Sunday, April 3, 2022

March 2022 Books Read

 

March rolled in like a lion here in Montana and I'm not sure Mother Nature really knows what season it is.  Good thing I have books to keep me sane until it's actually spring or summer....sprummer.  That's a thing, right? It is in my world so let's get on with the reason you're here.......

*2022 Audiobook Challenge* : The Friday Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs: I am so glad I decided to do something different with my reading this year.  This audiobook challenge has been a wonderful way to remind myself of so many reasons why I fell in love with a book when I read the hard copy.  This month's book was like coming back to an old group of friends. It has to be close to 10 years since I read The Friday Night Knitting Club by Kate Jacobs.  I found the book while thrifting with my sainted sister-in-law in Denver, CO.  It was a freak find and I mostly liked it because the cover was gorgeous (remember how I'm a total sucker for good cover art?) While I listened to this book I was reminded of the quirks and endearments of each of the characters that struck me when I read it, but in the same thought process, how much more applicable they are to me 10 years later.  I was especially drawn to the ages of the women and how close they are to my actual age and how fitting their struggles are for my current chapter in life.  This book is Rated PG for difficult adult themes and some mention of sex, but nothing that blows your hair back.  Book 2 is probably a bit more PG-13, but I'll cover that in another month! 

Florence Adler Swims Forever by Rachel Beanland: This was an intriguing coming of age book centered around a family who has a love for swimming.  I wasn't prepared for death and grieving to happen in the first 3 chapters so be prepared.  Once the family gets through the initial shock I really enjoyed the themes of moving forward, making the best with what's in front of us and stepping outside the social norms.  This book presents some really good moments to consider racism and religious inequality plus social class and how all three affect people's lives intimately.  It was really compelling and I felt like the ending did it justice and tied up nicely for me.  This book is rated PG-13 for difficult life events surrounding death and grief and sexual references.  

The Persian Pickle Club by Sandra Dallas:  Another feel-good read about a group of women who come together every week to make quilts.  It's set during the depression and is more of a day-to-day telling of the lives of women and their families in a small town in Kansas.  I loved the characters and how they were always there for each other.  I also learned that the term "Persian Pickle" is another way to refer to a paisley print.  This book is not very long so it's a good book for a lazy day at the park or on vacation.  This book is rated PG for mild adult themes, but nothing that remotely pushes it to the PG-13 level.  

The Arctic Fury by Greer Macallister:  I loved this book.  It was heavy on the law and courtroom dialogue mixed with harrowing tales of a group of women who go to Alaska in attempts to find a lost expedition of men.  The plot is centered around some true events and it was a great book to listen to while driving all over the state for my job.  It is a well-written alternating POV book and bounces back and forth between the court proceedings in Boston and the day-to-day adventures of a group of women who are so uniquely different from each other, but all out there trying to overcome the last frontier.  Books like this help me remember I can also be a bad ass woman when I feel like giving up and that is why I keep reading/listening to them.  This book is rated PG 13 for some crazy recounts of women in the wild tundra of Alaska and everything that came along with it including death and near-death experiences.  

My Contrary Mary by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows:  Book number 3 in this fabulous series came at the perfect time! I needed funny and light after the previous book and this fit the bill.  This is a retelling of Mary Queen of Scot and has some vague connections to the first book, "My Lady Jane." It was also my "Green Cover Challenge" for St. Patrick's Day! I enjoyed reading this book a lot and it was still as clever as the other two books.  However, I still firmly hold "My Lady Jane" as the best book and the natural break until the next book comes out in the fall is a good thing.  The authors are so good at making the story funny and engaging, yet suspenseful.  This book is rated PG for mild adult themes.  It is also a young adult fiction book which is suitable for teens.  

Carolina Built by Kianna Alexander:  I LOVED this book! It is a historical fiction based around the real life events of an incredible woman named Josephine Napoleon Leary. Jo was one of the first black women to pave the way in real estate development in North Carolina.  It was very well written and the author did a lot of research in the women's history archives at UNC - Chapel Hill to compile her story.  I'm not afraid to claim my feminist spin on things and I ESPECIALLY love reading stories about women who are also minorities who get shit done and take names.  Jo was just that lady and I'm so glad I took the time to listen to this book.  This book is rated PG-13 for some difficult topics and relationship struggles due to alcoholism, racism and domestic altercations. 

