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Monday, June 28, 2021

2021

Where has this year gone?  I started a January wrap up and didn’t get a chance to finish it.  I don’t know the route I want this blog to take…I barely have time to put my reviews on GoodReads, and I feel like they are not in depth at all.  So far this year I have read 47 books…that would be a ridiculous summary post no-one would want to read.  I have a started helping a friend get her book box off the ground by a) purchasing a subscription and b) posting videos of said subscription unwrapping.  But that is on Instagram and YouTube, I don’t feel the need to post here as well, maybe I will do a review?  So that leaves me as to where to go with this blog…I’m not in the book world enough to be talking about news.  But I don’t know reviews are the way this works anymore either…this may take some thought to figure out.

Monday, January 4, 2021

December 2020 Wrap Up

Three Ordinary Girls by Tim Brady (read 11/23 to 12/1) ⭐️⭐️
*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

This is aWWII true story.  Hannie Schaft, Truus Oversteegen, and Freddie Oversteegen are three sisters in occupied Netherlands, in the city of Haarlem.  They joined the underground resistance and became a terrifying force de resistance.  They sheltered Jews, political dissidents, and fellow Dutch Resistors.  They took direct actions like sabotaging bridges and railways.  They transported weapons and attacked military facilities.  They were assassins and seasoned spies.  Tim Brady did his homework when researching these women and bringing their heroics to the worlds attention.

This book started out strong, but around 40% it started to drag.  It became more a reciting of facts than a story.  I felt like Hannie, Truus and Freddie were ignored. I wanted more details of them.  It cam back around at the end but, it was too late I had lost interest.



The Peculiar Fate of Holly Banks by Julie Valerie (read 12/1 to 12/5) ⭐️⭐️⭐️

*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

This is the second book in the Village of Primm series.  I read the first book last December as a OUABC selection.  This book takes place just a week or so after the end of the first book.  Once again Holly Banks finds herself in the middle of a mystery. Her chocolate lab Struggle digs up a lost artifact and the chaos ensues.  

I gave this book a 3star because it still was a meh storyline to me, a little better than the first but not that engaging to me.  I think I need to look at this series almost like a cozy, but just without murder.  I liked that the characters stayed true to the writing from the first book, as it took place so soon after the first book that felt really important to me. The sarcasm was toned down a little bit, which I admit I was a little sad about.  But Valerie still didn’t take her created world seriously which did make it fun.  I don’t love these books, but I will still probably continue with the series which is a solid series. 


Baby Teeth by Zoje Stage (read 12/9 to 12/13) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

I picked this book up because Ants Among Elephants was such a heavy read.  This had been an impulse grocery store aisle buy.  It sounded great a thriller about a daughter trying to kill her mom, sort of Gillian Flynn style was my impression when I read the back.

I really liked the book, the premise and story line was great.  I loved the dynamic between the Mom Suzette and the daughter Hannah. I loved how devious  Hannah was, yet still had an air of innocence.  Alex seemed like a clueless shmuck, which fed right into Hannah’s plans.  What I don’t like was some of Suzette’s vulgarity around sex with Alex, and some of the sex scenes.  I’m not opposed to sex in a novel, it is part of life, but I felt like the scenes were put in more for shock factor than to further the storyline.  They seemed abrupt and poorly placed, and when they appeared they pulled me out of the story, which broke the magic for me.  But other than that it was really well written and a page turner for sure.


Ants Among Elephants: An Untouchable Family and the Making of Modern India by Sujatha Gilda (read 12/5 to 12/15)⭐️

This was the December selection for the Book & Wine Club. They are a newsletter that pairs a book and wine selection every month for local groups to meet.  It this month they decided to do a Zoom meeting, so my best friend and I joined.

This book was not as advertised, the blurb on Amazon’s and good reads said it was the history of a family as they rose above their caste to become educated, leaders and an improved life.  Eventually Gilda moves from India to America and writes her family’s history. It was marketed as a rare family history from the lowest of the castes in India, and their move triumph and success.  It was also supposed to be about the bonds of family.  Wow that sounds enlightening and amazing right?  Yeah I would love to read that book!  Sadly instead I read this one.  It wasn’t about family and triumph, it was recounting the deeds of the the oldest brother Satyam as he became a political activist who founded the People’s War Group, which sounded like a communist terrorist group to me

Which per my internet research is exactly what it is!  I’m sure I’m now on some monitoring list for even looking it up.  There was almost no discussion of the author’s mother, besides when she was being mistreated first by her Father and Brothers, then by her husband.  It definitely wasn’t about woman’s rights or gaining empowerment in India.  This book was horrible and the description was do misleading I felt betrayed for it being selected.


