Friday, July 30, 2021
Ghosts by Dolly Atherton, 5*
Dawg Towne by Alice Kaltman, FIVE stars and woofs!
Tex and Jaz tried to read the book in the sun...too hot!
It’s rare for me to buy a physical copy of a book, but Dawg Towne, by Alice Kaltman is one I knew I’d want to pass around, and that’s not easy to do with an ebook. Besides, my dogs, Tex and Jaz, had heard so much about it they wanted to take a look. I sped through it, and was sorry, because I rather miss Towne, now that I am no longer visiting it in words, and the characters, human and canine, worked their way into my heart. Kaltman has done a marvelous job of creating people who live the emotions we all experience, those that we can talk about, and those we can’t. The overwhelming sense that I got was that everyone needs a best friend and companion, and sometimes, dogs are the best choice.
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"Did she tell you we liked it?" |
I won’t spoil the story, but merely comment that this is a book for anyone who’s lived in a city, or suburb, or outside them both, who feels the isolation that each locale can create. It’s also for everyone who’s ever known, or loved, a dog. Thanks Alice, for another wonderful story, and literary companions.
Then they lent it to their pal, Sasha.
And she agreed. Great book for summer 2021!
Tuesday, June 29, 2021
To Sir, With Love, another remake ala You've Got Mail! 4*
As an admitted rom com afficionado, I have watched Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan answer the AOL siren call many times in Nora Ephron’s You’ve Got Mail. I knew it was based on a classic and have promised myself a viewing of the 1940’s The Shop Around the Corner. To Sir, With Love, brought that same romantic feeling to 2021 with of course, an app. The delicious fantasy that we develop when we spend time in our own imagination, fueled by words of kindness and understanding, is perfectly portrayed by Lauren Layne’s Grace/Lady and Sebastian/Sir. Setting it in a Champagne shop in Manhattan extended the fantasy for those of us who have always dreamed of New York, but know it belongs firmly there, in our dreams.
You will love these characters, even though you have a pretty good idea of what will happen. Thanks Lauren Layne, for a delightful escape in these serious and weary times.
Thanks to the publisher, Simon and Schuster, and Net Galley for giving me this break! To Sir, With Love was published today, June 29, 2021.
Monday, June 21, 2021
Songs In Ursa Major, for lovers or music and more. Five *
Songs in Ursa Major by Emma Brodie
When Janie Quinn takes the stage at her tiny island’s summer Folk Fest, her local band suddenly subbing for superstar Jessie Reid, she has no real idea of the ride she’s about to go on. Not only does the connection she feels with her fans provide her with the sense of belonging she’s sought since being abandoned as a child, it also opens doors--to Jessie, the strength of his success, and even his piano. Janie’s gift is not something she takes lightly, and conforming isn’t part of the fabric of her family. Songs in Ursa Major leaves readers yearning for Jane to succeed, for Jane and Jessie to find their way together, and for the music industry to find a conscience. I won’t tell you which of those are resolved but will say that for anyone who’s ever been an artist—whether it be with paint or words or music, this story will grab hold and remind you why you do it, and what you are up against.
A great story you will not want to put down. Brava Emma Brodie!
Thanks to the publisher and Net Galley for the advanced copy of this book. It will be released June 22, 2021.
Friday, June 04, 2021
New Girl in Little Cove by Damhnait Monaghan Five Stars!
I loved this wonderful trip to Newfoundland and it's fabulous characters. If you loved Come From Away this book that will remind you of the same feelings you had then, and totally warm your heart. New Girl in Little Cove is the story of a mainlander... Rachel, ( from exotic Ontario) who goes to Newfoundland for her first teaching job. Each character will become a friend in your memory and you'll struggle not to want to try out the dialect. Great read!
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
More book reviews! All very different. That Summer, You Can Trust Me, The House by the Cerulean Sea!
That Summer, Jennifer Weiner 5*
That Summer is another book set in Cape Cod, in the area we became familiar with in last year’s Weiner novel, Big Summer. This time we meet two families, one being wealthy, boarding school educated and suburban Philadelphia society entrenched. The other is the created family of Diana, a young woman whose life changed after a traumatic assault when she was young. How the two families intertwine and the tangles along the way create a story you will worry about and test your own thoughts on “#metoo” and money.
Jennifer Weiner continues to grow as a writer, tackling complicated viewpoints and issues and packaging them into contemporary fiction. That this book is being called a beach read illustrates again how beach reads have evolved into important fiction. Complex characters and smooth transitions! Culture clashes and #metoo. Creativity v. Money orientation. A great read!
The Publisher sent me an early copy of this book, which is available now!

You Can Trust Me, by Emma Rowley 4*
I’m not generally a mystery reader but like to broaden my scope. When a popular online book club chose this book for a monthly “read along” I hopped on the bandwagon, because their recommendations have led me to many books I’ve enjoyed.
