Showing posts with label contemporary fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label contemporary fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Playing catch-up


I really, really, really need to play catch-up here. I can't believe I've read so many books since I last posted a review! I've read some really good books in that time - as well as a few duds. I read 7 books during the 7 weeks I was away from home (first for my daughter's wedding, then on a celebratory trip to Italy), finished another 11 through the end of 2023. I've already finished 10 books in 2024, with 4 more (yes, crazy) in the works.

You know how it's so overwhelming to catch up once you kind of lose the habit of getting things done. After 7 weeks away, I had a crazy time getting back into the swing of being home. (And wasn't home long due to an out-of-town family emergency less than 2 weeks after my return.) Writing book reviews was near the bottom of my list of things to get done. (But yes, seriously, it was - and is still - on my list. I guess I'll get to tick it off today. Yay!

I don't want to not share the books I've read here so I'm going to list them with the stars I gave them on Goodreads. I'm hoping to write at least one or two lines with my thoughts on each title. Yes, for all 28 books!

1. The Breakaway by Jennifer Weiner ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I really enjoyed this one about a young women learning so much about herself as a leader on a bike trip with some unexpected group members.

2. Recipe for Second Chances by Ali Rosen ⭐️⭐️⭐️ I read this in the days leading up to our departure for Italy because it took place in Italy. It was just okay.

3. The Villa Girls by Nicky Pellegrino ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Another just okay read for me. This novel told a story that came before The Italian Wedding (not sure the order of the books being published). The story was okay. What I did love were the bits of the story that took place in Italy. As usual, Nicky Pellegrino does a great job at evoking the location.

4. City People by Elizabeth Topp ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Seriously, until I looked at the synopsis of this novel, I couldn't remember what it was about. Having said that, it was a good read about a band of mothers experiencing the loss of one of their own. I was able to connect to this story on many levels even though my days of being a mom of young kids is way in the past.

5. Tom Lake by Ann Patchett ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This book seems to have such mixed reviews. People either loved it or hated it. I loved Tom Lake, perhaps it was because I was really able to connect to this story. It's set during the early days of COVID which holds appeal to me and Lara's adult daughters have come home to quarantine. The daughters pass the time by listening to their mom share some stories from her younger life. One of Lara's defining moments in life was starring in the play Our Town. I saw my daughter in a minor role in that play years ago so I had that connection, too. This was a warm, comfortable read.

6. Woke Up Like This by Amy Lea ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I believe this was a free Amazon Prime First Read. Time travel. Two teens time travel to their 30s. I really enjoyed this one.

7. When We Were Enemies by Emily Bleeker ⭐️⭐️⭐️ This is one I really expected to love. It's about a young woman in 1943 Indiana working as a translator at a nearby Italian POW camp. It was simply okay.

8. Never Meant to Meet You by Alli Frank ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This was another free Amazon Prime First Read that I did not expect to really like, but I did. It was a light enough story but one with a lot of substance about marriage, race, and religion. Plus one of the main characters was a kindergarten teacher. 

9. Paper Doll Lina by Robyn Lucas ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Another free Amazon Prime First Read, this one about a woman who has really lost herself in her marriage. It had promise, was enjoyable enough to read, but just okay.

10. Enough by Cassidy Hutchinson ⭐️⭐️⭐️ I listened to Cassidy Hutchinson read the book. I guess I was hoping to learn a little bit more than I did. Since so much of the story is already out there, I learned a few things and was reminded of just how awful the end of the last presidency and January 6th was. Not that I need a lot of reminders.

11. Israel: A Simple Guide to the Most Misunderstood Country on Earth by Noa Tishby ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I had started to read this highly recommended book before our family emergency. My son and I both flew across the country and were both reading Israel and boy did we have a lot to talk about. I learned many new things, I was reminded of many things I'd learned over the years, and I feel a bit better informed about what's going on in the Middle East right now. Whenever I read anything about Israel, I always wonder how accurate the information is. This seems accurate and I understand that Noa Tishby is a Zionist, but it didn't seem to me like she had some hidden agenda. Reading this reaffirmed most of what I'd already believed. There are no easy answers.

12. The Authenticity Project by Clare Pooley ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ The author of this one was the same author as Iona Iverson's Rules for Commuting. There were lots of similarities across the two books, although the premise of each plot was quite different. In The Authenticity Project, Julian Jessop, an older, lonely artist writes the true story about his life and leaves it in a cafe, suggesting that others do the same. Write their truths and pass it along. Six strangers are brought together and form unexpected friendships. I preferred Iona Iverson but this was a pleasant read, too.

