Clue's Shelf Life 2024

Talk2024 Category Challenge

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Clue's Shelf Life 2024

1clue
Edited: Jan 5, 10:19 am

I've learned that a lightly structured reading plan is the best for me. I like to plan, but I'm too influenced by recommendations, reviews, and library visits to stick to it! Still, I enjoy participating in group reads and challenges so you'll see me in some of those from time to time.

My decision to participate in a group read will depend on what I have on the shelf (both literal and electronic). Whatever I have , I'll consider reading or putting in the donation box. When there is more than one available, I'll consider reading more than one. I've always thought that would be a good idea but had other commitments. The groups are:

Alpha Kit
Bingo
Historical Novel
Random Kit
Calendar Cat

Though I don't have a theme, I'll be sprinkling in pictures of native plants of my home state of Arkansas. A native plant is one that was present when Europeans arrived in North America, though they may have been lifting their heads to the sun for thousands of years before.

I plan to list what I read below. I do love a list!

2clue
Edited: Nov 11, 11:32 am

8clue
Edited: Sep 6, 8:36 pm

Books Over 450 400 pages

I find myself skipping over these because they're big even though it's unlikely they'll get smaller.

1. My Name is Barbra by Barbara Streisand 996 pages
2. The Women by Kristin Hannah 464 pages
3. Becoming Madame Secretary by Stephaine Dray 501 pages
4. The Weather Woman by Sally Gardner 448 pages

9MissWatson
Dec 11, 2023, 9:00 am

I had to smile at this: I didn't want to overwhelm myself by listing 2,000 starting out. Sometimes our ambition gets ahead of us. Happy reading!

10DeltaQueen50
Dec 11, 2023, 9:59 pm

I have placed my star and I am looking forward to following along. :)

11mstrust
Dec 12, 2023, 12:22 pm

Happy reading in 2024!

12pamelad
Dec 12, 2023, 3:39 pm

>4 clue: Me too. I keep bypassing the longer books on my tbr pile but, as you have, I've made a category for them this year. Happy reading!

13lowelibrary
Dec 12, 2023, 6:41 pm

Good luck with your reading in 2024.

14Jackie_K
Dec 17, 2023, 6:49 am

My star is placed too!

15mysterymax
Dec 18, 2023, 1:38 pm

Reading at least four BIG books is on my agenda for 2024. I'll be following along hoping you keep me inspired!

16MissBrangwen
Dec 18, 2023, 2:22 pm

I'm another one who has a "big books category" for 2024! I had one this year and it did help a little, but I want to focus more on this in the upcoming year. Happy reading!

17mysterymax
Dec 19, 2023, 1:09 pm

>16 MissBrangwen: I'm determined to get through Moby Dick this year! I've tried several times and have come away convinced that anyone who says they've read it is dreaming. Yet those that say they have all seem to really like the book. I'm going to make a real effort and if I don't make it through - that's the end of it!!!

18christina_reads
Dec 19, 2023, 1:59 pm

>17 mysterymax: Ironically, it is your white whale! :)

19mysterymax
Dec 19, 2023, 2:40 pm

>18 christina_reads: Oh, good one!

20clue
Dec 20, 2023, 9:30 am

>9 MissWatson:, >10 DeltaQueen50:>, >11 mstrust:, >12 pamelad:, >13 lowelibrary: >14 Jackie_K:, >14 Jackie_K:, >15 mysterymax:, >16 MissBrangwen:, >17 mysterymax:

Thanks to all for stopping by. It looks like many of us have the Big Book syndrome, it will be fun to follow everyone as they read them. Think how much room they're taking up on the shelves!

Before I take on this heroic effort, I have to catch up on posting 2023!

21rabbitprincess
Dec 20, 2023, 7:46 pm

Good luck with tackling the big books next year!

22dudes22
Dec 21, 2023, 5:29 am

According to LT, I have a lot more books over 500 pages than I thought. I also have Les Miserable which is over 1,000+ pages on my e-reader. I had a plan one year to read "x" number of pages each day to finish it over a year, but that lasted less than a month. Maybe I'll try to get to at least one this year. You're really pushing a lot of us, Luanne. Hope you have a good year of reading.

23lsh63
Dec 21, 2023, 7:52 am

Good luck with your reading next year, and especially with those big books! I avoid them also, I think I get impatient wanting to get to the next book.

24Jackie_K
Dec 21, 2023, 4:29 pm

>22 dudes22: I did that several years ago with War and Peace, although I gave myself a weekly page target rather than daily. I doubt I'd have managed it if I'd just started at page 1 without any kind of target.

25Tess_W
Dec 23, 2023, 1:34 am

Good luck with your 2024 reading!

26mysterymax
Dec 23, 2023, 9:42 am

>22 dudes22: Where do you find the list of your books by page count?

27clue
Dec 23, 2023, 11:04 am

>26 mysterymax: Go to Your Books and look at the top where the Settings are listed (A, B, etc). I use A setting but I think I added the pages column myself. You can do that by going to Settings (after A, B...) and click. It takes you to the page where you can change the columns, remove a column you don't use or add something.

28hailelib
Dec 23, 2023, 11:09 am

Just dropping by. Enjoy your 2024 reading.

29VivienneR
Dec 23, 2023, 1:30 pm

Happy reading in 2024, Luanne! Big books are last choice for me nowadays too.

30mysterymax
Dec 23, 2023, 11:57 pm

>27 clue: Many thanks!

31dudes22
Dec 24, 2023, 12:35 pm

>30 mysterymax: - Clue beat me to it. That's how you do it. I'll add that then you can click at the top of the column, and it will sort lowest to highest, or highest to lowest depending on how many times you click.

32hailelib
Dec 24, 2023, 3:59 pm

It's really easy to pass over the extra long books for me unless they are a favorite author.

Anyway, have some fun with your reading in the New Year.

33clue
Edited: Jan 18, 9:24 pm

1.
Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Kit (Birds)
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0



A good choice to begin 2024, this is a humorous and memorable little book. The story takes place in Kenya where Mr. Malik, now retired, takes part in a weekly bird-walk. It has caused him to learn alot about Kenya's birds and he always looks forward to the next week's walk. In truth he's had a longtime crush on the leader, Rose Mbikwa.

To shy Mr. Malik's dismay one day the handsome, wealthy and oh- so-sure-of-himself Harry Khan shows up for the walk. Khan was a classmate of Mr. Malik, and was his tormentor. It doesn't take long for both men to reveal they will be asking Rose to the social event of the year held by Mr. Malik's club. Other members get involved and create a bird related contest to reduce the two suitor's to one.

34dudes22
Jan 2, 5:55 am

>33 clue: - Yikes! I took a BB for this way back in 2019. Guess I should move it up the list.

35Jackie_K
Jan 2, 7:31 am

>33 clue: That sounds delightful - I'm thinking No 1 Ladies Detective Agency vibes?

36mysterymax
Jan 2, 12:29 pm

Just what I didn't need... a BB... and it's only 02 Jan. Having lived in Tanzania, this is one I just can't bypass.

37Helenliz
Jan 2, 3:38 pm

Happy new year.
I like the prompts you've got. I, too, get easily sidetracked.
Looking forward to seeing what catches your eye this year.