The Way Back by Gavriel Savit (read 12/15 to 12/22) ⭐️⭐️⭐️

*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.*

The book takes place in the 1820’s or so.  It follows two kids, the book description said they were teens, although I thought they were more like 12.  Yehuda Lieb, son of poor single mother and Bluma granddaughter of Tupik’s midwife, a small Jewish Villaine somewhere in Eastern Europe.   They both encounter death one day, and then consequence is a journey through the Far Country, a Jewish land of spirits and demons.  Where they decide to make war on Death himself.

I’m not going to lie  this one left me floundering about.  I was not aware of the characters at all.  I suspect they are well known Jewish folk lore characters, but I had no idea who they were.  Still I was able to follow the story and enjoy it.  I think if I had known who they were some stuff would have made more sense.  And the description is right, it did remind me of Neil Gaimen’s American Gods. I enjoyed the read, it was a solid story and I would read more from this author.  


Divided in Death by JD Robb (AKA Nora Roberts)  (read 12/22 to 12/26) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

This is book 18 in the In Death Series,  I started reading this series in 2015.  One of Eve’s husband’s employees of fond at the scene of her husband and his lover, at fist glance it looks like an open and shut case.  But things don’t add up Eve and the deeper she digs, the deeper the conspiracy goes.

This was another great one in the series, admittedly the plot isn’t new or unique.  But that isn’t why I love these books, I love these books because of the characters.  Eve, Roarke, Peabody, McNab, and Feeny are all old friends. They grow as characters and people, and yet they stay in their character traits enough to give me comfort.  


Visions in Death by JD Robb (AKA Nora Robert’s)   (read 12/27 to 12/29/20

I’m obviously feeling some comfort reads, and Eve Dallas does it for me.

I’m surprised that after all this time Robb was able to surprise me. There was a twist at the end that was completely unexpected for me.  I enjoyed the writing and the way we get to see and know some side characters more intently.  I love the lightheartedness of this series though too, despite all the murder there is laughter.  I even read some bits to my husband, much to his confusion.


Tuesday, December 1, 2020

November 2020 Wrap up

So here it is the first of the wrap ups, I know that I have done some summary reviews in the past, and well they seemed to be happening more and more, so let’s go with that format.  Because this is the first, it will include the final book I read from October, but after this it will just be the books I read in the current month.


15 Minutes of Flame by Christina Brecher (read 10/25 to 10/27)  ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Stella sells candles in a small Nantucket Town.  While Stella is helping to plan the town's annual Halloween fundraiser. While planning she explores a deserted, boarded-up building on the property--once used as a candle-making shop-- and she discovers a terrible secret: the skeleton of a Quaker woman, wrapped in blood-soaked clothing and hidden deep within a stone hearth.   And Stella gets involved with the investigation.

So I got this from OUABC sweet Halloween box. And it was an OK read, I didn’t love it I didn’t hate it. It was just a cozy mystery nothing too amazing. It was obvious that it was a later book in the series, I think it is #3.  The characters were fine, the mystery was fine.  It was a solid cozy.


The Majesties by Tiffany Tsao (read 10/27 to 11/6) ⭐️⭐️

*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

This is about two sisters from a Chinese-Indonesian family grapple with the past after one of them poisons their entire family. Gwendolyn and Estella have always been as close as sisters can be. Growing up in a wealthy, eminent, and sometimes deceitful family, they’ve relied on each other for support and confidence. But now Gwendolyn is lying in a coma, the sole survivor of Estella’s poisoning of their whole clan.  As Gwendolyn struggles to regain consciousness, she desperately retraces her memories, trying to uncover the moment that led to this shocking and brutal act.

I’m not sure how I feel about this book.  I wanted to like it, the writing was lovely, the story was engaging, and the ending I didn’t see coming.  But I wasn’t motivated to read it and I wasn’t engaged in the story or the characters.  I didn’t hate it, and I see the value in the story and the writing, but at the same time I didn’t like it. No particular reason, it just didn’t grab me.


