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What I'm Reading - Nov & Dec 2019
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Mary Anne
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Nov 04, 2019 07:23AM

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Not Quite Nice – Celia Imrie – 3.5***
In her debut novel, Imrie has given us a sort of “coming of old age” story featuring a group of British expats living in a small town on the French Riviera. I thought it was an enjoyable, fast novel. Perfect for a vacation read. The bad guys get what’s coming to them, and everyone learns a lesson or two. It’s not exactly a happily-ever-after ending, but it gives me hope for the future of these characters. There are two more books in the series (thus far), and I look forward to reading them.
LINK to my review





I've actually been to Spooner! Though I didn't visit the library.



Summer Hours At the Robbers Library – Sue Halpern – 3.5***
Three people running from their past (or present) find the help they need at the library. The novel is told in alternating viewpoints as each of the three central characters reveals his or her back story and experiences in current time. The first time there was a “flashback” it caught me off guard, but I quickly grew used to the style. Halpern gives us a wonderful cast of supporting characters as well. There are moments of humor to balance the heartache and disasters. I’d love a sequel to find out how they cope in the future.
LINK to my review


I Always Loved You – Robin Oliveira – 3***
The subtitle – A Story of Mary Cassatt and Edgar Degas – is all the synopsis anyone needs. This immediately drew my attention as I love art, the Impressionists in particular, and I love reading historical fiction about artists. I had previously been content to merely gaze with astonishment and admiration at the works of art they created. But while I appreciate now having learned all the details of their complicated relationships, and while these period elements added color to the story, the book failed to really move me.
LINK to my review


Having read “How to be less stupid about race” by Crystal Fleming, I realized it’s nice to read a story about an average, middle class, happy family of people-of-color. Although I didn’t enjoy Dr. Fleming’s book, she did make me realize how much I need to read such stories.







Quentins – Maeve Binchy – 3.5***
I came late to the Binchy fan club, but better late than never. I really like her style of every-day drama – the kinds of ups and downs we all experience in life. Many of her books feature the same ensemble cast of characters, but they don’t have to be read in any particular order. This book starts with Ella Brady and her lover Don Richardson, but quickly encompasses Brenda and Patrick who run the upscale restaurant Quentins and all the many patrons and trades people who support it. Reading a Binchy novel is a bit like visiting with old friends.
My full review HERE






Ban This Book – Alan Gratz – 4****
Fourth-grader Amy Anne Ollinger is stunned to discover that her favorite book has been removed from the school library because another student’s parent has complained it’s “inappropriate.” I loved Amy Anne; she starts out a quiet, shy girl who virtually never voices her concerns out loud, but who takes action to right a wrong. Perfect read to celebrate Banned Books Week!
My full review HERE


Clock Dance – Anne Tyler – 3.5***
The novel follows Willa Drake, her hopes, dreams, disappointments and joys – over 5 decades, from 1967 to 2017. I like the way that Tyler explores the everyday drama of life. Not much happens – as far as a plot to carry the reader along – and yet much happens in terms of the character’s life. Willa frustrated me for much of this book. She was so passive that I wanted to shake her. I’m glad that by the end she is finally beginning to assert herself, to look at what SHE wants from life and to dare to try to achieve it.
My full review HERE



That’s a pity. I’d heard good things about the book and this very interesting woman, and it sounds as if you had, too. Moving on. . . !




Ways To Hide In Winter – Sarah St.Vincent – 4****
This is a tightly written, marvelous psychological / political thriller. The characters are skittish, guarded, and yet reveal themselves by their actions. Kathleen and Daniil recognize in one another a certain similarity – both are running from the truth, both profess to need solitude even a way to hide away, and yet both want desperately to confide and reveal their pain and their hopes. This short novel includes some major issues The landscape is practically a character, and adds to the feeling of isolation, loneliness and imminent danger. The reader is kept in suspense to the very end.
My full review HERE








I struggled with The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao in print--the footnotes were just as enchanting as the novel itself, but . . . totally solved by the audio, where they were read as part of the narrative, which completely worked for me.


Love And Ghost Letters – Chantal Acevedo – 3.5*** rounded UP
Acevedo gives us a wonderful exploration of Cuba from 1933 to 1969. Over the course of the novel Acevedo explores love in its many forms: passionate, within marriage or outside of it, as a teenager, during old age, parental and among friends. The upheaval within the relationships is contrasted nicely against the revolutions and political changes in the country during this time frame.
My full review HERE




I really wound up loving it--it felt "complete", if you will.


Both books were quite good. Many readers here on CR recommended M. Obama's audio version, and I understand that it has just won a Grammy. I particularly liked her take on life in the White House, where the First Family is almost trapped, at times.
Saslow's book is based on the transition of Derek Black away from the "family business" of leading the movement of people who hate anyone who isn't white. They are activists in an effort to keep whites in the majority in the US, by whatever means. They run an infamous website called Stormwatch. David Duke is literally the guy's godfather! There were times while reading when the hair on the back of my neck stood up. But definitely worth reading.

Mary Anne wrote: "My library book hold list aligned so that I received Becoming by Michelle Obama and Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a Former White Nationalist by Eli Saslow a..."
I MUST get to The Burgess Boys and Becoming! I've been looking forward to Michelle Obama's book and I've enjoyed everything I've read so far by Elizabeth Strout.
I wish I'd stop adding to my TBR mountain!

Kate Atkinson is one of my favourite authors, and while Transcription isn't my favourite of her books, her trademark fine writing and quirky humour make it fun.


Here are my TBR books that I want to get to immediately.
1. Belgravia
2. Callander Square
3. The Yellow House


Here are my TBR books that I want to get to immediately.
1. [book:Belgravia..."
I enjoyed The Yellow House.

Here are my TBR books that I want to get to immediately.
1. [..."
Oh good. It sounded interesting.



Passing – Nella Larsen – 4****
Larsen was part of the Harlem Renaissance and this book is a marvel of social commentary. In this slim volume Larsen explores issues of black/white identity, of the desire to get ahead and the societal obstacles to that path, of male/female relationships, and female-female rivalries. There is tension, fear, anger, joy, desire and hope. We get a wonderful glimpse of middle-class Black culture in 1920s Harlem.
My full review HERE
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