38JayneCM
Jan 2, 8:43 pm

>33 clue: >34 dudes22: Me too! I remember adding this to my to read list long ago!

39Tess_W
Jan 4, 1:25 am

>33 clue: On my TBR, hope to get to it this year!

40clue
Jan 4, 10:25 am

>39 Tess_W: Tess, It would be a good "break" book because it's short but tells a good story.

41thornton37814
Jan 4, 8:07 pm

Hope you have a great year of reading! Looks like your first one was a good one.

42clue
Jan 5, 10:23 am

>41 thornton37814: I always try to find something to start the year I think I'll like and this one was a good choice.

43Tess_W
Jan 6, 10:57 am

>40 clue: Oh great suggestion. I'm currently reading Helen of Troy on audio and it's 22 hours. I will need a break after completing!

44beebeereads
Jan 17, 8:20 pm

Enjoy your reading year! I'll be following along as well.

45clue
Edited: Jan 25, 10:23 am

2.
Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Alpha A
BINGO: Ugly Cover
My Rating - 4.0



The Sir John Fielding Mysteries are based on an actual person. Fielding was a magistrate, blind, and the founder of Bow Street Runners, the first London police force. In the series the Fielding character is all of these things, and is also the father figure for a young ward of the court, Jeremy Procter.

This is the fourth book in the series and my favorite to this point. Fielding is anxious to solve the deaths of four prostitutes. Jeremy has served as Sir John's assistant since coming to his house but here for the first time he is responsible for parts of an investigation. One that turns out to be very dangerous. Alexander has created an 18th century London setting that causes the reader to smell the stench, hear the clamour, and believe the danger of the streets.

I'm using the cover for the ugly cover Bingo square. Would it encourage you to read the book or buy it? The picture on the left I believe to be a stairway leading into a river and the one on the right is the eye of a prostitute whose eyes were cut from her body.

46JayneCM
Jan 25, 5:09 am

>45 clue: Definitely a creepy/ugly cover!

47mstrust
Jan 25, 11:21 am

>45 clue: The jacket designer should be working in the mail room.

48Tess_W
Jan 25, 1:25 pm

>45 clue: Never read a Fielding mystery, so I put #1 on my WL. That is truly an ugly cover!

49clue
Edited: Feb 1, 9:46 am

3.
Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Three Word Title
My Rating - 4.0

My Name is Barbra by Barbra Streisand

(I can't get a touchstone for the book to appear)



I've been a fan since I was a young teen but didn't know Streisand didn't want to be a singer, even as a child being an actor was her goal. That was a bit of a disappointment to me because I have loved her music so much and so long, and have the original LPs to prove it!

Though it's 966 pages, the book is well organized and easy to read though not so great to hold! She writes about making each of her movies and shows in detail, and devotes entire chapters to some. She also gives a chapter to her political involvement, 25-year marriage to James Brolin, and people she has known. No gossip.

I think the book is more detailed than it needs to be, but many of her fans will probably like learning how each movie or play was planned, what changes were made, her own suggestions to improve it, etc. I have wondered if it should have been written earlier, maybe 20 years ago, because a lot of people involved in her creative efforts are no longer living and may not be known to many readers. And by the way, the next time you're in a truck stop look around, when she and James are on the road in the pickup they stop at them. She loves shopping for treats there!

50clue
Edited: Jan 27, 3:42 pm

4.
Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO: Friendship
My Rating - 3.5



The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman 3.5*

In the fourth book in A Thursday Murder Club Mystery series it seems Osman may be preparing for the longevity of the series. Elizabeth, the informal leader of the group, is not the planner in solving this crime, instead Joyce comes into her own and uses what she has learned from Elizabeth to be the leader.

The mystery revolves around the murder of an antique dealer and a missing shipment of heroin in an antiquarian box. There are several new characters although most didn't survive the plot, but there is one in particular that may be carried forward as a member of the group. I think the story was a little cluttered but still fun.

51clue
Edited: Jan 27, 3:43 pm

5.
Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

Lucky Thirteen by Iris hatteersley



A memoir that covers the authors life from her birth through the age of 78. A large part of her work life was with the U.S. Marshal's service. Unfortunately I didn't find it very interesting and the writing could use some improvement.

52clue
Jan 27, 4:12 pm

>21 rabbitprincess:,>23 lsh63:,>24 Jackie_K:,>25 Tess_W:,>26 mysterymax:,>28 hailelib:, >29 VivienneR:,>32 hailelib:

We all seem to have a Big Book problem. I was determined to get one off the shelf in January and it's done. I read the last one to come to the shelf, 996 pages. I don't think I'll read one next month but we'll see.

53VivienneR
Feb 1, 12:35 am

>45 clue: Even with that horrid cover, I really enjoyed Person or Persons Unknown.

>52 clue: I have planned a couple of Big Books this month. We'll see how that works out in this little month.

54clue
Edited: May 24, 3:23 pm

FEBRUARY

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

6. Murder Most Royal by SJ Bennet



This is the 3rd book in the enjoyable Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series. In this case the Royal family is beginning to gather at Sandringham for their annual family Christmas celebration. Before Christmas Day arrives however, the finding of a severed hand occurs very near Sandringham. At the Queen's request her assistant shows her a photograph of the hand and the Queen recognizes the signet ring the the hand is wearing.

Though this is a good mystery, I was somewhat disappointed in this one because the Queen becomes more involved in the investigation. In the previous two books she and her assistant work together piecing evidence together but the Queen stays in the background while the assistant does the leg work.

.

55Helenliz
Feb 7, 6:50 am

I listened to the first one a year or so ago. Thanks for the reminder of them.

56clue
Edited: Feb 16, 11:48 pm

Later

57clue
Edited: Feb 16, 11:48 pm

Later

58clue
Edited: Feb 17, 3:15 pm

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59clue
Edited: Feb 17, 3:15 pm

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60clue
Edited: Feb 17, 3:14 pm

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61clue
Edited: Feb 17, 3:14 pm

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62clue
Edited: Feb 16, 11:46 pm

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63clue
Edited: Feb 17, 3:36 pm

I joined Library Thing Feb 12, 2007, 17 years ago! I always look forward to Thingaversary because I make a game/project out of it. Each year for each book I read from my own library I put $3 in my mother's beautiful old teapot (I started years ago with $1). Last year I read 42 of my own. I certainly wouldn't be able to buy 17 new books at once so this works for me and allows me to continue to participate. When I started in Thingaversary I'm sure I never thought I'd be here 17 years...and more!

I start looking for cheap books both digital and paper around November and buy a few BBs, a few wishlist, etc. as I find them. This is lots of fun to me but that's just half of the project. The other half is to donate the same number of books I buy. They usually go to the library. I haven't done that yet but I have a few set aside.

Here's the list from my library and I count 15 so I must have 2 I haven't posted yet or I have a problem with my copy/paste. I'll be adding them to the list when I find the problem.