The Master Butchers Singing Club by Louise Erdrich:  Ok friends...this is the book I'm not going to make friends talking about because so many of you raved about it when I shared on Facebook.  I wanted to love this book and I just didn't.  This book was choppy and didn't make a ton of sense to me.  I felt like the title alluded to more singing and how that would bring together a group of immigrants, but it didn't.  This book also made my eyes cross because the print was very small and the margins narrow.  My Aunt Holly and I talked about how we both fall in the snob category of font and margins have to be perfect or we don't read it.  Well, I suffered through this one thinking the plot would outweigh and it didn't.  This book is rated PG-13 for heavy life themes and crappy font and margin formatting.  ;o)

The Other Einstein by Marie Benedict:  My last book of March was also historical fiction about a real life person.  Mileva Maric was the first wife of Albert Einstein and the main character of this book.  Mileva was a genius in her own right and a mathematician when being nerdy and female was frowned upon.  She catches the eye of Albert Einstein when they are at university and eventually get married.  You can Google the real story about the first Mrs. Einstein and read that she offered a lot of critical math equations in papers that all credit went to her husband.  Old Mr. Alby was an ass hat and I'm going to venture to say he was un-diagnosed narcissist and maybe even high functioning autism.  My raging feminist heart broke for her and I celebrated when she finally said, peace out bro, I'm done.  This book is rated PG-13 for asshat Alby and all the horrible things he put Mileva through during their marriage.

March was another good reading month in the cozy book nook.  Spring is starting to peek out and the days are getting longer so I am happier.  Reading keeps me grounded and reminds me of the many people before I was born who had to fight for the basic rights of existing as a woman with a brain who has control of her money and uterus.  

The moral of the story: Girl power hasn't always been a given.  Respect the history of women and what it mean to your life.  I know I do every single day!

Until next time, my lovelies,
-R

Friday, March 4, 2022

February 2022 Books Read


Aw, the month of l-o-v-e and allllll the heart eyes was certainly another outstanding book adventure! As luck would have it February ended up being the month for a twisted tale of Jane Eyre in my new books reading annnnnnd the best love story ever for the Audiobook 2022 Challenge (next to the real Jane Eyre) The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.  But then it included some really solid Kristin Hannah about domestic violence and the 2nd installment of angsty minivan-driving ex-wives trying to help their ex-husband NOT get killed.  What is this madness and why didn't I plan it better?  That, my friends, is how my life runs.  Read on to see what swoony and sorta shifty shenanigans I got myself into during February.  Have you read any of these books?  I'd love to hear about it in the comments!

*2022 Audiobook Challenge* : The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows: When I read the book a few years ago, I was in absolute awe of the writing style, the character depth and the DARLING tale about friends who survived the war through a happenstance book club on the island of Guernsey.  The original book review is on this blog and it holds one of the highest ranks in views because this kind of theme deeply resonates with people.  We survive life because of the friends we hold dear.  Listening to the audiobook was a complete dream.  All the actors used for the different characters were exactly as I imagined them in my head.  I really felt the depth of devotion and love this group of people had for each other when I heard it and how much they sacrificed by letting Juliet in their circle.  I'm still super impressed with how well the film adaptation kept with the book plot and all I can say about the book vs. the movie is this: the film was kind to Mark's character.  He is an absolute ass hat in the book and hearing it was even more evident. Juliet and Dawsey?  Still the answer.  I was sad when it ended because I felt like I put my friends back in the library.  Rated PG-13 for difficult themes centered around life, loss and war.  

Summer Wives by Beatriz Williams: This book was juicy and a period piece set in the early 1950s! I'll be honest I didn't realize just how shifty the plot was going to be when I read the description and then it was too late because I was hooked.  When I finished the book I made a note on my list that it was like "Mad Men" meets nantucket mystery. It's also presents solid evidence on why you should never have an affair. Ever. Definitely Rated R for romance themes and all that comes with them.  

My Plain Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows: Last month I read the first book, "My Lady Jane" by this trio of authors and ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT.  Like it firmly holds the #1 favorite book of 2022.  I was hopeful and very excited to read "My Plain Jane" because it was a twisted version of "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte.  For those who don't know "Jane Eyre" is my # 1 favorite classic book.  I adore it.  So, while I was intrigued and still enjoyed this book, I didn't 5-star love it.  I felt like I was a really picky editor who was having an affair on Charlotte Bronte's original plot line and Mr. Rochester.  Like I said before just say no to affairs.  But seriously, this was still a great book, clever and clean.  Rated PG due to mildly violent themes.  It's technically YA fiction like the first book so it's mild.  

The Great Alone by Kristin Hannah: Where do I even begin?  This book has been recommended to me multiple times since it came out a few years ago.  I've been resistant to reading it because the main theme is domestic violence and anything Kristin Hannah writes is VIVID and intense and my empath heart can't take it, especially in the winter.  But then I found it while thrifting and it was on sale for a dollar and my aunt's voice was looming in my brain from Thanksgiving telling me how much I would love this book so I caved.   Boy, am I glad I caved. This book is unbelievably accurate in every sense when it comes to the danger and heartache of domestic violence.  I know first hand (thanks to the day job) what domestic violence looks like and the author NAILED IT.  She also gave a very realistic depiction of what active combat trauma does to a person and their family. But! On the flip side of the gruesome realities of domestic violence and combat-induced PTSD was the grit and utter resilience shown by a village (literally) of people in the "great alone of Alaska" who helps a mother and daughter rise above the abuse and conquer the world.  It took me a few days and a few more Disney movies to process after I finished, but I'm still glad I read the book.  Rated R through and through for domestic violence vividly described.  

