Books Read in 2021
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Tuesday, October 11, 2022
First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros - The Good Sister; Sally Hepworth
Wednesday, August 31, 2022
A couple catch up reviews - A History of Wild Places; Shea Ernshaw and Dark Matter; Blake Crouch
Wednesday, August 3, 2022
(3) Brief Reviews - The Only Woman in the Room; Marie Benedict - The Measure; Nikki Erlick and Summer Love; Nancy Thayer
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros - The Only Woman in the Room; Marie Benedict
Welcome to First Chapter/Intros, hosted by Yvonne @ Socrates Book Reviews. Each week readers post the first paragraph (or 2) of a book we are reading or plan to read soon.
This is my book club read for this month and it is a real page turner with very few characters. It is Fiction but based on a true story and should make for a good discussion book.
What do you think - read more or pass?
Thursday, June 23, 2022
Book Review - A Long Petal of the Sea; Isabel Allende
Tuesday, May 10, 2022
First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros - The Lost Apothecary; Sarah Penner
Welcome to First Chapter/Intros, hosted by Yvonne @ Socrates Book Reviews. Each week readers post the first paragraph (or 2) of a book we are reading or plan to read soon.
1
NELLA
February 3, 1791
She would come at daybreak--the woman whose letter I held in my hands, the woman whose name I did not yet know.
I knew neither her age nor where she lived. I did not know her rank in society nor the dar things of which she dreamed when night fell. She could be a vicim or a transgressor. A new wife or a vengeful widow. A nursemaid or a courtesan.
But despite all that I did not know, I understood this: that woman knew exactly who she wanted dead.
This is our book group pick for the end of the month and from this intro I am really looking forward to it. It is told in (2) timelines past and present day.
What do you think -- Read more or pass?
Monday, March 21, 2022
Book Reviews: Recitatif; Toni Morrison and The Invisible Life of Addie Larue; V. E. Schwab
Friday, February 25, 2022
Book Review - The Authenticity Project; Clare Pooley
Saturday, January 29, 2022
(2) Book Reviews - The School for Good Mothers; Jessamine Chan and In Five Years; Rebecca Serle
Saturday, October 30, 2021
Book Review - Stay With Me; Ayobami Adebayo
Akin and Yejide are a young professional couple in Nigeria who after four years in remain childless. Akin is pressured by his mother Moomi, to take a second wife who can give them a child. She even has the woman in mind, her name in Funmi. Akin and his wife do not believe in polygamy but after trying fertility specialists, healers as well as some bizarre folklore beliefs still no pregnancy. Of course, it is assumed Yejide is to blame. When Yejide learns about the second wife she feels desperate to get pregnant and, this is where the story gets interesting. I can't say too much more about the storyline without giving spoilers but, this story was decent and had plenty of discussion points.The story covers the periods 1985 - 2008 with a backdrop of political turmoil. The story is told in alternating POVs from the two main characters who were well-developed yet unlikeable in their own ways. The story is heavy in dialogue with a blend of extremely sad moments and laugh out loud scenes as well which was nice as this book could have been a real downer. I liked learning about the Nigerian culture and the value placed on offspring above all else. My book group met to discuss this one this month and most thought it was an interesting read but no one really loved it. Readers who like learning about other cultures should try this one.
I originally tried the audio download from the library but, I found the Nigerian accent a bit too difficult at times so, I switched to the library print copy instead.
Rating - 4/5 stars
Sunday, June 27, 2021
Book Review - Before We Were Yours; Lisa Wingate
TITLE/AUTHOR: Before We Were Yours; Lisa Wingate
PUBLISHER: Ballantine
YEAR PUBLISHED: 2017
GENRE: Fiction / Historical
FORMAT: print / LENGTH: 378 pp
SOURCE: Library
SETTING(s): TN and SC
ONE SENTENCE SUMMARY: A fictionalized account of the Tennessee Children's Home scandal where poor children were rounded up and sold to wealthy families.
BRIEF REVIEW: In 1939 Rill Foss and her four younger siblings lived a poor but happy life aboard a Mississippi River shanty boat. When their pregnant mother went into labor, the parents had to leave unexpectedly, putting twelve year old Rill in charge. Everything changes in the lives of these children when the authorities get involved and the children are found and taken to the children's home. The children are told they will be reunited with their parents but, of course this does not happen.
In the present day, Avery Stafford is a prosecutor in South Carolina and the daughter of a Senator. Born into a wealthy, prominent SC family, her family is helping her plan her wedding. When her father is diagnosed with cancer, Avery comes back to help her father with business and personal matters. It is a chance encounter with May, a woman in a nursing home, a picture that May has in her possession and a bracelet that has Avery wondering if somehow May and her grandmother may have a connection.