Leave Only Footprints: My Acadia-to-Zion Journey Through Every National Parks by Conor Knighton

A Friend of Mr. Lincoln: A novel by Stephen Harrigan

Remainders of the Day: A Bookshop Diary by Shaun Bythell

Guide To Beasts of East Africa by Drayson S Nicholas (currently reading)

Remember Ben Clayton by Stephen Harrigan

The Leopard Is Loose: A novel by Stephen Harrigan

Indian Horse: A Novel by Richard Wagamese

Murder Most Royal by S J Bennett (read)

An Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us by Ed Yong

Shelf Life: Chronicles of a Cairo Bookseller by Nadia Wassef

The Lost Van Gogh: A Novel by Jonathan Santlofer

My Dear I Wanted to Tell You by Louisa Young

The Bookseller of Inverness by S.G. MacLean

The Last Devil to Die by Richard Osman Read

The Wager by David Grann

64MissWatson
Feb 17, 6:04 am

Happy Thingaversary! Enjoy your haul!

65rabbitprincess
Feb 17, 8:45 am

>63 clue: That's a great way to celebrate your thingaversary! And some good books on that list. I've read the Wagamese, Osman, Grann, and Bythell. I want to read the Wassef so will be interested to hear what you think.

66MissBrangwen
Feb 17, 12:18 pm

>54 clue: I bought the first one of this series last December and am looking forward to reading it, though I don't know when I will do so.

>63 clue: Happy Thingaversary! Your project sounds wonderful. What a great idea!

67lowelibrary
Feb 17, 1:18 pm

>58 clue: Great book choices. Happy Thingaversary

68mstrust
Feb 17, 2:03 pm

Happy Thingaversary! Enjoy your new books!

69clue
Feb 17, 3:23 pm

>63 clue: Really? This message showed up a total of 7 times?? All I was doing was cut and paste but my internet service was having some problems and I didn't think the message was going to show as it went up and down. It seems clear my reposting was unnecessary now! If you know anyone who has a hard time remembering what they read, just sent them here!

70clue
Edited: Feb 17, 8:54 pm

>65 rabbitprincess: I have a hard time walking away from books written by booksellers. I didn't know he had a new one out until I stumbled across it.

>66 MissBrangwen: I hope you enjoy that one, I really like the characters, especially her assistant.

>67 lowelibrary:, >68 mstrust: Thanks, my optimistic plan is to read 2 a month. Don't hold me to that though!

71thornton37814
Feb 18, 5:57 pm

I need to begin focusing on my Thingaversary haul which is coming up in about 6 weeks or so. I'm glad you found some good ones. It can be pricy for those of us who have been on LT a long time if we don't look for free and bargain books. I will purchase one pricy reference book I need for genealogy.

72clue
Feb 18, 8:05 pm

>71 thornton37814: I hope you have fun choosing!

73christina_reads
Feb 19, 2:04 pm

Happy Thingaversary! I love the idea of setting aside some money for each book you read from your shelves. I may try to do something similar, and save up the money for something special!

74clue
Edited: Feb 26, 10:15 am

>73 christina_reads: The trick is to remember you have it. I didn't have Covid but I did have serious brain fog and totally forgot about book savings for some reason I can't explain. When I was dusting the teapot much later I opened it up and there was money! I suppose that's one positive about growing older, you have some good surprises!

75VivienneR
Feb 25, 3:18 pm

Happy Thingaversary! Great haul of books. I love the unique ways we long-time LTers have to celebrate.

76DeltaQueen50
Feb 26, 1:15 pm

A very happy Thingaversary!

77clue
Edited: Feb 29, 9:00 pm

Thanks to everyone for the Thingversary good wishes, I look forward to it every year.

>71 thornton37814: Yes, part of the fun for me is to get books I actually want at a reduced price at Thingaversary. As you well know new book prices have risen. However, the new Barbara Streisand biography was priced at $42 I think it was, but everywhere I saw it for sale there was a reduced price of about $10. My neighbor gave me a copy of Kristin Hannah's new book The Women and the retail price was $30 but the actual selling price was $17.98 (Amazon is $19.19). This is apparently new strategy in publishing, at least for some novels.

78clue
Edited: May 24, 3:24 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO: Three Word Title
My Rating - 4.0

7. The Last Masterpiece by Laura Morelli



The author is an American art historian who has written this book based on women who became involved in saving thousands of priceless masterpieces from destruction during WWII. Most of the book takes place in Florence, Italy where treasured art in the Uffizi Galleries needed removal and relocation. The two primary women characters, a German photographer and an American stenographer, risked their lives recording each piece and where it was taken, sometimes traveling with the treasures.

Altough I knew about the effort to save art during the war, I was not aware that women were involved or that the effort was so very large and dangerous. Shortly after I finished reading, my local newspaper carried a front page syndicated article on the unacknowledged contributions women had made to this massive effort. It's acknowledgement long, long overdue.

79clue
Edited: Mar 2, 12:14 pm

Origin - Library
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie



I've been meaning to read this for years and I'm so glad I finally got to it. I've only read a few Poirot titles and I think it is certainly the best of those. Many readers who have read more than I often remark that it is one of her best and perhaps the best. The story is intriguing and twists and turns keep the reader involved. Poirot comes out of retirement for this one and his new assistant is the doctor in the village where he now lives. And no, I didn't know what was coming!

80dudes22
Mar 1, 6:14 am

>78 clue: - That sounds interesting. On the list it goes.

81clue
Mar 2, 12:16 pm

>80 dudes22: I liked it and learned from it. There are times when the rescurers were moving from place to place that I got confused, but other than that I don't have any complaints.

82MissBrangwen
Mar 2, 1:45 pm

>78 clue: I added this one to my absurdly long WL!

>79 clue: This is one of my favorites, too. I think I just liked everything about it, it was such a perfect read.

83clue
Edited: Mar 9, 7:01 pm

Origin - Library
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Multiple Countries
My Rating - 3.5

Look For Me There by Luke Russert



This book is difficult for me to write about because the author didn't write what I expected to read. He is the son of Tim Russert the immensely popular and successful television journalist. I had read Tim's book about his father, Big Russ and Me, and thought Luke's book would be in the same vein. Instead Luke's book is not about his father, but about his father's unexpected death and the effect of it on his only child.

At the time of Tim's death Luke, who had worked 8 years for NBC News, was a young star in the world of network journalism himself, so it was a surprise and a symptom of a downward spiral when he walked away from that envious life. Hoping to help her son find his feet, his mother suggested he might take a trip. He decided to do that, and took off on a travel odyssey that spanned 3.5 years and covered more than 60 countries!

At first I found Luke hard to like. It's obvious by his remarks that he knows he is very privileged, but he dosen't seem to truly understand the meaning of that. Many readers have commented that he is whiney and an unjustified complainer. Well, sometimes he did come across that way to me too and I had to push myself to read on. In the end, I wasn't sorry I finished it. Another complaint I've read in comments about the book is that he was constantly mentioning his Catholicism, but I think his faith is an integral part of him, and I never considered him preachy or offending.

After Luke made what he thought would be the last trip, he moved to San Francisco where his mother's family had a home and where he decided to stay and write this book. Once started though, he decided he needed one more trip! This time to the Holy Land. Off he went on what became a very meaningful experience and combined with counseling, brought him around to laying down the burden of his father's legacy, giving him the freedom to follow his own path. That path will likely lead to more travel experiences culminating in writing about them. The chapters in this book about various countries he visited were interesting and I'll look for his next one and give it a try whenever that may be.