13. The Apology Project by Jeanette Escudero ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I had to look at the synopsis of this one to remember the plot of this one. It's about a woman who gets fired when she's not willing to compromise her principles for a big case at her law firm. What next? While she attempts to figure that out, she is encouraged to apologize to people from her past (some who meant something to her, others that really didn't). That became her project. It was "fun" following along.

14. Only the Beautiful by Susan Meissner ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Susan Meissner always writes an interesting novel that isn't quite the kind of historical fiction where you learn a lot about the time period but which is set in a time period that makes the story especially meaningful. In this case, a key character was living through World War II in Austria. The main character, however, was a young woman whose parents worked on a vineyard when they were killed in an accident. The owners of the vineyard agree to care for her until she legally becomes an adult. She becomes pregnant and things fall apart for her after that. 

15. Our Town: A Play in Three Acts by Thornton Wilder ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ After reading Tom Lake, I decided to reread Our Town. Apparently, I wasn't the only person who had the same thought because there was quite a long waitlist to get the play. This is Thornton Wilder's most frequently performed play.

16. One Summer in Savannah by Torah Shelton Harris ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Sara Lancaster has left her home in Savannah, Georgia to protect her daughter, Alana who was born as the result of a rape. When her father becomes ill, she returns to Savannah and has to deal with the ghosts of the past. It's a bittersweet novel about motherhood and moving forward after something terrible. I loved the character of Alana who is exceptionally smart.

17. Shanda: A Memoir of Shame and Secrecy by Letty Cottin Pogrebin ⭐️⭐️⭐️ This memoir was recommended to me by several people. They were all slightly older than I am, and I wonder if that's what made me think this was just okay and not great. This memoir focuses on the secrets that Pogrebin and her family kept because the truth was "a shanda" or a shame or a disgrace (in Yiddish). I was able to identify some of the shandas in the life of family members.

18. The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I listened to this audiobook with my husband on a long car ride and it was perfect. An engaging story that we could both enjoy and the length of the audiobook matched the hours in day one of our road trip spent in the car. Hannah's husband has disappeared. She and her stepdaughter, Bailey, who don't have the greatest relationship, come together to figure out what could have possibly happened to Owen, husband and dad.

19. Looking for Alaska by John Green ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ After finishing one audiobook on day one of our road trip, I knew I wanted to find another "short" audiobook to listen to on day two of the trip. Looking for Alaska has been on my list of banned books to read and it was the perfect length. It's a coming of age story that takes place at a boarding school. At the end of the story (which coincided with us leaving the highway and just having the local roads to get us home - further than you'd think unless you, too, live in a rural area - my husband and I looked at each other and said, "How important is a book like this for a kid experiencing even a part of what was experienced by the characters in this novel. How wrong that a book like this is banned!"

20. The Surgeon's Daughter by Audrey Blake ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ My first finish for 2024 is the sequel to The Girl in His Shadow which I read as part of a Big Library Read in June 2022. While I gave both novels 4 stars, I much preferred The Girl in His Shadow to The Surgeon's Daughter. Both novels made me really think about what it would have been like to be a women with a brain and with some amibition in the 19th century. (I liked that Nora attended med school in Italy, of course!)

21. Must Love Flowers by Debbie Macomber ⭐️⭐️⭐️ We came home from our road trip to NY and my husband had COVID. Because I'm a strong believer in public health, that meant that I isolated unless I really needed to get out and do something (always wearing a well-fitted, high quality mask). It meant I had a lot of time for reading. I decided I wanted something light so looked for something new by Debbie Macomber. It fit the bill perfectly. It was a story about a young woman and an older woman coming together for convenience and helping each other move on to the next stages of their lives.

22. The Air Raid Book Club by Annie Lyons ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This novel by the same author as The Brilliant Life of Eudora Honeysett took a different spin on the kindertransport program during WWII. Hedy is a refugee from Germany. She's an older teen who goes to England unhappy to be parted from her parents and brother. She's taken in by Gertie is contemplating selling the bookstore that she owned with her recently deceased husband. The book club was really a very minor part of the novel. I think if there had been a little bit more focus on the book club, this could have been a 5-⭐️ read for me.

23. The Little Liar by Mitch Albom ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Lots of chatter about The Little Liar on many of the book websites and Facebook groups that I follow. "Truth" is the narrator of the story which at times felt a little contrived, but it worked. The main character of the story, Nico, is 11-years old when the story begins. He never lies. Ever. Until... the Nazis invade Salonika, Greece to deport the Jews.That's when lying becomes a method of self-preservation and eventually redemption. I'd previously had no knowledge of the vibrant Jewish community in Salonika (Thessalonika) prior to reading this book. 