The dual story lines alternate with Rill's POV (past) and Avery's story (present) and the possible link to the past as Avery begins her personal investigative work. Rill's story was quite compelling and sad at times. It is through this narrative that we learn the deep dark secrets of the children's home and what children had to endure. Avery's story was quite good as well but, there was an unexpected romantic development added to the story which seemed unnecessary and basically served as a needless filler. There is a lot of abuse and neglect suffered by the children in this story which is hard to read about at times. There were a few parts that left me confused; some people are mentioned and then seen to just disappear without explanation, leaving the reader to speculate what might have happened.
This book was selected for our June Book Group discussion and it lead to a good discussion. Most of us were glad we had a chance to read this one but, that we would not have minded if the cheesy romance sub-plot had been eliminated.
There are lots of articles online about Georgia Tann, the Director of the Tennessee Children's Home, who was responsible for the rounding up of these children and some 5,000 others around that time. Many of these children were adopted out to wealthy families in Hollywood and throughout the US.
RATING: 4/5
Tuesday, June 15, 2021
First Chapter First Paragraph Tuesday Intros - Before We Were Yours; Lisa Wingate
Saturday, March 20, 2021
Book Review - The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek; Kim Michele Richardson
TITLE/AUTHOR: The Book Woman of Troublesome Creek; Kim Michele Richardson
PUBLISHER: Sourcebooks
YEAR PUBLISHED: 2019
GENRE: Fiction / Historical
FORMAT: print /LENGTH: 320 pp.
SOURCE: eBook / Purchased
SETTING(s): Kentucky
ONE SENTENCE SUMMARY: A story about the Pack Horse Librarian Project and the prejudices faced by a strong, brave, Appalachian woman in 1930s Kentucky.
MEMORABLE QUOTES:
"What I wanted most was to be okay as a Blue. I never understood why other people thought my color, any color, needed fixing."
“I liked my sensibility just fine. I liked my freedom a lot—loved the solitude these last seven months had given me—and I lived for the joy of bringing books and reading materials to the hillfolk who were desperate for my visits, the printed word that brought a hopeful world into their dreary lives and dark hollers. It was necessary. And for the first time in my life, I felt necessary.”
Thursday, April 16, 2020
Book Reviews - The Library Book; Susan Orlean and The Girls of Atomic City; Denise Kiernan
SETTING: CA
FORMAT: audio/library
RATING: - 3.5/5
The Library Book was one of the books chosen for a book group read in 2020. One focus of this book was the devastating fire at the LA Public Library (Central Branch) in April of 1986. The fire destroyed the library and its collection and, the rebuilding took more than 8 years. The author highlights the critical role that libraries have played over the years and, she discusses libraries past and present.
The author shares her fond memories of frequent trips to the library as a child with her mother, a tradition she continued with her own child years later. The writing about her personal experiences was wonderful and really resonated with me.
Overall, I was a bit disappointed with this book. I do appreciate all the research that went into this book, however, I thought a lot of it felt unfocused and hard to follow at times. Listening to the audio version was probably not the right decision for this book. I found it especially tedious to listen to the author speak call number after call number (Library Dewey Decimal Classification System) about the types of books destroyed in the fire. As someone who has worked in libraries for about 15 years, I really thought I'd love this book but that was not the case. If you decide to try this one I suggest print over audio.
SETTING: TN
FORMAT: print/library
RATING: - 4.5/5
The Girls of Atomic City is a NF work about the young women who during WWII were hired for a secret mission, (unknowingly aiding to help build and fuel the atomic bomb.)
In 1943 Oakridge, TN was a town that no one had heard of, yet, seemingly overnight, the town grew out of the mountains and farmlands on some 80,000 acres. The US government's heavy recruitment efforts created, jobs, jobs and more jobs in this secret city. Most who were hired were women: chemists, mathematicians, secretaries and custodial staff alike. Those hired were housed on site and given only basic information, just enough to enable them to perform their jobs. Never was it acceptable to talk about their work or they would be removed from the the project and the property.
The book focuses on 9 women and what they experienced during their time working on this top secret mission. At times it was a bit difficult to keep all of the characters straight, the stories were so interesting.
This book was our book group read for March but, we never got to discuss it before the library closed due to the pandemic. This is one of those books that I would have never selected to read on my own but, I was so happy my group selected it. I do think this book would appeal to a variety of readers.