84Helenliz
Mar 12, 11:23 am

Love the incentive to read and collect money for your thingaversary.
Mine falls near my birthday, so I use that as an excuse to buy a pile of books. I will admit to not buying as many as I've been here. I've got more than enough unread already!

85clue
Edited: May 24, 3:24 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Cat, Calendar Cat
BINGO: City (Oklahoma City)
My Rating - 3.0

8. The Leopard is Loose by Stephen Harrigan

Grady McClarty, 70, is asked by the Oklahoma Historical Society for an oral account of the escape of a leopard from the Oklahoma City zoo in the 1950s. Instead McClarty writes a remeniscence, as if he were telling the story as the five year old he was when the escape took place.

Grady, his six year old brother Danny, his mother, and two uncles all lived in seperate apartments adjacent to his grandparents house. The reminiscence is not just about the wild animal's escape and the terror it caused within the city, but also about his family members attempts to put the war years and experiences behind them, and learn how to continue toward the lives they once expected before grief, psycholgical scars, and recognition of racial injustice became part of them.

This quiet book will appeal most to those who like the 1950s time setting. The family does a lot together including going to church, eating together, and the uncles take the boys to the zoo every Sunday afternoon. There is a romance for the boy's mom but it's quietly done. There were times I was a little frustrated by areas that seemed to drag and occassionally the 5 year old voice seemed older. I thought descriptions of the time were good and believe me, the description of young men piled into the beds of pickup trucks with rifles in all hands for leopard hunting was very believable as was most behavior.

86DeltaQueen50
Mar 17, 10:53 pm

I am putting The Leopard is Loose on my Kindle Unlimited list, I have read The Gates of the Alamo by him a number of years ago and really liked it.

87clue
Edited: Mar 18, 10:22 am

>86 DeltaQueen50: I hope you like it when you get to it. This is the only book by him I've read but I'll read more. I've got Remember Ben Clayton in the TBR but by reviews I'd say the Alamo book is his most popular. Years ago I used to read his pieces in Texas Monthly magazine.

88clue
Edited: Mar 28, 9:34 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Alpha H
BINGO: Bestseller
My Rating - 3.5
Other: Big Book 464 pages

The Women by Kristin Hannah

The author brings much deserved attention to the women who served in the VietNam war in this novel. The plot addresses both Frankie's war experience and her experience after returning to the U.S.

She is a young and inexperienced nurse when she arrives in Nam, but she builds skills quickly in an Evacuation hospital where the wounded are first brought. I thought this part of the book was very well done and was compelled to keep reading once I started.

I wasn't as engaged with the second part. The intention of the author was to show how difficult it was for vets to assimilate back into their own country, but in my opinon it wasn't written with the depth to cause the reader to feel the pain. As you can see I'm rating a little lower than most because of that.

I'm a few years younger than Frankie and I'm sure many LT readers are around that same age. We don't need the reminder, but I'd like for younger readers to get an accurate understanding of what so many of those vets, female or male, and their families lived through, or tried to.

89thornton37814
Mar 24, 4:07 pm

>88 clue: I have a good friend locally who served as a nurse in the Vietnam War. I wonder if she's read the book and what she thinks of it.

90clue
Mar 25, 10:36 am

>89 thornton37814: Yes, that would be very interesting to know. I know two women who served in VietNam but neither were nurses.

91clue
Edited: May 24, 3:25 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Alpha R
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0
Other:



8. Coronation Year byJennifer Robson

I enjoyed this very much. It begins in January, 1953 and ends in November of the same year. It follows the lives of a small hotel owner in London, her boaders and guests. The hotel hasn't done well since the war began and Edie, who inherited the hotel as a young adult after the war, is struggling to keep it open. When she learns the Queen's coronation procession will pass The Blue Lion, owned by her family since the 17th century, she is estatic, knowing it may be her last chance to save her beloved home.

A good story, with engaging characters, it's one of those books that's especially good when its time to rest, relax and read.

92VivienneR
Apr 1, 1:14 am

>88 clue: I have that on my library list but there is such a long list of holds that it will be a long time before it's available.

93clue
Edited: Apr 1, 10:27 am

>92 VivienneR: I was the same way, I think I was number 83 when a friend called and asked me if I wanted her copy. I'm going to take it to book club and let them pass it around too. There has been a lot in the news about the first edition being 1 million copies!

94hailelib
Apr 1, 10:36 am

>88 clue: I have put in on my library list but don’t expect it to be available anytime soon.

95clue
Edited: May 24, 3:25 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO: Food, Cooking
My Rating - 3.5
Other: Reread

9. Maman's Homesick Pie by Donia Bijan



This book is a reread from 2017. My original comments and rating still stand:

After reading Bijan's first novel The Last Days of Café Leila, I looked forward to her earlier memoir and have not been disappointed. Bijan's family was on vacation in Spain when they got the call saying it wasn't safe for them to return to Iran. In 1978 they left Spain and came to America, settling in California.

Starting over, particularly when it wasn't expected, was difficult for Bijan's parents especially her father. He was not fluent in English and was never able to pass the exams necessary for an American medical license. Her mother, fluent in English, was able to begin nursing in a hospital quickly. Eventually her father would return to Iran periodically to work. Because her mother had been active in politics it wasn't safe for her to return.

Not surprisingly Bijan's father's dream for her was a career in medicine. She tried but soon found it wasn't for her. Instead, greatly disappointing her father, she became a Cordon Bleu trained chef, studying under the famed Madame Brassart in Paris. After returning to California she worked in several restuarants, eventually opening her own award-winning bistro.

Bijan writes with great passion causing the reader to care about her and her family. At the end of each chapter she includes Iranian and Iranian/American recipes, some of them her mother's.

96MissBrangwen
Apr 7, 4:12 am

>91 clue: I have The Gown by this author still waiting on my shelf. This sounds a little similar and I might want to read it at a later point. I really like the premise and your review.

97clue
Apr 7, 10:24 am

>96 MissBrangwen: I've read three of her books and this is my favorite although I did like The Gown. The other one I don't remember very well.

98clue
Edited: May 24, 3:26 pm

Origin - Library
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Published in '24
My Rating - 4.0
Other:

10. The Underground Library by Jennifer Ryan (This is a new book and apparently isn't in touchstones yet)



Based on an actual event during WWII, Ryan has written about the relocation of a bombed library to the safety of the underground. It's here that people gather every night and Juliet Lansdown, the library's new deputy director, wants to help lift spirits by offering good books to read and by keeping their neighberhood library open. Once they are up and running the uses for the library grow. The characters, both library staff, and those from the neighborhood, are well done and have varied backgrounds and circumstances.

Very enjoyable!

99clue
Edited: Apr 20, 8:28 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Water
My Rating - 4
Other: Book club

The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder by David Grann



The Wager, purchased by the Royal Navy in 1740, shipwrecked over 280 years ago during war with Spain. Grann spent six years researching the Wager's history including traveling to the island where the tragedy took place. But as the title tells us, there is far more to the story than a ship going aground. Grann recounts all of the events, those caused by nature and those caused by men, step-by-step making the eventful story easy to follow.

According to several internet sources, Martin Scorsese and Leonardo DiCaprio acquired film rights to the book in 2022.

