the Oxford English Dictionary.  It is about words, of course, but it is also about love, friendship, the suffrage movement and how the words in the dictionary are not always the words that everyone uses.  I really loved this book and the characters and will be thinking of it for the days to come.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 




The Hard Crowd: Essays 2000-2020
3 stars














I love a good essay collection and was really looking forward to this one.  Overall, though, it was a mixed bag for me.  I liked her essays on social issues and nostalgia but there were a few (especially on art and media) that I would start and then eventually lose interest.  I did enjoy her writing so I think I would like her fiction, which I surprisingly have not read, much more.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Monday, March 29, 2021

New Releases - March 30 2021

Beyond the Sand and Sea:  One Family's Quest for a Country to Call Home by Ty McCormick
4 stars 








Asad's family fled Somalia due to warfare and violence between competing political factions.  They joined a flood of refugees into Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp, where Asad was born.  Growing up in the hard conditions at camp, with little chance of education and no records of a nationality, Asad faced impossible odds for continuing his education but the with the discovery of the camp library and his immersion in novels that demonstrated different kinds of life he developed a perseverance that would eventually take him to a full scholarship to Princeton.  This book is a much needed exploration of the refugee experience, especially during the years of President Trump's evil travel bans.  I thought this a well written and thought out book, but to be completely honest, I would have loved to have rather read Asad's story through his own words, especially since he is a writer himself, having published articles in the New York Times.  I did appreciate the author's chapters towards the end that record his own involvement in Asad's life because while Asad did have determination to face impossible odds, the normal refugee experience makes that nearly impossible without having someone, like the author, to provide a source of support and I think that is an important point to make.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.  


The Final Revival of Opal & Nev by Dawnie Walton
4 stars



Written in the form of a fictional oral history of the musician, Opal Jewel, and her brief partnership with Nev Charles, this novel examines art and race and the career of one woman who never feared to speak up.  This is compared to Daisy Jones and the Six and format-wise, I see why.  This is a much meatier book, though, and in my opinion much better.  The main narrator, who is making the book about Opal and Nev, has her own history with the duo and it adds an interesting dimension.  She is trying to be an objective journalist while still dealing with all this history that she has with Opal.  I also loved the character of Opal.  She is brave, flamboyant and flawed but does try to learn from her mistakes while not apologizing for making them.  The love of music really comes through in the writing and makes it one of the more authentic fiction books that I have read.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



North by Shakespear: A Rogue Scholar's Quest for the Truth Behind the Bard's Work
by Michael Blanding
4 stars


I've always been completely fascinated by the fact that so little is actually know about one of our most famous and well read playwriters.  Besides his birthplace, his wife and children and an approximate date of birth, much is a mystery about the man.  Even, whether or not he even wrote what is attributed to him.  That's the purpose of this book.  The author follows an eccentric researcher who obsessively follows leads that point to a man name Thomas North, who he believes wrote many of Shakespeare's plays before Shakespeare.  I love books about people who have all-consuming, and somewhat unusual, passions.  Dennis McCarthy is dogged and obsessed and really fun to read about.  I'm not sure I am completely convinced but I definitely learned a lot about Shakespeare.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchage for an honest review. 


To the Greatest Heights by Vanessa O'Brien
4 stars










I have read so many books about alpine mountaineering but I believe this is the first written by a woman, which excited me greatly from the very first page.  Vanessa O' Brien was highly successful in the finance sector when 2008 caused the recession and for her to ultimately lose her job.  In her forties and at a loss as to what to do next, she (fairly randomly, to me at least) decides to set a goal to climb Mount Everest...and she does.  This is a chronicle of all of her climbs as she breaks a record for climbing the seven summits faster than any other woman and as the first American woman to summit K2.  Vanessa is INTENSE, and at times that was a little hard to take.  I'm pretty sure that she may be the complete opposite personality of me, however, I too find myself in my forties and a turning point, deciding what to do next and while Everest is not in my cards, I found this book completely inspirational and aspirational for whatever goal I do decide to conquer.  Many thanks to NetGalley and Atria Books for a complimentary digital ARC of this book. 


Elizabeth & Margaret: The Intimate World of the Windsor Sisters by Andrew Morton
4 stars










I just finished all four seasons of The Crown so it was a perfect time to pick up this book.  Andrew Morton has written royal biographies before so is no stranger to the genre.  This tells the story of Queen Elizabeth and her sister, Princess Margaret, and their relationship over their tumultuous lives.  I admired their loyalty to each other, which is an aspect of their lives that Morton focuses his writing.  This is entertaining and a perfect complimentary read for those that want a history alongside the television drama.  I received a digital ARC of this book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.


For the Love of Books: Stories of Literary Lives, Banned Books, Author Feuds, Extraordinary Characters and More by Graham Tarrant
Audio Book 
3.5 stars



To start with, this book is so much fun.  It is just a quick read with short chapters, with random stories and facts about books and authors.  I listened to it in audio-book format, read by Matthew Lloyd Davies.  His deep voice is perfect for the subject matter and he read the short segments smoothly.  The one big issue is that this book includes a LOT of dates, publication dates and dates of author's births and deaths.  I am sure if you were looking over a printed page, it might not seem a big deal but when being read aloud, it felt a little clunky.  I see why the dates are needed, though, so I'm not quite sure what the fix for that would be. That is a small quibble as this was overall an entertaining listening experience.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 



The Dark Side of Alice in Wonderland by Angela Youngman
2 stars









I'm not sure what to make of this book or the point it is trying to make.  It is short but oddly repetitive and I felt like the author was trying to assert that in Victorian times, unclothed portraits of children were more accepted.  Which may be the case, however, she also includes multiple letters from Lewis to parents trying to talk them into less or no clothing for their children, so it must not have been an entirely accepted practice.  I enjoy reading biographies of authors, but this one just wasn't for me.  I received a digital ARC of this book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.