24. The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry by Gabrielle Zevin ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Here's another novel by the author of Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow. A.J. Fikry owns a book store that he'd started with his recently deceased wife. (Didn't I just write something similar for The Air Raid Book Club??) A.J. is still a young man, but he becomes a recluse and has difficulty figuring out what might be next for him. He becomes a recluse. Then he finds a package left behind at the bookstore which sets about a whole new life for A.J. and those in his rather limited circle.

25. The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride ⭐️⭐️⭐️ The premise of this story is that a skeleton is found in Pennsylvania in the neighborhood of Chicken Hill where years ago Jews and African Americans lived side-by-side. Chona runs the Heaven & Earth Grocery Store that was started by her father. The story was interesting, but it dragged on in many parts and I often had a hard time following things as there were so many characters who, to me, weren't all that distinct. Lots of readers have loved this one but it kind of fell flat with me.

26. Nora Goes Off Script by Annabel Monaghan ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I loved this book, most probably because I also love Hallmark movies. Nora writes screen plays for The Romance Channel (I see you, Hallmark!) and when she writes something more substantial, more or less the story of her marriage falling apart, it gets picked up to be a major motion picture. Then Nora is living in her own Hallmark movie. If you love Hallmark movies, you'll love this book.

27. Tales From The Cafe: A Novel by Toshikazu Kawaguchi ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This is book 2 in the Before the Coffee Gets Cold series. Visitors to a small cafe in Tokyo are able to time travel, but there are several rules they must obey. And they must finish their coffee before it gets cold. In this installment, 4 patrons get to time travel to come to terms with the past and move on to the future. I think I liked the creativity of the first book a little better, but this was enjoyable, too. And I plan to read the next two books in the series as well.

28. No Visible Bruises: What We Don't Know About Domestic Violence Can Kill Us ⭐️⭐️⭐️ I only read this because this was a title my community book club selected. It was a difficult book to read because the subject matter is so difficult. I wish it touched upon spousal abuse in wealthier couples because I have a friend who experienced that and I was hoping I'd getting some insight into her experiences. As tough as it was to get through the book, we did have a great book club discussion.

29. Unorthodox Love by Heidi Sherlock ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Penina is an Orthodox Jewish woman who longs for love and marriage but is not what any Orthodox man would want as she is unable to have babies. At 29, Penina's life is all about going to work and then doing for others in her free time. She's the family fixer and she volunteers at a NICU at a local hospital. Life becomes more interesting when she's set up with a gay Orthodox Jew who would like a fake marriage to please his mother before she dies... and her boss takes a medical leave and his son comes in to run the show. Penina has a smart mouth which I enjoyed. A very pleasant book to read, especially after No Visible Bruises.

And now I'm caught up! Whew! I'm listening to two books and reading two e-books. Hoping to review each book as I finish it.


Friday, April 21, 2017

The Nest

Should I apologize to my community book club right now? I selected The Nest by Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney to be our May book club title. I'm wondering how my fellow book club members will feel about this book? 

When I first finished reading this debut novel this afternoon, my first inclination was to give it 4 stars. I mean, it kind of held my attention and it took place in New York City and it was a quick read. Then I realized those aren't reasons to give a book 4 stars.

The book was published with great acclaim. A terrific debut novel about a dysfunctional New York family. (Don't people from outside of NYC think that most families in New York are dysfunctional? Okay... don't answer that.)

The more I thought about the book, the more I reconsidered my 4 stars rating. Within an hour, I'd revised my rating down to 3 stars.

What did I like about the book? Well, yes, I loved that it took place in New York City with a lot of the story taking place in Brooklyn. Brooklyn is hot. Why shouldn't a new book take place there?

What else did I like? I liked the language that Ms. Sweeney used. She did a great job painting pictures with her words. Her descriptions of places allowed me to picture them in my mind. Her descriptions of people, not so much so.

I also liked the way she juggled plots and subplots. At first I found it overwhelming to keep all the stories and interactions straight. But once I was able to do that, I really did marvel at how many balls she had in the air at the same time. There was the main sibling story, the different relationship stories - old lovers, gay lovers, sisters, business partners... just to name a few. As each story ball was thrown into the air, I was jolted a bit, surprised... like... wow... another subplot. For me, that worked.

I also liked the way the author linked the stories of the various characters together. The girl who was involved with The Nest not being what the siblings always planned on it being becomes connected with the tenant in Stephanie's house. Stephanie who was Bea's first literary agent and Leo's current lover. 