100thornton37814
May 3, 8:17 pm

>99 clue: I held that one in my hand this week as we transferred it from the leased books section to the general stacks. I might eventually get around to reading it, but I don't know. There are so many books and so little time.

101mstrust
May 22, 12:06 pm

I want to read that one. I don't know if the events come close to The Batavia, another infamous shipwreck/murder case, but I love a good shipwreck story.

102clue
Edited: May 31, 10:40 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Kit (Art)
BINGO: Warrior
My Rating - 4.5
Other:

Remember Ben Clayton by Stephen Harrigan



Shortly after WWI Lamar Clayton, a well known West Texas rancher, contacts the famous sculptor "Gill" Gilheaney about the possibility of a sculpture of his son who was killed in France during the war. When the two men meet they don't like each other but the job is offered to Gilheaney and he accepts.

The truth is that both men are searching for more than they admit of this piece of art. Gilheaney recently learned the best of his public sculptures had been damaged beyound repair during a riot. In his sixties, he knows he has limited time to find a suitable subject that can be as meaningful as the sculpture that once defined his career.

Clayton and his son Ben had developed a contentious relationship causing Ben to enlist. Clayton didn't see him off when he boarded the train that would take him to his death nor did he talk to him the night before. Because the opportunity to talk will never come, he wants the piece to convey all that should have been said about and to his boy.

This story is powerful, complex, and emotional, with other characters helping explain the weaknesses and behaviors of both men. It isn't always easy to read, particularly those pages telling about Ben's death, and while there is no happy ending tied up with string, the ending is satisfying. The book won both the Spur Award and the James Fenimore Cooper Prize for Best Historical Novel of 2012.



103clue
Edited: May 26, 7:53 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Kit (Garden Visitors)
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.5
Other:

Foxgloves and Hedgehog Days by Daniel Blajan 4.5*



This small memoir gives a lot of pleasure. The author moved from the city to a small country village and tells of his delight (mostly) beginning a garden and becoming familar with the wildlife. He loves all of it, even if whatever is growing or visiting his home is considered a pest by other gardeners. He occassionally writes something that is laugh-out-loud funny. This is one of the most enjoyable "my life in a garden" books I've read.

104clue
May 26, 8:24 pm

Origin - Shelf (Read for Rosalita)
CAT/KIT : Calendar CAT (Derby)
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.0

Under Orders by Dick Francis



A mystery revolving around he death of a jockey. Like most of his books, I enjoy reading them but don't always remember them clearly. I find them relaxing.

105clue
Edited: May 31, 10:38 pm

HOLD

106clue
Edited: May 28, 12:45 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Diary
My Rating - 3.5

Remainder of the Day by Shaun Bythell



Shaun Bythell is a bookstore owner in a small town in Scotland and this is his diary of 2016. The bookshop diaries (this is the second) are kept for each business day in the year. He includes how many online orders were received, how many of those could be found, what the till was for the day, and how many customers came into the store. We also get stories about unusual customers, particular books, and of visits he makes to the homes of people wanting to sell libraries. Less interesting to me are comments about his friends and outside activities.

The first diary recorded the previous year so having read them both I like knowing how this likeable fellow is getting on. In the Epilogue he catches us up with personal changes but one change he doesn't mention, though is evident, is his financial situation is much better after publishing 4 bestselling books! Good for him!

107KeithChaffee
May 28, 1:59 pm

>105 clue: Like most of his books, I enjoy reading them but don't always remember them clearly. I find them relaxing.

Oh, I think that's the point for some highly prolific series authors (including some who I enjoy very much). The individual stories aren't supposed to be too memorable or distinctive; they're just meant to return you to the same comfortable style and milieu that you've enjoyed before. And if that mild, vague sameness means that the books are more easily re-readable because you can never quite remember if you read this one already or not, well, what author would complain about that?

108clue
May 31, 12:08 pm

>107 KeithChaffee: Agreed. There's a lot to be said for a book that brings comfort and a break from the real world few hours.

109clue
Edited: Oct 31, 10:35 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0

Becoming Madame Secretary by Stephanie Dray



This is a novelization of the remarkable life of Francis Perkins (1880-1965). In early adulthood, after witnessing the fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company where 146 people died, she lead the charge for safer working conditions in factories and later for the establishment of a minimum wage. After decades of successful advocacy she served as the Secretary of Labor under President Roosevelt, becoming the first woman to serve in a presidential cabinet where she developed a plan for Social Security, and many other important programs and policies, many still in place.

The author wrote that Perkins left behind a large number of papers regarding her business life but very little about her personal life. That was Dray's impetus for writing this 500 page novel. While the basics are known about her marriage and motherhood, Dray has imagined the conflicts and challenges between her work and family life.

I was aware of Francis Perkins and some of her accomplishments but learned more by reading this. Although its a long book I think it was worth my time. To me the writing isn't up to the standard Dray has set in her earlier books I have read. It particulary fell short when she was writing about the family life. The father and daughter were closer to being props to the story than people Francis loved.

110clue
Edited: Jun 2, 11:30 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : Alpha P
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

Chapter and Curse by Elizabeth Penney



Molly and her mother are asked by Aunt Violet to come to England to help with the family bookshop. Once they get involved, Molly has some good ideas to bring more customers into the store. The first author appearance she plans does that very thing, but ends up tragically when a woman Voilet knows is found dead in the back garden and she becomes a suspect.

All of the elements we expect from a cozy mystery are here and although the plot is predictable, I liked it enough to continue with the second book in this series.

111clue
Edited: Jun 22, 3:32 pm

HOLD

112clue
Edited: Jun 2, 3:11 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO: Warrior
My Rating - 4.5

Remember Ben Clayton by Stephen Harrigan



In 1920 Lamar Clayton, a well known West Texas rancher, contacts the famous sculptor "Gill" Gilheaney about the possibility of a sculpture of his son who was killed in France during WWI. When the two men meet they don't like each other but the job is offered to Gilheaney and he accepts.

The truth is that both men are searching for more than they admit of this piece of art. Gilheaney recently learned the best of his public sculptures had been damaged beyound repair during a riot. In his sixties with arthritic hands he knows he has limited time to find a suitable subject that can be as meaningful as the sculpture that once defined his career.

Clayton and his son Ben had developed a contentious relationship causing Ben to enlist. Clayton didn't see him off when he boarded the train that would take him to his death nor did he talk to him the night before. Because the opportunity to talk will never come, he wants the piece to convey all that should have been said about and to his boy.

This story is powerful, complex, and poignant with other characters helping explain the weaknesses and behaviors of both men. It isn't always easy to read, particularly those pages telling about Ben's death, and while there is no happy ending there is one that feels right. The book won both the Spur Award and the James Fenimore Cooper Prize for Best Historical Novel of 2012.

113clue
Edited: Jun 6, 10:54 am

Origin - >Library
CAT/KIT : No
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.5

The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl



What I liked about Ruth Reichl's new novel is the realistic setting of 1980's Paris and characters who are known from the city's recent past. Food and wine talk flows throughout the book and having been written by the former editor of Gourmet magazine and resturant critic Reichl, it will probably be of interest to foodies, though I personally tired of it.

