Monday, October 5, 2020

Marilla of Green Gables/ Sarah McCoy


 Marilla of Green Gables/Sarah McCoy


If you are a fan of Anne of Green Gables, like I am, you will want to read anything remotely related to the series. 

This pre-quel story is about Marilla growing up and works its way to probably 15-20 years maybe before Anne with an E enters her life. 

She certainly had her share of tragedy and you can see where both she and her brother Matthew get their strong personalities and sense of purpose. 

The book was well written and author McCoy creates a story that is plausible; we can see Marilla’s later life building before our eyes. 

Enjoy the book, it will add depth to the 

L M Montgomery’s series about Anne.


William Morrow/Harper Collins

Published October 2018

Olive, Again/ Elizabeth Strout

 Olive, Again written by Elizabeth Strout. Again. 

Loved the sequel as much as I loved Olive Kitteridge.  Olive is such a quirky woman, lives in Crosby, Maine. And if you live in Maine, you either know or have met someone like Olive. A no-nonsense, honest as the day is long kind of person. Let’s you know just what she thinks of you. Shakes her head at the things people do. 

I like the way Strout has written these two novels. They bounce around between residents of the town. We learn something about every one of them, the good and the bad things.

And the one common denominator is Olive. And what I take away from these stories is that all of us touch so many lives. So many. Sometimes it helps and sometimes it hurts. Great story, put it on your TBR list!


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

The Known World/ Edward P Jones



I was late on the bandwagon with this one. But it’s never too late to read a good book.  A Pulitzer Prize winner. 

And although when you read the reviews you may think this is a story about a black slave owner named Henry Townsend, the book actually begins and ends with a slave named Moses.

Woven with historical fact, this work of fiction is a raw look into the lives of the 

people of Manchester County, Virginia before the Civil War.  Centered around the Henry Townsend plantation, it delves into the intricacies of being a free black man, owning land and slaves. 

It’s quite a powerful story and you won’t be able to put it down once you start it. 

This book needs to go into every reader’s TBR pile! 

Published by Amistad Books 2003

Monday, July 27, 2020

No, You Shut Up! /Symone D Sanders


Bold, brash, outspoken and smart, Symone Sanders is teaching a new generation to stand up. 
The title is a quote from Sanders after she was told to shut up on national TV. 
If you are struggling with getting your voice heard, this book is the perfect read for you. 
Just look at her credentials: currently a senior advisor on Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign, a juvenile justice advocate, former CNN political commentator and former resident Fellow at two prestigious political schools. And she lives right in the middle of it all, Washington, DC. ‘Nuff said.

No, You Shut Up
Symone D. Sanders
Harper Collins Publishing May 2020


Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Before You Go/Tommy Butler

Before You Go / Tommy Butler

This book is filling my empty space right now...and you will only know what I mean, when you read this book. It has profoundly affected me. I should wait a few days before I write a review because it’s so raw. But here goes...

Elliot was a traveler, not in the global sense but in a cosmic sense. He was always ‘different’ as a child and he recognized it even then. His parents covered for him or refused to acknowledge it, his brother teased him and he had no friends to understand him, except maybe Esther.
After college he goes off to NYC to work as an accountant, not what he had planned. He meets two people in group therapy, and forms a deep bond with both. Kindred spirits.
Elliot goes on to have a life...
You will have to take my word for it that this book is worth reading. It is.
You will see in the photo that my hand is on this book. It’s because I am keeping it on my bookshelf for a while, not passing it on just yet. I know I will re-read it someday.

Harper Collins, publisher
Out in August 2020

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Guide to the Stars/Claire Comstock Gay

I love to read my horoscope and then say to myself “that’s so generic it could be anyone’s horoscope.”
That’s not what Claire Comstick Gay writes in her book Guide to the Stars.
Of course I went right to the Pisces chapter to see what she said about me. And I have to say I saw myself mirrored back from the pages.  Some of the fun horoscope stuff and then some quite serious life affirming stuff. She writes about Fred Rogers being a Pisces and it was so interesting to see the astrology spin on his character. It’s about being human and how we all get through this life.
Each chapter is a Sign of the Zodiac, so you can look at yours right away. After I read mine, I read some family and friends and yes, some exes chapters. Couldn’t resist.
Whether you believe in Astrology or not,  I think you will enjoy this one:)
Harper Collins, Publisher

Friday, May 15, 2020

True Love/Sarah Gerard


True Love/Sarah Gerard
Honestly, I’m surprised I finished this book. Not only finished it but enjoyed it, I think. It grabbed me and wouldn’t let me go!
I was just into the book about 3-4 paragraphs and I realize that what I’m assuming is the main character, Nina, is cheating on her boyfriend. Names of characters start appearing and without even knowing who they are, I can figure out what’s happening...and it happens so many times!
This novel is a crazy ride. Well written because you can feel the craziness.
Poor girl is looking for love, in all the wrong friends, and friends of friends, and their friends, too.
Fast paced, head shaking, heartbreaking...if you are up to it, I recommend it.
Harper Collins Publisher
July 2020