I was surprised by a 9-11 related story. Living in the NYC area during 9-11, that story struck a chord with me. I also double-checked. And when the towers collapsed, there really were sculptures by Rodin missing... including The Kiss... which has a pretty prominent role in this novel.

I liked the premise of the book. The splitting up of an inheritance amongst 4 siblings. (I'm still going through the settling of my parents' estates.)

That's what I liked. What didn't I like?

I didn't like the characters. None of them. Not a single one. The Plumb siblings were horrid, each one worse than the next. I don't think a single one of them was anyone that I'd want to know. (And thankfully in real life I don't believe I do know anyone like any of them.) The mother, Francie, who was thrown into the story at random times and seemed truly awful was never mentioned by the siblings. How can that be? Do none of them besides the youngest, Melody, have any inkling that their mother really damaged them?

Even though the father (who left the legacy of The Nest to his children to inherit on the 40th birthday of the youngest child) was a successful businessman, I never got the impression that the family was raised with any great wealth. The Nest wasn't that large (I don't think) when the father first died. But it was invested well and grew to a vast sum in the ensuing years. Then the kids counted their chickens before they hatched. They spent the money they imagined they'd be getting. 

There was a divorced charismatic sibling. There was a gay married sibling. There was a "smart" single sibling. And there was a miserably married sibling. I guess stereotypes work in novels about dysfunctional families.

... and everyone but Leo lived happily ever after. Well, maybe Leo lived happily ever after, too. But the rest of the characters and their relationships ended up tied up in an unrealistic, tidy way. I'm not sure I like that.

At the end of the story when Melody is asked if she likes her daughter Nora's friend, Simone, her answer makes it sound as if she thinks Simone might be okay. As a character, I didn't like Simone. And as a mother, I really wouldn't like her as a friend for my daughter. And not for the reasons you might think. I just didn't like her. And where the heck were her parents?

It's harder to list the things I didn't like about the book without giving away some of the story than I thought it would be.

Would I recommend it? Probably not. But if you like books set in New York City about 40-somethings living beyond their means, you might enjoy this book.


Sunday, January 1, 2017

Top Titles for 2016



My reading goal for 2016 (and that I'll use again for 2017) was to read 36 books. I figured 2 book club books per month (one for each book club) and then an extra book that I could pick up and read based on personal choice. I exceeded my goal by 2 books coming in with 38 books. I didn't stop to count how many books were book club books versus my choice books. In those 38 books were 3 titles from the Outlander series. Those are BIG FAT books. Makes me even more pleased with surpassing my reading goal.

A friend asked me what my favorite books for 2016 had been. I thought perhaps others might be curious as well. I've broken them down into Classics (thank you, Books and Beer Club) and Contemporary. They are listed in no particular order.

Classics

  • The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
  • Persuasion by Jane Austen
  • Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie
  • Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

Contemporary

  • Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult
  • Stones from the River by Ursula Hegi
  • The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennesy by Rachel Joyce
  • In the Unlikely Event by Judy Blume

Thursday, April 14, 2016

The Little Paris Bookshop

This morning, as I was sitting drinking coffee with my iPad standing up in front of me, my husband asked, "What are you doing?"

"Reading."

"I think you'd be happy in this house alone, with 3 rooms full of books."

"I'd miss you some of the time."

I've mentioned before that he's a non-reader. He doesn't get what reading means to me. Okay, maybe I should say, he didn't get what reading means to me... until I read him an excerpt from the Acknowledgements from The Little Paris Bookshop and an excerpt from an interview with the author, Nina George.

I enjoyed the book well enough, but I really enjoyed the Acknowledgements and the interview even more. They wouldn't have stood alone on their own as something to love. But they were the icing on what was an otherwise wordy cake.

From the Acknowledgements:
      P.S. Thanks also to all the booksellers who help the magic to work
 on me. Books help me breathe better - it's that simple.

From the interview with Nina George:
Why has this novel resonated so deeply with readers?
Because it's a story about death and about how much we can be shaped 
by loss, by missing a person. Grieving, or admitting that the loss of a loved 
one has  derailed us, was unfashionable, forbidden for much
 of the past. Also, there is a dedicated community of people
 in the world who will always be able to ocnnect with each
 other across all languages, boundaries, and religions. 
It is the "Readers' Club."
 People who read a lot, starting at a very young age, 
are people who were raised by books. They have learned about
 forms of love and hate, kindness, respect, and ideas
 that are different from their own.
They experience the world as something infinitely larger 
than before. They enjoy the indescribable feeling of having 
found their trust selves...
We readers are book people, and Jean Perdu [the protagonist]is one of us.