The plot is mundane, just a new take on a young stuggling woman meets rich man theme, but the desciptions of Paris neighborhoods and street scenes as well as the overall feel of the book kept me reading. In the early chapters there is a section that made me think of Sarah Addison Allen's writing and from time to time I was also reminded of Woody Allen's movie Midnight in Paris, though here there are chefs in place of the writers. Overall a good weekend read.

114clue
Edited: Jun 6, 8:51 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Kit (Initials - L)
BINGO:
My Rating - 2.5

Eight Hundred Grapes by Lara Dave



A family in which every family member (all adults) is going through change or needs to. The protagonist was immature and unlikeable as were most of the characters. I previously read Dave's The Last Thing He Told Me and I did liked that but this wasn't for me.

115clue
Edited: Jun 25, 10:27 am

These are the first two books in the Emmeline Lake Series.

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0

Dear Mrs. Bird by AJ Pearce



Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Cat
BINGO: N0
My Rating - 4.0

Yours Cheerfully



Emmeline Lake wanted so much to be part of the war effort. In particular she wanted to be a war correspondent. When the London Evening Chronicle advertised an opening, she jumped at the chance to fulfill her dream. At the interiew her head was so in the clouds she didn't even ask what the actual job was but accepted it when it was offered. On her first day at work she learned there were jobs other than war correspondent that needed filling, like those for typists. And this one was a job typing for the advice columnist. Emmeline learns quickly she does't like Mrs. Bird who won't consider answering any letter on a subject she sees as improper. As the book progresses, Emmeline makes some bad decisions and her future in journalism of any kind is at risk.

While the first book revolves around the office and advice letters, the second book begins with changes at the office and changes for Emmeline. The Ministry of Information meets with London's journalists and asks them to join the effort to bring more women into the workforce. Emmeline, who has shown she has good ideas, is given the assigment for developing a plan for her publication. This leads her to visit a large factory where she is allowed to talk to a few of the women about what the jobs are like. As the women begin to trust Emmeline, she is told things that cause her to really understand why so many women don't join the factory workforce, and why they often leave if they do.

Emmeline's personal life is very much a part of the books too. Her friendship with girlfriend Bunty is well written and helps make the story real. She also begins to do volunteer work related to the war, a romance develops, and the blitz takes place. Even with the WWII setting thanks to the characters, the books are uplifting and provide relaxing reading.

A third book will be released in the U.S. in August. Just on a whim I checked abe to see if a used one published in England last year might be available. It was and I'll read it in July.


116clue
Edited: Jun 25, 9:14 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Cat
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

The Hanover Square Affair by Ashley Gardner



This is the first book in the Captain Lacey Regency Mystery Series.

Publisher's description:

London, 1816
Cavalry captain Gabriel Lacey returns to Regency London from the Napoleonic wars, burned out, fighting melancholia, his career ended. His interest is piqued when he learns of a missing girl, possibly kidnapped by a prominent member of Parliament. Lacey's search for the young woman leads to murder, corruption, and dealings with a leader of the underworld. At the same time, he struggles with his transition from a soldier's life to the civilian world, redefining his role with his former commanding officer, and making new friends--from the top of society to the street girls of Covent Garden.

My comments are that the author created a strong sense of time and place and Captain Lacey is a well defined and consequently sympathic character. I don't think the plot is necessarily memorable, but I'll be able to continue with the next book later because I'll remember the Captain.

117christina_reads
Jun 26, 10:45 am

>116 clue: This series has been on my radar for years but I haven't gotten to it yet...glad to hear you enjoyed this first installment!

118clue
Edited: Jun 26, 11:23 am

Origin: Kindle
CAT/KIT : Alpha B, Random Cat, initial L
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.0

For Whom the Book Tolls by Laura Gail Black



When Jenna needs a new start in her life, her uncle invites her to stay with him and in return help in his antiquarian bookstore. Not long after she arrives in the small North Carolina town he has lived in for decades, she finds his body at the bottom of the staircase that leads from the second floor apartments to the store.

A light, short, but entertaining read. And another off my Kindle!

119dudes22
Edited: Jun 26, 6:52 pm

>115 clue: - I listened to the first one last month and I intend to get to the second as soon as an audio is available in my library system. Right now, it says my hold would be indefinite until the library system acquires a new copy.

120RidgewayGirl
Jun 26, 7:12 pm

>113 clue: I've been wondering about this book as books about Paris are very much hit or miss. You've convinced me to give it a try.

121thornton37814
Edited: Jun 28, 1:35 pm

>118 clue: I might eventually give that series a try, assuming the library gets it.

ETA: I checked. They have a copy.

122clue
Jun 30, 8:59 am

>120 RidgewayGirl: I agree with you, most I've read in recent years are miss! I decided to try this based on her first novel. It was just okay, but there was a small portion of it that took place in the area in New York City where the food purveyors selling to resturants were located. I thought that small part of the book was very good and at least for me memorable.

>119 dudes22: I hope you like it when you get it. I do think the first book appealed to me the most but still liked the second. I look forward to reading the third.

>121 thornton37814: I think you will like it. I'll read the second and see how it goes.

>116 clue: The Captain is just so likeable. This was on my TBR longer than I expected it to be, but I could say that about many books. I have the second, but it will probably be a few months before I get to it.

123clue
Jun 30, 9:14 am

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.5

Foster by Claire Keegan



I'm not going to say much about this because there are so many reviews of it already. Clearly, based on my rating it can be seen I consider it exceptional. I'll think about the characters a long time, wondering what might have happened after the last page was read.

124clue
Edited: Jun 30, 6:20 pm

HALF-YEAR RECAP:

I feel pretty good about where I am to what I planned for the year:

* Read 5 specific authors sometime during the year - not doing as well as i hoped, have only read 1 out of the 5.

* I had acquired 17 Thingaversery books in February and would like to read them all this year. I've read 7 out of the 17, so 41%.

* My Bingo card is 76% filled, 6 to go and this is a take it or leave it goal for me. I don't feel driven to finish it but enjoy doing so.

* Wanted to remove some over 400 page books from the shelf and was thinking 6 for the year. So far I've read 3 with one in progress. There is a little problem here...I was thinking they would all come from books on my shelves at the beginning of the year but 2 were acquired this year! I've decided to make peace with that because they would have likely been additions.

I've had a rough time the last 6 weeks with reading anything that takes concentration due to back pain. It took 3 weeks to get an MRI and then I had a 6 PM appointment on a Saturday for it. I saw an orthopedist in the next week and he said it was a manageble problem and we would begin with therapy. That was 2 weeks ago and my first evaluation with a therapist is July 11. The Dr. did give me a few excerises and they have helped, and I started on an anti-inflammatory drug.Those things have made it possible to do a little much needed gardening last week with just minor pain so hopefully I'm on the road to thinking about more than pain!

I've faced the fact that I have got to reduce what I have waiting on my Kindle! A lot of those are light books and I read more last month than I usually do but Kindle reduction will probably be my primary goal for next year for now I'll work what I can in. So, I've enjoyed my 2024 reading and look forward to the next 6 months.

125rabbitprincess
Jun 30, 6:33 pm

Great progress, especially on reading your Thingaversary acquisitions! Also glad that you were able to get some gardening done. Hope your back pain continues to ease up.