The Guest List by Lucy Foley (read 11/7 to 11/8) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

On an island off the coast of Ireland, guests gather to celebrate a wedding.  The groom is a handsome and charming, a rising television star. The bride is a smart and ambitious, a magazine publisher.  But as the wedding starts things go astray and someone ends up dead.

So I’ve been hearing about this book for a while, I decided to check it out from the library. Wow was it good.  I hated having to put it down to do things. I just wanted to read to find out first of all who died, and second who killed whoever died. Foley did a really good job on setting up the death and the murder itself. And it wrapped up well sort of.


Throwaway Girls by Andrea Contos (read 11/10 to 11/15) ⭐️⭐️⭐️

*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

Caroline Lawson hates her school and her life, she can’t wait to escape her rigid prep school and parents who don’t accept her as a lesbian.  She has three months to graduation and that freedom she craves.  Then her girlfriend leaves her to move to California, and her best friend Madison disappears, Caroline feels compelled to get involved in the investigation. Caroline kept her own secrets, and it seems so did others in her life.  The Caroline finds out about the other missing girls, the girls from the wrong side of the tracks who it appears police didn’t investigate.  Caroline is determined to find out what happened to them and why no one seems to notice. But as every new discovery leads Caroline closer to the connection between these girls and Madison, she faces an unsettling truth.

This was a good book, the end was surprising..I didn’t see the villain coming.  It had some slow parts and I got stuck in the middle but it ended well.

The Lending Library by Aliza Fogelson (read 11/15 to 11/17) ⭐️⭐️
*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.
When the Chatsworth library closes indefinitely, Dodie Fairisle turns her sunroom into her very own little lending library.  At first it is a hobby, but then it takes on a life of its own and the townspeople come to rely on it and on Dodie. 
I wanted to like this book, and I wanted to like the characters. But I didn’t. Maybe it was the wrong time for the story for me but the loss hit me harder then I would have thought, which meant I didn’t enjoy the read.  I didn’t like Dodie and I don’t like Shep and I really didn’t like Sullivan‘s parents. This was just a miss for me.


The Warning by James Patterson (read 11/18 to 11/21) ⭐️⭐️⭐️

In a small town called Mt. Hope, there has been an accident at the nuclear plant.  But the military tells the townspeople it is cleaned up and they can come home now.  And it does look beautiful, everything is fixed up and nicer than when they fled.  Including Jordan, suddenly he is faster and stronger and he knows things, like how to fight.  But something is wrong, no one has a cell phone signal, there is no tv or news, and the military has blocked off the two ways out of town. What are they hiding?

I enjoyed this read, it wasn’t innovative or new.  In fact it was fairly cookie cutter sci-Fi, stealing ideas from multiple other books.  But because Patterson is a good writer it still meshed well and was a fun read.  It felt comforting like a cozy mystery, but with a Sci-Fi twist!  I wish I could say which Sci-Fi twist,  it I don’t want to give it away.


The Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey (read 11/ 17 to 11/23) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
*I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

Imagine the pain of having your husband leave you, now imagine if he left you for a more docile  version of you he had cloned.  That is the pain Evelyn was feeling when one nigjt her clone Martine called needing Evelyn’s help.  It seems Martine had murdered their husband Nathan. And it was quite the mess that needed fixing.

I had a little trouble with this one at first, I mean I liked the premise, it just wasn’t resonating with me.  Then I put it down for a day or two and flew through it.  I would say at about the 40% mark it really started to pick up. I enjoyed the story arc and the secrets Nathan held.  It was overall a good read.


Ready Player One by Ernest Cline (read 11/25 to 11/28) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

This was a re-read for me.  I received my order of Ready Player Two and I wanted to reimmerse myself in the universe.  My review still hasn’t changed.  I still love the book!  Although this time as I read I was able to see subtle clues of the gates and puzzles laid early on.  And as I read, I took the time and made a play list of all the songs listed in the book.  Next re-read I’ll listen as I go.





Ready Player Two by Ernest Cline (read 11/28 to 11/30/20) ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

So this is follow up to Ready Player One, I admit I ordered it without even knowing what the plot line was.  This book takes place after Wade and the gang win Halliday’s Egg.  Wade finds a technological advancement in Halliday’s Vault that will change the world the way OASIS originally did.  But it comes with a new quest and riddle to solve, Wade once again has to step up to not only save the OASIS,  but possibly all of humanity.