The Little Paris Bookshop is about Jean Perdu who likes to call himself the "Literary Apothecary." He knows which book each person is meant to read to cure what ails that particular person. He uses books to cure the ills of the lives of his customers. He can heal everyone else's heart but he is unable to heal his own. He had lost the love of his life 21 years earlier and was unable to move past that loss.

The whole premise of the book, being able to detect what book a specific person should read, reminded me so much of The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh. In that book, Victoria matches specific flowers to specific customers to help them overcome their problems. Meanwhile, she struggles to overcome the earlier hardships of her own life. I guess that's where the similarity ends. I guess that's where the similarity ends.

The "little Paris bookshop" is actually a barge that sits in the Seine. So when Jean Perdu suddenly realizes that he needs to do something concrete to heal his old wounds and start living life again, without much thought, he lifts anchor and off he goes. Joining him on board is a young bestselling author, a one hit wonder, struggling to come up with an encore act. Along the way they meet a lovelorn Italian chef. Traveling towards the south of France by boat, they share experiences as they which may or may not help the trio get their lives figured out.

The novel is billed as "a love letter to books." That's what I was expecting. I thought there would be many more literary references or opportunities to see which books got matched with which personalities and/or problems. Instead, it was really more of a love letter to readers. Which was fine. It just wasn't what I expected. It was also a book about overcoming loss. Loss of a loved one, loss of the family unit, loss due to disappearance, loss due to death. 

Parts of the book dragged a little for me. Perhaps because the book was translated from either German or French, some of the passages came off as being particularly wordy. (What's ironic is that the language reminded me of The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbary. Turns out that Jean Perdu's favorite book is The Elegance of the Hedgehog!) The positive of that type of writing is that the ending wasn't at all rushed. It was somewhat predictable... but then again it wasn't. I had watery eyes a couple of times during my reading, but when books somehow intersect with things the reader is dealing with in real life, that can happen.

I gave this book 3-stars on goodreads.com. I liked it. To whom would I recommend it? Probably to someone who loved The Elegance of the Hedgehog. Or to someone who loves to read books that are more character study driven than plot driver. And to someone who likes to be an armchair traveler to France.





 

Monday, February 22, 2016

Run by Ann Patchett

Run is a novel by Ann Patchett that's about families, missing mothers, missing fathers, adoption, ambition, secrets, race, religion, socio-economics. Those are the big ideas!

Run is a novel where a collision between several families takes place, literally and figuratively. In the literal sense, Doyle and his two adopted sons, Tip and Teddy, have just walked out of a political lecture given by Jesse Jackson. It's a snowy, snowy night in Boston. As Tip and his father get into an argument, Tip feels himself being hit. Tennessee, a single mom, has knocked Tip out of the way of an oncoming SUV. Tip gets superficially injured while Tennessee's injuries are more serious. Kenya, Tennessee's daughter, was the sole witness.

Run is a novel about the 24 hours in the lives of Doyle, Tip, Teddy, Sullivan (Doyle's birth son), Father Sullivan (the boys' great uncle), Tennessee and Kenya subsequent to the accident taking place. I'd rather not tell you more about the novel because I don't want to give anything away. The beauty of this book is in the unpredictable path that the book takes to get to a somewhat predictable conclusion.

What I loved most about this book were the plot twists. Just when you thought you knew exactly where the book was heading, it took a major turn. Patchett started most of the chapters with something a little bit confusing, something that you go, "Hmm, do I need to start reading this chapter again?" I also liked the lyrical flow of words that Ann Patchett has put down on paper.

What didn't impress me that much were the almost caricature roles that each of the characters played. Bernadette was the other worldly mother, even before her death. Doyle was the over-involved father. In today's lingo, he's a true helicopter parent. Sullivan is the "bad" boy. Tip is the overly serious brother. Teddy is the sweet brother. Tennessee is the obsessive character. Kenya is the 11-year old with the maturity of a much older person. Maybe if there had been more character development I would have liked the characters more than I did. Kenya was my favorite character. And I liked whom Sullivan became when he was around Kenya. Some of the behavior of the characters was stereotypical as well. Father Sullivan, Tennessee and Kenya most fell into those molds.

Would I recommend the book? Yes, I think I would. I think I'd recommend more it for book clubs than for individuals to read alone. It's an easy read, a rather simplistic story, but it should provide lots of topics to be discussed at my upcoming book club meeting. (It's on March 8th, if you're wondering.)

After reading Run, I think I need to dig up that copy of Bel Canto that I think I have sitting around here somewhere.

Stay tuned...