126thornton37814
Jun 30, 7:02 pm

>123 clue: I was also a fan of that one!

127clue
Edited: Sep 25, 8:46 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Kit
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.0

Night of Shadows by Frances Lockridge



Evans Parten is a young professional taking a few days in NYC before reporting to a new job. While walking down 5th Avenue he sees a pretty young woman he realizes he knew growing up. After starting a conversation he invites her for lunch on Saturday. When he arrives at the apartment to pick her up, not only is she not there, but a couple with another name are in residence . Angry to be duped, he sits in the car and fumes. But when she comes out of the building with a man who seems to be controlling her and may have a gun, he reports the incident to the police and becomes involved in the investigation that will lead to international crimes.

First published in 1962, this is more thriller than mystery and less sophisticated than current thrillers. The "pretty young woman in trouble" plot though, is ageless. I bought this at a library book sale in 2019 along with others by the writing team of Frances and Richard Lockridge and like the others, I enjoyed the six decade step back.


128Helenliz
Jul 5, 1:44 pm

>123 clue: I also loved that one.
Sorry to hear about the back troubles. Good to know it's manageable.

129VivienneR
Jul 19, 1:32 am

Congratulations on your progress! Not only reading Thingaversary books but getting the 400 page books off the shelf.

Sorry to hear about your back. Take care.

130clue
Edited: Aug 2, 1:13 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

The Reckoning by John Grisham



Pete Banning is a hero. Returning from WWII to his small hometown, he is recovering from the aftereffects of the Bataan Death March and of being a POW. Once home he takes up the management of the generational farm he, his children, and a sister live on. When the book begins his wife is living in a psychiatric hospital.

Banning's return to civilian life seems to be going okay until he drives to the church the family faithfully attends and shoots and kills the popular minister. When he is arrested he admits the crime but won't tell law enforcement or anyone else why he did it. The rest of the book concerns the why.

Grisham writes in graphic detail about Banning's experiences on Bataan and in prison. In general I think the book is too long and the "during the war" section could have been shorter. Still, I liked the book and found it to be interesting. Grisham dropped a few clues along the way that lead me to believe the murder was because of something that in the end turned out wrong. I liked that too.

131clue
Edited: Jul 30, 2:49 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0

Good Night, Irene by Luis Alberto Urrea



Based on his mother's experience as a Clubmobile Corp member in WWII, Urrea brings yet another way women contributed to the war effort to our attention in this well done novel. It is rather surreal that women, nicknamed Donut Dollies, drove trucks to battle areas to serve fresh coffee and donuts to the fighting men, but they did.

Urrea's characters, Dorothy and Irene, begin working together on a truck in 1943 and continue together until the end of the war. At first intending to write a non-fiction account of the Dollies, he learned the records for the Clubmobile Corp were destroyed in the 1970s in a warehouse fire so he turned to fiction to tell his mother's story. His research included making friends with Jill Knappenberger, who worked alongside his mother. His mother died in 1990.

132clue
Edited: Jul 31, 10:46 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Just author and title on cover
My Rating - 2.5

Trail of Crumbs by Kim Sunee



When the author begins her memoir she is in her twenties and living with a very wealthy French businessman who has homes in Paris and Provence. Unhappy in that situation she leaves and begins what she describes as wandering, eventually ending up as food editor for an American magazine.

This is the second time I've tried this book, its been on my bookshelf two years, but I didn't finish it the first time and scanned the last quarter this time. I didn't like her much, she was greatly focused on herself, and the book just didn't click with me. Perhaps younger readers might like it better than I did.

133clue
Edited: Jul 31, 10:43 pm

Origin: Kindle
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 2.5

A Treacherous Tale: The Cambridge Bookshop Series by Elizabeth Penny

When I read the first in this series I thought it was a promising series start. The second book however used a technique that I found irritating, a children's book written by one of the adult characters was inserted in, I think, 3 sections. I disliked the children's book, disliked that it was interspersed in the actual book in sections, and thought it was gimmicky. Can you tell I didn't like it? I know Anthony Horowitz used that technique successfully, but here it was just an irritant to me. Otherwise the characters were good as was the mystery.

134thornton37814
Aug 1, 8:00 pm

>153 VivienneR: I hate the second didn't work for you. I haven't gotten around to it yet, but I liked the first one.

135clue
Edited: Aug 2, 1:17 pm

>134 thornton37814: I liked the first one too and will read the third. I just hope it's more like the first than this was. If you like the children's book, you will probably like it, the mystery is good.

136clue
Edited: Aug 11, 8:54 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.5

Mrs. Porter Calling by AJ Pearce



This is the third book with Emmy Lake as the protagonist. I've grown weary of novels with a WWII setting but I'm glad I didn't move on until I read these three.

Each of the books takes a different approach to carrying Emmy Lake's story. In the third book the story revolves around the upset at Women's Friend magazine where Emmy has risen to the position of advice columnist. She and most others at the magazine are very loyal to their readership. When the magazine is inherited by a socialite she decides to change the magazine's purpose from supporting average women through the war and instead focus on women like herself. Travel! Bespoke clothes! Recipes for the cook! Emmy and her friends attempt a rally but with no big money it may be a hopeless fight.

The author has written solid characters and friendships. She has said that the series will run through WWII and if that's still true we have one more to be published. I look forward to the fourth book here and whatever the author writes afterwards.

137clue
Edited: Sep 6, 9:05 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0

Finding the Lost Dalton by Harold Trisler

This is Trisler's account of researching and finding the location where Frank Dalton, a U.S. Deputy Marshal, was killed in the line of duty and who was involved in the murder. It also includes an explanation of law enforcement in that region (Indian Territory now Oklahoma) during that period. He includes an explanation of the Federal Court, located in Western Arkansas, that had jurisdiction over IT.

Frank Dalton was the brother of the 4 Dalton brothers in the legendary Dalton Brothers outlaw gang. When Frank was killed his brothers also became deputy marshals but they didn't last long.

138clue
Aug 27, 1:44 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0

Stuart Little by E.B. White

139clue
Aug 27, 5:48 pm

Heads up George Smiley fans. I just read that John le Carre's son has written a book to be published in October that revives George Smiley. I read the first seven in the series of nine over twenty years ago. I say every year I want to reread them in addition to the two that have been published since then, but somehow never get to it. Now I read that his son, Nick Harkaway, will have a book that revives Smiley published in October!

140VivienneR
Aug 28, 1:02 am

>136 clue: I have that on my library list after really enjoying the first two.

>139 clue: That's good news! Do you know if he'll be writing under the name Nick Harkaway or Cornwell or even le Carré? I'll be on the lookout anyway.

141clue
Aug 29, 10:30 am

>140 VivienneR: There's more humor in this one, the new owner was a good bad character.

>143 clue: The impression I got was that it would be Harkaway.

142clue
Edited: Sep 6, 9:18 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Cat (Weather)
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0

The Weather Woman by Sally Gardner



It can be very dangerous to be ahead of your time. Especially as a woman.

