Reading the Bible with Rabbi Jesus by
Lois Tverberg -- I think Amazon recommended this book "how a Jewish
perspective can transform your understanding" based on things I've
looked up in the past, and I put it on my Wishlist and got this book for
Christmas. I enjoyed some chapters very much; "Painting in Hebrew," and
"Greek Brain, Hebrew Brain" and the two or three after that were my
favorites.
Toute Allure: Falling in Love in Rural France
by Karen Wheeler -- I read book one from this lady and enjoyed it more
than I thought I would so I put two more books by her on my Amazon
Wishlist and got this for my birthday. It was interesting to read more
about this Englishwoman's life in a small village in rural France, the
friends she makes, the people she meets, the line dancing she ends up
practicing with folks she meets there, and her life with Biff, the dog,
and dealing with her super-loud Portuguese neighbors.
Smokescreen
by Iris Johansen -- this is a book my mom checked out before the
library closed for covid-19, and I don't think she ended up reading it,
but I did. It was ok, nothing great. Eve agrees to go to Africa in a
ruse to reconstruct skeletons of children who were murdered in a
massacre near the Congo. Once she gets there, the real reason that Jill
and Novak wanted her there is made known. Will she stick around to help
despite the trickery? Not my favorite "thriller." (And, yay, the
library announced on Facebook today (May 6) that they will restart
curbside pickup of books on Monday, May 11!)
The Midwife of Hope River
by Patricia Harman -- finally I read book 1 in this midwife series
because I got this for my birthday; great story introducing us to
Patience Murphy and her background. I enjoy these books!
Tout Soul
by Karen Wheeler -- This book starts with Karen rushing back to her
small village in France to meet up with her boyfriend (introduced in
book 2) only to find things have changed. In this third book which is
"the pursuit of happiness in rural France," we learn more about this
Englishwoman's life as an expat. Fairly entertaining if you like reading
this sort of thing...and since I read books 1 and 2, I'm glad I went
ahead and got this one as well.
My Husband's Wife
by Jane Corry -- I've read a couple books by this author that my
library had, but they didn't have this one so I got it for my birthday.
It was a pretty good story about Lily and Ed in England, and their
neighbor Carla, the 9 year old who struggles in school since she's
different (she's Italian and the kids bully her.) Later in life Carla
comes back into their lives and what a tale that turns out to be. When
the book starts, Lily is headed to prison to represent a convict who is
appealing his sentence (of murdering his girlfriend by pushing her into
scalding bath water when she was drunk.)
Stitches in Time
by Suzanne Woods Fisher -- the library is back open for curbside pick
up and this was a book that was waiting for me from a few weeks ago when
I put it on hold. I accidentally read book 3 before this one, and I
didn't really enjoy book 3 very much because there was stuff that didn't
make sense. I hesitated to read this one, but I actually enjoyed it and
now wish I'd read the books in order. Anyway, this Amish community
helps the local foster children by taking in some older children for a
couple months. I know several foster families so this one was a good
read.
Assad Or We Burn the Country
by Sam Dagher -- "How one family's lust for power destroyed Syria."
This book was recommended by Bridget and her mom, and I got it for my
birthday, started it that day, and finished it today (May 14).
Interesting tale of the Assads and the Syrian conflict in the last few
years, and some of the history of the family as they rose to power. I
wish so much that this book ended with Bashar and Asma's demise. God
willing, one day.
A Long Way From Home by Connie Briscoe -- A story
about enslaved women (mostly) on the James Madison plantation and later
as Susan is sold to another house in Richmond, Virginia. An interesting
story through the eyes of enslaved women.
The Runaway Midwife
by Patricia Harman -- Usually her books take place around the Great
Depression era, and I thought this was part of that series. Instead it's
a modern book about a nurse-midwife who leaves her practice and
disappears onto a small Canadian island and takes on another identity. I
didn't like this book as much as her others, but it was still good.
No Rest For the Dead
by 26 authors -- I ordered this book from the library thinking it was
one of the two Lisa Scottoline books I had left to read. Instead I found
out it's a book by 26 authors each one writing a short chapter or two
in this mystery concerning a lady who some say was wrongly executed 12
years prior. The lead detective is among those thinking an innocent lady
was put to death. An OK story; pretty good, but not the best.
The Rose of Sebastopol
by Katharine McMahon -- Mariella travels to Crimea in search of her
cousin Rosa, who left to nurse British soldiers wounded in the conflict.
A pretty good story.
The Moonshiner's Daughter by
Donna Everhart -- Jessie Sasser's mom died in a moonshine accident when
Jessie was 4. Jessie grows to resent the family business, but she's at
odds with her dad, brother, aunt, uncle, and cousin who all get the good
things "shine" money brings to the family. Pretty good story.
Redhead by the Side of the Road
by Anne Tyler -- this was an easy read which I read in a couple of
hours; it's about the Tech Hermit, Micah Mortimer, who is visited by his
college girlfriend's son and his woman friend faces eviction. Micah is
used to routine and these things disturb his routine. Rather cute,
simple story. Reminds me of similar stories written in recent years
about people on the autism spectrum.
Olive Kitteridge
by Elizabeth Strout -- at first I was confused about this book as it
seemed disjoined, but when I finally read that it was a collection of
short stories, it made a bit more sense. I do like how it portrays Olive
as "ferocious and complicated and kindly and sometimes cruel. In
essence, [she is] a little bit of each of us," according to the author
in the last pages of this book (see author interview, pg. 276).
The Secret Orphan
by Glynis Peters -- this book started out rather well, but fell apart
for me in places. I struggled with Elenor being with her aunt,
housekeeper Victoria and her odd husband "for years" in a couple places
in the book, yet Elenor later was back on her farm fixing to turn 20
when she'd just turned 19 while living with her aunt. Also, I felt like
the end was just the author couldn't figure out how to end things so it
all wrapped up in a few pages. Which is OK, I guess as I was ready for
the book to end. It wasn't a bad book; it just could have been better.
The Other Woman
by Sandie Jones -- Emily is thrilled to meet Adam and within months
they find a flat together. Unfortunately as Emily and Adam plan their
wedding, Adam's mom, Pammie, makes things very difficult. Why does
Pammie dislike Emily so badly? A pretty good thriller.
Olive, Again
by Elizabeth Strout -- another Olive book, and I'm glad I read her
earlier one to see who Olive was. This is like a sequel to her other
book, but written over a decade later. I grew to really like (and
somewhat understand) Olive in the first book, and this book was similar
in style. I also noticed some characters from other books by this author
(the Burgess siblings, Isabelle and Amy) which was kind of neat. One
chapter of this book had me like "eh," and then other chapters had me
crying as a lady struggles with cancer treatments and Olive deals with
getting older and missing folks.
Have You Seen Me
by Kate White - before the library shutdown, I had put a bunch of their
new books on hold online, and this is one of the first from that batch
that finally came through. Several others are still On Order. I picked
up this suspenseful book the other day and decided to read it first
since it's new and others might want to read it. It was a good, fast
read, and I enjoyed the mystery and suspense of it. Ally is shocked to
realize she walked into her old workplace thinking she was back from
vacation or somewhere, but she'd not worked there in five years. Come to
find out, she can't remember a couple days of the last week, and she
wonders what caused her to disassociate with her life: did she have an
argument with her husband? And was that bad enough to cause this? Did
she witness something horrific? Even worse, did she do something
terrible?
1 comment:
Excellent list! I want to read a few of these--sadly, our library has fewer of these than I hoped.
Post a Comment