OK so I really liked this book, and it’s always nerve wracking to red a sequel of a favorite.  What if they ruin it?  Thankfully Cline didn’t. I still like Ready Player One better, but this was a good follow up.  Again some same old Sci-Fi tropes, which I don’t want to give away the plot of the villain...but it’s a classic and a well used plot line.  That being said it is a classic, because when it is well done it is highly entertaining.  There were far more music referenced I feel in this book than in the first book, but maybe I just caught them more easily.  I enjoyed this read, I like Clines writing style and the nostalgia he gives me for the 80’s.  I feel like it was a solid follow up.


Thursday, November 19, 2020

Changes

So I have decided that I just can’t keep up with a book by book review anymore.  So I gave decided that I am going to do a “Monthly Wrap Up” format.  I don’t have. Any followers so, unless they speak this is the plan.  I am also going to incorporate some planner stuff too.  I’m in the process of working on the intro post about that.  I will start the “Monthly Wrap Up” in November. I want to do some other bookish things, I’ve joined some online book clubs, maybe talk about them?  I don’t know...if any of you loyalists out there have suggestions of what you want to see, comment on this post.

And I am also going to try and learn this hash tag thing.  Wish me luck!

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

The Perfect Daughter by D.J. Palmer (Read 10/23 to 10/25) - 5 Star

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1cVDIadPg5YwCX3eMG24jLCoynwKRysAaI received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.

Grace’s daughter Penny is in Edgewood, a facility for the criminally insane, awaiting her trial for murdering her Birth Mother Rachel. But Penny isn’t just Penny, she is Eve, Ruby and Chloe too.  Who murdered Rachel, and is Penny really Disassociate Identity Disorder (DID) or as the head Edgewood doctor thinks Antisocial Personality Disorder, ie Penny is an expert liar.

This is the second DJ Palmer book I have read, and he has become a favorite author.  I love the twists and turns of his stories. The characters are all so engaging, and make you want to read about them. This was unputdownable for me.  I found myself wanting to know the next twist throughout my day, and I couldn’t wait to read more, even if it was only 5 mins while my coffee brewed.

Monday, October 19, 2020

Bait and Witch by Angela M. Sanders (Read 10/18 to 10/19) - 4 Star

I received this book as an Advanced Reader's Copy (ARC) through NetGalley. I received this copy free in exchange for my honest review.A mystery, a library, a small town and a witch!  Josie is a librarian at the library of Congress, who overhears a senator making a shady deal.  When she and a co-worker whistleblow it, the co-worker disappears.  So Josie feels she needs to too.  She answers an ad for a librarian position in Wilfred, Oregon.  But not all is as ideal as it seems.  Josie finds a dead body on her first day. This was a great seasonal read, The characters in Wilfred were wonderful and colorful.  And the library itself was magical.  I’m not 100% sure I like Josie, but I don’t hate her either.  It is obvious this is meant to be a first book in the series, and I do look forward to reading more.

Sunday, October 18, 2020

The Haunting of Brynn Wilder by Wendy Webb (read10/14/20 to 10/17/20) - 3 star

I received this book as an Amazon Prime Early Reads. I was excited to read it because I had read and enjoyed two other Wendy Webb books:  The End of Temerence Dare and The Lady in the Lake, both of which had solid 3 stars from me.  Consistency is important. 
This book I was pleasantly surprised to find takes place in Wharton, the same town on Lake Superior’s shores as The Lady in the Lake.  And we got to revisit with some of the same characters, although if you haven’t read Lady in the Lake, it’s ok you will not be lost this is not a sequel.
Brynn Wilder comes to Wharton to escape an avalanche of loss in her life.  And she stays at boarding house for the summer where she meets the other long term boarders and quickly makes friends.  But there is a mystery afoot, over the winter a mysterious woman died in Room 5, and nobody knows who she was or how she got there.  Then Brynn starts dreaming of her.....
This wasn’t my favorite Wendy Webb book, it was again consistent writing. Her characters are well written and she develops the mystery well.  And the best part in my mind is that she actually resolves it in the final chapter.  However, I did not like the resolution, I felt it was a little too far out there.  If I was basing my rating on just how much I liked the story it would be a 2-star.  But her writing style and solidness of story and character development brought this book up to its 3-star rating.