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.