Unfortunately this novel is hard to describe. The setting is Regency England and the story begins at the Frost Fair on the Thames in 1789, and continues through the last Fair in 1814. The protagonist, Neva Friezland, is only three and at the Fair with her parents in 1789 when the ice begins to break. She tells her father the ice is moving before it becomes apparent but of course he ignores her. Separated from her parents as the ice fails they are lost to each other. She is adopted by a well known, highly skilled clockmaker. As Neva gets older he begins to understand and accept she has the ability to accurately predict the weather but over time they both learn that knowing the future compromises her safety and reputation as a young woman.

Because I read very little fantasy or books based on folklore, I approached this with some skepticism. I'm glad I picked it up though, it was well written and captivating. Not perfect but for me well worth the time I spent with it.

143clue
Edited: Sep 6, 9:01 pm

144beebeereads
Sep 6, 8:19 pm

Finally working my way through catching up on threads since April. We have always had a lot of common "likes" in our reading. I enjoyed your reviews.

145MissWatson
Sep 9, 4:40 am

>139 clue: Nick Harkaway is the son of??? I didn't know that. Thanks for the heads up!

146clue
Sep 10, 4:54 pm

>145 MissWatson: Yes, the son of LeCarre and he's written several books. I'd not been aware of him as writer.

147MissWatson
Sep 11, 5:46 am

>146 clue: I took BBs for two of his books, and will now approach them with a different eye.

148Charon07
Sep 11, 11:12 am

>147 MissWatson: I haven’t read any LeCarré, so I can’t make any comparisons between father and son, but I’ve read a couple of Nick Harkaway’s, and I plan to read more. I especially adored Gnomon, which I can’t even begin to describe in its complexity, but it’s a fascinating SF intellectual puzzle that I’ve heard called “fractal” in its structure. It does seem to be a book that some people hate, though.

149clue
Sep 11, 11:24 am

>148 Charon07: I'm glad to hear he's a good writer.

150clue
Edited: Sep 18, 8:18 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: POC Author
My Rating - 4*

Moon of the Turning Leaves by Waubgeshig Rice



This is the second book in the Moon series about an Anishinaabe community in Northern Ontario. The community was formed twelve years previously when its members left their homes after society collapsed due to a power failure. Although living in the wilderness has proved to be a safe place they know they must consider another move because the population of game and fish is nearing depletion.

The community members decide to send a scouting party to determine the possibility of living on the original Anishinaabe homeland far to the south. Volunteers are raised even though they know it will be a long and dangerous journey. This compelling recount of that journey is finely written and can be found on many recommended reading lists.

151clue
Edited: Sep 18, 8:54 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3*

Death in Provenceby Serena Kent



This light mystery is the first book for the author and it shows in her use of every cliché in the many books like it.

When Penelope's less than stellar husband dies she learns her two children now see her differently...primarily as a free baby sitter! So what's she to do? How about move to France, buy a decrepit old home to restore in a beautiful location, find a body in the moldy pool and get kidnapped by one of the murderers? If this sounds new to you, it's worth the time.

152beebeereads
Sep 22, 11:38 am

>150 clue: I am eager to read this book. I thoroughly enjoyed the first. I will likely listen to it when the cold winds blow here this winter. I remember Moon of the Crusted Snow as being very atmospheric.

153VivienneR
Oct 5, 2:08 pm

>150 clue: I enjoyed both Waubgeshig Rice books and hope he continues with the series.

154clue
Oct 5, 3:36 pm

>151 clue: I hope he does too!

155clue
Edited: Oct 26, 12:03 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0

South of the Border West of the Sun by Haruki Murakami



Hajime grows up in a small Japanese town just after WWII. From childhood into his thirties we are party to both his thoughts and to the results of his decisions. At the age of twelve he meets Shimamoto, another student at his school. She is also an only child and they go to his home after school, listen to records, and talk about things they are troubled by. When they begin going to different schools they grow apart but meet again in their thirties when Hajime is a husband and father.

I enjoyed Murakami's dreamlike writing but don't think this book will be memorable to me.

156clue
Edited: Oct 26, 3:43 pm

Origin: Library
CAT/KIT :
BINGO: Random Kit, Calendar CAT
My Rating - 4.5

The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare



This children's classic is a delight to revisit. The themes of prejudice and unfounded accusation are unfortunately as relevant for young readers today as in the 17th century.

157clue
Edited: Oct 31, 10:36 am

Origin: Library
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

The Antique Hunter's Guide to Murder by C.L. Miller



An antique hunter who searches for stolen items is an appealing character to me but this first novel wasn't what I hoped for. It has two good characters, the antique hunter and her sidekick aunt, but everything about the mystery is very conventional and the middle is something of a jumble. I'll follow the author to the next in the series though because I think she has promise.

For those who are familiar with the antique world, the author's mother was Judith Miller of Miller's Antique Price Guide.

158clue
Edited: Nov 15, 11:13 am

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.5

The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore by Evan Friss

159clue
Oct 31, 11:14 am

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

Murder on Safari by Hillary Waugh

First published in 1987 this isn't considered one of Waugh's best mysteries and seems a bit dated to me. James Addison is a newspaper writer working in New York. He's given an assignment to join a Bird Watchers Society tour going to Kenya and to write an article about it. The people on the tour are primarily mangers of the Cartwright company along with their wives. One exception is Dagger, an older man who has had a career as a writer and as a well-known detective. He is accompanied by his daughter who is in her twenties. There are jealousies and strained relationships among all of the Cartwright employees.

By the last quarter of the book three people on the tour have been murdered. After the second murder a Kenyan police officer joins the tour and at the end of the book, with he and Dagger working together, they identify the murderer. The fact that after each murder the tour continued seemed far fetched to me.

160clue
Edited: Nov 19, 11:36 am

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random Cat
BINGO: Another Cultural Tradition
My Rating - 3.0

Fried Eggs With Chopsticks by Poly Evans

This is a travelogue of the author's 2 month solo trip to China. I like that
she gives the history of different areas as she travels to them and in general brings China to life through her use of public transportation, eating in local restaurants, and interactions with ordinary people through her rudimentary Chinese. Sometimes her remarks are repetitive, particularly those pertaining to cleanliness. Marketed as being funny, I didn't particularly find it to be so.

161clue
Edited: Dec 8, 11:58 am

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT : Random CAT (First Person)
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

Lost and Found in Spain by Susan Lewis Solomont

This is a memoir of Solomont's three and a half years as the wife of the U.S. Ambassador to Spain during the Obama presidency. The first third of the book focuses on the difficulty she had of adjusting. After improving her Spanish, becoming involved in the Jewish community and becoming involved with Spain's executive women she found her balance. 3.0*

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.0

The Mistletoe Mystery by Nita Prose

A short (128 pages) book that can be finished in one sitting. I had not read any of the Molly the Maid series and it would probably have been better if I had, but even if I had I think this entry to the series would have been too predictable and too sweet for me.

162clue
Edited: Dec 25, 5:19 pm

Origin: Shelf
CAT/KIT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 2.5

The Autobiography of Santa Claus by Jeff Guinn
This story of how Santa Claus came to be is a combination of historical fact, historical figures, legend, and fantasy. It's told in 24 chapters that can be read one at a time during December. Perhaps if I had read it that way I would have liked it more. I found it often to be ponderous, repetitious, and sometimes boring.

163VivienneR
Yesterday, 4:38 pm

Wishing you happy reading in the New Year!