The Hurricane Sisters by Dorothea Benton Frank: This was a lovely book on the outside and professed to be a good "beachy read" so I thought, perfect after finishing Kristin Hannah.  Welllllllll, they were only half correct.  About halfway through the book and solid domestic abuse strolls in to the plot line and it wasn't so light anymore.  My biggest beef about this book is they advertised it as a book about 3 women who are connected by the hurricane-ridden island they live on in Eastern America.  That reference is made in the last 50 pages of the book....if that.  Again, tough editor hat on and I wanted to bust out my red pen and write "Really? You titled it this and then didn't explain it until the end! Red check marks here, here and here." It was still a good read and I finished it without sacrificing brain cells so that's a win.  Rated PG-13 for difficult adult themes.  

Finlay Donovan Knocks 'em Dead by Elle Cosimano: This came at a point in the month when I needed solid humor and a book with characters I already knew.  The much anticipated 2nd installment of minivan mom mishaps with Finlay Donovan did not disappoint.  I liked it better than the first book and that's saying a lot.  It was equal edge-of-your-seat mystery, curl-your-toes romance and rolling-on-the-floor humor.  I'm excited for the next book to come out although I don't know when the author plans to release.  This book just came out in 2022 so I'm guessing a couple years.  Rated PG-13 for minivan mom murder attempts and some steamy romance.  

The Sunflower Sisters by Martha Hall Kelly: This was my vacation week book and a whopping 500 pages of very good Civil War historical fiction.  I thoroughly enjoyed this book and finished it in 3 days.  That is far more of a sign that I was rested and had energy to read for hours at a time, but it is also because the book is just so good.  It's actually the 3rd installment of a series of books that started with "The Lilac Girls" which is set in WWII.  I sort of knew this was a prequel and I've never read "The Lilac Girls" so I took a risk on reading the last prequel first.  I don't know if I'll read the other 2 books, to be honest.  I liked this book all on its own and thought it gave a very well-rounded account of the Civil War and the toll it took on families.  After I finished it I sent a message to my friend who I went to college with in Southern Virginia and said "you should read this....it's not Gone With the Wind." A bit of an inside joke, but trust me when I say "The Sunflower Sisters" is much more accurate than Scarlett and Rhett.  Rated R for graphic descriptions of abuse toward slaves.

West End Girls by Jenny Colgan: This book was set in London and twin sisters take a risk and go and live at their grandmother's lavish apartment for free while she's in an assisted living center.  The book details their adventures and mishaps as two very different people trying to co-exist in a new place.  Generally Jenny Colgan does a good job at writing stories that are sweet and predictable.  This book wasn't my favorite.  I couldn't get in to the characters and felt like it was too Hallmark movie for my taste.  I don't think I lost brain cells like last month's ultra sappy Hallmark-esch book, but it was a close call.  Rated PG-13 for adult themes including sex and profanity.  

Every Wild Heart by Meg Donahue: When I found this book at the thrift store it jumped out at me because it talked about mother/daughter relationships and a bit of mystery.  It neglected to mention that it was probably more of a YA fiction and better suited for older teenagers or young adults (a LOT younger than me).  It had some great narrative about the therapy that comes with spending time with horses, but it also had a weird mystery about the mom being stocked by one of her loony radio show fans.  This was another book that made me cringe because the author literally came to the climatic event and "resolved" everything in the last 20 pages.  I felt jipped because the plot line development could have either been realigned to meet the 200 page limit of they could have made it a 350 page book and did it right.  I'm glad it was short otherwise I might not have finished it.  Rated PG for mild themes about wackadoo stalkers.  

All in all I was really pleased with the books I read and listened to in February. My brain feels so much better when it's actively reading and keeping track of a plot, creating voices and envisioning settings.  March includes some solid road trips which means good audiobook time and I can't wait to share with you my selection for the 2022 Audiobook Challenge.  

The moral of the story: Life is messy, but thank goodness for friends who make it bearable.  

Until next time, my lovelies,
-R







Saturday, February 12, 2022

January 2022 Books Read

 


I likely rang in the new year with my "nose stuck in a book" but that pretty much sums up winter in the cozy book nook.  Reading is how I keep my brain moving and not going crazy during the shorter, darker days of winter.  This year 800 days of January was offset with some really fantastic books and the first of my 2022 Audiobook Challenge.  Here are some musings on the plot and my handy dandy rating for those who may not enjoy the swearing, sex or blood and guts.  Have you read any of these books?  What did you think? 