Monogamy/Sue Miller


Annie met Graham and fell for this big, burly, larger than life man. Married him and lived with him for thirty years. He died in his sleep and she was devastated. Until the get together after his funeral, when a woman acquaintance was found crying uncontrollably in Graham’s study.
Right away Annie knew....and then she had to pretend she was grieving... and that was just the beginning.
Great story, great read. Enjoyed it and recommend it.
Harper Collins Publisher/
September 2020

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

All the Light We Cannot See

All the Light We Cannot See
Anthony Doerr

This one. Wow. Pulitzer Prize Winner? Yes, every word of it. Put this on your TBR list, peeps.
So well written...Werner, a young German boy. Marie-Laure, a young, blind French girl. In the middle of WW2 and the French Occupation. So it’s not a light read. But so worthy of reading.
Most of the chapters are short. Some only little more than one page. It jumps between characters, between time, between countries. And towards the end of the book it moves you very quickly through events and the intensity drives you to keep reading.
(For me, way into the next morning)
I’m not going to get into the story, I want you discover this one on your own.

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Fabulous

Fabulous by Lucy-Hughes-Hallett

Love a good book of short stories. It’s the kind of book to carry along with you on a day of errands when you know you will be in line waiting for your turn.
That does not mean the stories are any less meaningful or powerful than chapters in a novel. They can be even more so, packed full of power in fewer words.(remember Brokeback Mountain/Annie Proulx?)
Hughes-Hallett has given us stories of ordinary people, going through extraordinary circumstances. Drawn from fables, bible stories and Roman myths, you may recognize some of them and others you won’t. But truly all interesting reads.
This author has won many awards for her writing.
Published by Harper Collins Jan 2020

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

The Astonishing Life of August March/Aaron Jackson

Fantastical. You will have to believe that a newborn baby boy, thrown into the trash in the dressing room of a grand theater in NYC, can not only survive but thrive. INSIDE the theater. An elderly, spinster seamstress found the baby, decided to keep him for her own but couldn’t bring him home...
Alittle Pippi Longstocking, alittle Crawdad Sings, alittle Benjamin Buttons. Maybe some Garp thrown in.
But I have to tell you, I loved this book.
As I read all the incredible things happening in this kids life, I cheered him on! I wanted him to win, against all the odd and odds. And I believe you will, too. Look for it in bookstores in April.
Harper Collins, publisher
Author Aaron Jackson is a writer and comedian. This is his first novel.

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Everlasting by Katy Simpson Smith

I will say right up front that I liked this book but it’s not an easy read. Historical fiction with a dash of modern philosophy. There are four interesting characters, all from different centuries spanning two thousand years.  A Christian child martyr, a monk on crypt duty, a Medici princess and a modern day biologist. There are common threads that connect them, and I think that was the hardest part reading the book. As I read, my mind searched for hidden meanings and a common anything to bring the story together. It takes awhile, but once you have read a few chapters, you will want to read more!
Each main character has a connection to Rome, a connection to faith and a connection to love in one form or another. And one more connection that I’m not going to mention;)
Author Katy Simpson Smith has a PhD in history and you can tell, details of the time period are authentic and you will feel enlightened on many levels.
I’m not sure I can even explain why I think this is a must read. It’s reading on a higher level...does that make sense?
Author Simpson Smith wrote The Story of Land and Sea, which I also enjoyed.
Look for it in March 2020/ Harper Collins, Publisher

Monday, January 13, 2020

The Lost Diary of M/ Paul Wolfe

So, I read this book over the weekend because I couldn’t put it down! The M in the title is Mary Pinchot Meyer, mistress of JFK, ex-wife of Cord Meyer, CIA.
The author, Paul Wolfe, takes us on a wild ride in this one. It is written as Mary’s hypothetical diary during the time she spent with JFK. Hypothetical, because the CIA found her diary after the assassination and destroyed it. FACT. I had to keep reminding myself that this book was historical FICTION because I absolutely believe this is the way history was made 1960-63. (In the author’s notes, Wolfe reminds us more than once it is fiction)
Great book, well written, fast paced, intriguing and plausible.
Starts out with Mary writing to her friend in Japan, if you are reading this, then I am dead”...then she tells us who did it. Chapters are titled by dates, and as the dates count down, you want to keep reading because you know it’s coming to November 1964. The book ends with Mary P Meyer’s unsolved murder less than a year later.
Can’t say enough, coming to book stores next month, Harper Collins, Publisher...a must read!

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Everything I Know About Love/ Dolly Alderton

When I started this book, after a chapter or two, I almost put it aside. The drunken escapades of a twenty year old...not for me. But I liked the writing style of the author, it was raw and honest. So, I kept reading. Although our life circumstances were very different, I started to feel a connection as Dolly went through her twenties, an emotional connection. To loves and loss, confusion, anxieties, carelessness..it was all right there. The feeling still that I’m a kid on the inside, but my outside is the old lady, is not limited to any one generation.
I heard myself say..oh no Dolly, don’t go down that road again..then I knew I was hooked...glad I stuck with this book.
Look closely at the title. It doesn’t say everything there is to know. It says everything I know by Dolly Alderton. And well worth the read.
*Note: The author is English, so there are references made in the book that you may not get. I was ok with that.
                                           Comes out next month/Harper Collins, Publisher