Red River Road by Anna Downes -- Katy is in a van looking for her sister Phoebe who was traveling through Western Australia and seemed to have disappeared. She meets Beth who ends up tagging along for the ride and helps her locate her sister. Pretty good story. Deals with the issue of women traveling and how often men or intimate partners make them feel unsafe.
Ace, Marvel, Spy by Jenni L. Walsh -- this is a novel based on the memoir of Alice Marble, a tennis star from the 1930s. Pretty interesting lady!
Written in the Waters by Tara Roberts -- "A Memoir of History, Home, and Belonging;" the author travels with groups to places where slave ships were wrecked. She also went to a few other places like Benin and Togo to find out more about her own heritage. Pretty interesting.
The Business Trip by Jessie Garcia -- Stephanie, a successful lady in theTV industry, is leaving Madison for yet another conference. And she is not happy about it. Just because she's the single lady, she most always has to be the one who travels. Jasmine is fleeing an abusive boyfriend. They meet on the plane to Denver. Their friends and acquaintances back home wonder when neither shows up to their destinations and they receive odd text messages. A pretty good thriller type book!
Melania by Melania Trump (or her ghostwriter?) -- I say that about the authorship because there are no acknowledgments at all. Well there is a page for photo credits at the very end of the book, but the book ends with a letter to the American people after the assassination attempt on her husband's life. I usually enjoy memoirs from immigrants and I put this one on hold several weeks back when I saw it on my library's online catalog. It was just 181 pages of text with a nice chunk of pictures in the middle. I enjoyed seeing Melania's mother, father, and sister as well as Melania as a baby and child up to her modeling days and as a mother and First Lady. My favorite part to read was probably when she took trips as FLOTUS, and her times with children and leaders/partners of other countries. She took a rosary to Pope Francis hoping he would bless it for her (he did.)
She talked about her modeling career as she lived in Milan and Paris before coming to New York City where, of course, she met her future husband. She told how she and Donald bonded over favorite musicians and movies. She told about her Be Best campaign and why she wore that jacket; about the media being out for her family, touched on the impeachment trials with no depth, but just that political enemies were out to get her husband. I didn't realize she had renovated so many areas while living at the White House, but that is something she enjoys doing. She talked of how she sometimes disagrees with her husband on his political stances, but how she discusses these things with him in private. She has a strong pro-choice position regarding abortion. She also thought the FBI raid on her house was like something people in her former Communist country would do. She also discussed her posing nude for some French magazine since those photos were brought up at some point in the last several years. (Europeans are OK with nudity so it's nothing shameful for her to have done. No big deal except to some Americans. Yawn.)
Vera Wong's Unsolicited Advice for Murderers by Jesse Q. Sutanto -- I saw this one on Myrna's blog and decided to read it. Very cute story about Vera who found a dead body in her tea shop. Knowing the murderer often comes back to the scene of the crime, she collects the four strangers who show up outside her tea shop and seeks to solve the mystery - because, of course, the police don't investigate properly in her opinion.She's quite a lady!
The Dressmakers of London by Julia Kelly -- When Isabelle's mom dies, she is shocked to find out her mom left the dress shop to both herself and her sister Sylvia who abandoned them after her marriage to Hugo. Sylvia tries to show that she's changed, and runs the dress shop when Izzie is conscripted into helping England in their fight against the Nazis.
The Lies I Tell by Julie Clark -- Kat is a journalist who has been tracking Meg for years. Meg is a con artist who is finally back where she grew up. She came to settle a score against a man who left her and her mom homeless. Pretty good story.
The Crash by Freida McFadden -- Tegan is eight months pregnant and going to visit her brother at the ski place he works at when she hits a tree during a blizzard. Her ankle is most-certainly broken and she has no idea what to do. A local man Hank helps her, but Tegan gets weird vibes from him and is scared that he'll hurt her. Instead he takes her to his house where his wife Polly, a nurse, helps her. But when Tegan is convinced to stay in the hospital bed IN THE BASEMENT, and then it seems to take forever for their road to be cleared...well, it's just bad times for Tegan.
The Lost Passenger by Frances Quinn -- Elinor grew up as a privileged daughter of a man who made his fortune in cotton, yet she and her dad are surprised when they get an invitation to a ball where "their kind" aren't usually welcomed. There she meets Frederick who quickly sweeps her off her feet. A quick wedding follows and Elinor finds out fast that she was chosen due to her father's fortune. (Those titled folk often need money to keep up the family's crumbling estate afterall.) When Elinor has a chance to travel on the Titanic, she's excited about this adventure and being able to see her father again plus spend time with her little boy. At home he's off with the Nanny for most of the day, and she wants to be a mother to him herself. Yet...we know what happens on the Titanic. Good story!
A Right Worthy Woman by Ruth P. Watson -- A novel about Maggie Lena Walker, "the first Black woman to establish and preside over a bank in the United States, whose actions transformed her community of Jackson Ward into Virginia's Black Wall Street." I admire her determination and hard work!
Love Anthony by Lisa Genova -- Olivia is living alone on Nantucket after a separation from her husband. Their son was diagnosed with autism at age 3, and the doctor asked then about their marriage. An odd question.... then again, maybe not. Meanwhile Beth finds out in a cruel way about her husband's infidelity and tries to figure out what to do. Meanwhile she starts writing a novel about a boy with autism.
The Note by Alafair Burke -- Three friends are on a girls' weekend when a prank goes awry. Next thing they know May, Kelsey, and Lauren are questioned by a lead detective about a wealthy young man who is missing. Yikes!
The Girl from Greenwich Street by Lauren Willig -- This book is a "novel of Hamilton, Burr, and America's First Murder Trial." In it you meet people with names like Brockholst Livingston, Cadwallader Colden, Buthrong Anderson, and the murder victim herself, Elma, short for Gulielma Sands.
Tell Me Lies by Carola Lovering -- This book follows Lucy and Stephen who met when both were in college at Baird. Stephen has a strong hold on Lucy, and this book was rather annoying due to their toxic relationship....whew.
A Map to Paradise by Susan Meissner -- This book follows the story of Melanie Cole who was blacklisted as a Communist simply because she dated a certain actor. Meanwhile Eva, the immigrant who helps at her house, has secrets that could make things worse for Melanie if they are uncovered. And then there are Elwood and June next door. They've seen June several times lately, but where in Elwood?
The Christmas Guest by Peter Swanson -- A novella about a young American student who went to England to study. Ashley was thrilled to be invited to Emma's country estate to spend the Christmas holiday. While there she hears about a murder and how her friend's twin brother is a suspect.
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