*Audiobook Challenge 2022*: The Boston Girl by Anita DiamantThis book has remained in my Top Five Favorites since I read the hard copy and it has sweet memories attached to it as well.  After I wrote about the book on my previous blog I shared the review on my Twitter feed.  I was really in to learning social media at that time and learned that sometimes a person could get lucky and find and tag the author in the original tweet.  What I didn't expect was to receive a personal message from Ms. Diamant and then her willingness to send me an autographed placard for my used copy out of appreciation for my review.  It meant the world to me during a really dark, sad time of life.  The audiobook was absolutely wonderful.  I listened to it during a trip for work and I hardly noticed the hours go by.  The tragedy and triumph experienced by a pre-WWII Jewish family in Boston was still just as poignant.  There were elements of the story that made my heart hurt more now than before.  I think that has a lot to do with 7 years of life experiences since I read it and having a narrator say it out loud with the emotion the author intended. If you'd like to read the original blog post click on this hyperlink.  This is a solid PG-13 due to thematic issues and sexual content.  

The Elephant of Belfast by S. Kirk Walsh: This was a gripping book about the Nazi invasion in Budapest and how it affected a local zoo.  The main character is a young woman who connects well with a young elephant named Violet.  Throughout the book we read about the sadness, danger and adventure that came with war and how it affected the zoo animals and those caring for them.  This is a solid PG-13 read due to gore related to wartime.  

Let Them Eat Cake by Sandra Byrd: I really had high hopes for this book and read it after The Elephant of Belfast to have a side of funny after a lot of sadness.  It was dumb.  It was low budget Hallmark movie dumb.  I finished it and was drawn in enough to finish, but it was nothing to write home about and promptly went in the "Back to the Thrift Store" box in the corner book nook.  This is a PG due to mild adult themes and lack of brain cells used to write it.

The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce: I absolutely ADORED this book.  It really spoke to my musical hippie, Beatles-loving, avante-garde heart. The story centers around a record shop owner in the 1980s and the day-to-day experiences he has with people and their quest to find the right soundtrack for their life.  In the course of his journey as a small business owner he has met many people with their own tales to tell that often include music.  His shop is on a quirky street along with other vibrant shopkeepers doing their best to stay afloat.  Then one day a beautiful and mysterious woman faints in front of the record shop and his life changes forever and ever. The writing style in this book was outstanding and the author did a very good job at building a voice for each character that came alive for me on the page.  Definitely a 5 Star Rating! This is a PG read due to some language, but it's pretty tame.  

The Secret Gift of Lucia Lemon by Celia Anderson: This was a darling book about an older woman who takes a trip in Europe and finds herself through following the footsteps of a dear family friend.  This book was a great escape for the bleak winter outside and the characters all had delightful personalities.  Lucia seeks out answers of where to go next in life after a dead end marriage to someone she likely never loved anyway.  She learns that it's never too late to start over and there is always time for an adventure.  I gave this 4 stars.  This is a mild PG-13 for adult themes and some sexual content.  

My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadow: Hear ye, hear ye, you must read this book! My friend from college recommended this book after her book club read it in 2021. She said the reviews were mixed among the members of her book club but she loved it.  When I read the description on Amazon I was instantly hooked.  Just the sarcasm of the book synopsis had me laughing.  And laughing I did not stop.  From page one until the word "the end" I laughed my guts out.  This is a clever and hysterical re-telling of Jane Grey who is married off at 16 to a guy she really detests and then finds out he's actually a horse and that makes their wedding night super awkward and then they magically save the kingdom (and her cousin) and they all live happily ever after.  Read. it. today. Just hilarious and in the #1 spot for best book of 2022. Rated PG which was refreshing and it is mostly because it's technically youth fiction.  

Marilla of Green Gables by Sarah McCoy: This book has been on my wish list for years and I'm glad I only listened to it on the audiobook from the public library.  It was a disappointment and there is no way around it.  I am a diehard Anne Shirley fan and when I read about this book I was so pleased that someone had taken the time to tell Marilla's story and why she was such a sour soul until she had Anne.  I think the author wanted that to be her outcome, but for me it felt like regurgitating Anne's story that was already masterfully written by L.M. Montgomery.  The writing wasn't terrible and she did attempt to develop the characters which kept me listening, but the majority of the time I felt like I was being unfaithful to the OG Anne with an E.  Rated G.  Not a bit of scandal.  

So there you have it, my nerdy book friends! I'm so happy to be back on the blog train o' crazy and look forward to sharing my musings about the books I'm reading and listening to in 2022.....oooh that rhymed.  I would love to hear from you about the books you're reading and especially if you've read any of the books I mentioned.  Bombard my comment section, peasants! I welcome ye!

The moral of the story: January is over. Hallelujah.

Until next time, my lovelies,
-R