I count this one as one of them. An intriguing house, built on the site of a tragic fire, a wealthy social influencer with the requisite handsome husband and darling child. And the ghostwriter, who is there to expand the brand. Or is she?
The book twists and turns in both viewpoint and time, leading the reader down first one alley and then the next. Maybe it’s because this isn’t my normal genre, but I found it fun! The ending was mostly satisfying--no spoilers from me! If you like a mystery, or need a change, give this one a try.
The House on the Cerulean Sea, TJ Klune 6*...if possible.
This may be my favorite book of the year. It reads like a children's book or maybe a fable, and the magical creatures who make up the characters are nothing like what I normally read, but what a beautiful story, beautifully told. The characters are exquisite, from the seemingly OCD Linus Baker to the fascinating master of the Orphanage, we are taught to look beyond appearances and preconceptions to the possibility of a kinder, more inclusive world. Linus is sent to investigate the orphanage, with almost no preparation, so we discover all the idiosyncrasies along with him. This writer makes us adore the spawn of Lucifer!
"How can we fight prejudice if we do nothing to change it? If we allow it to fester, what’s the point?”
Give yourself the gift of reading this one!
Sunday, April 18, 2021
Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid, Great summer read! 5 stars
Taylor Jenkins Reid has shown she’s a skilled writer, unafraid of using nonlinear storylines to develop the world of her characters. Malibu Rising is no different. Add to that the family saga of the Rivas and this is the kind of book you can sink into.
The Rivas value their family bonds, a value that is tested over and over with their parents, siblings and their choice of loves. For a group as loyal as the four children, Nina, Jay, Hud and Kit, their secrets keep them from being completely authentic with each other, but for some reason, this, along with insecurities we don’t expect from the celebrities they’ve become, make them relatable characters we just want to cheer for.
Set against glamorous Malibu, with the ocean, surfing, fires and wild parties that just the name Malibu brings to mind, this was a satisfying novel with just enough escapism to make it an ideal summer read. Cinematic in its scope and execution, this book would be a great movie. Another hit for TJR!
Malibu Rising publication day is June 1, 2021. Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for my copy!
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
A Million Reasons Why, by Jessica Strawser. 5*
A Million Reasons Why by Jessica Strawser
When Caroline’s husband selected the Christmas gift they would give her family, he had no reason to believe it would result in anything but interesting information. He had no way of knowing the heartbreaking secrets that would be unlocked by that simple test.
The information sends this family into chaos that includes infidelity and illegitimate children, to lies told to keep the secrets hidden. Along the way, complex characters tangled together in a web of love and secrecy gamble with what they hold most dear. And the plot continues to twist.
Strawser had treated moral issues most people never consider with tenderness and compassion. What would you do if you could save someone’s life…and only you could do it? This book not only explores the morality of its characters, but also of how our society treats people with medical crises, particularly those in need of organ donation.
This book will grab you and keep you until the end. You won’t want to put it down.
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing this copy to me. Publication date is March 23, 2021.
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
The Sweet Taste of Muscadines, debut by Pamela Terry. 4*
The Sweet Taste of Muscadines
The Sweet Taste of Muscadines, a debut novel by Pamela Terry, is the best of southern family drama but also part travel book. The scenes that unfold for the Bruce family, upon the unexpected death of the matriarch sport characters authentic, lovable and embarrassing, just as we’d expect in a story of a family.
Where Terry shines most, though, is in her descriptions and sense of place. Lila, our main character, begins the journey at her late husband, now her, home in Maine, where we as readers would be just as happy to stay, with the artists and all the great canine friends.
But then she travels “home” to Wesleyan, Georgia, and she not only enchants us with the tasteful homes and small town, but also lets us visit the low country Marsh. The writing in this section felt very much like Pat Conroy could have been nudging the author as she typed.
But she saved the best for last, as our characters travel to the Hebrides in Scotland, to the actual island (but fictional community) of Eynhallow, where the beauty makes the reader, and probably the writer, breathless.
Encapsulated in these lovely settings is a very real story of loss, mystery and acceptance. In these pandemic times, I’d give it five stars for the chance to “travel” alone, but the story is well done. Especially if you love dogs!
The Sweet Taste of Muscadines will be published March 16, 2021 by Random House/Ballantine. Thanks to NetGalley for the chance to preview.
Tuesday, February 02, 2021
Four Winds by Kristin Hannah….5+ stars.
Kristin Hannah is one of those authors whose book you know you will love no matter the subject or genre. She’s that good at bringing character, time and place to life. Her research is dependable which lets the reader “live” in times too hard to fantasize, while appreciating the beauty along the way.
She’s done that again with Four Winds. Here more than ever, Hannah gives us a glimpse of the lives and expectations of women in the pre depression era, then raises the stakes by putting her underestimated character, Elsa, on a Texas panhandle farm immediately before, and then during, the dust bowl. Elsa and her children keep descending the societal ladder and eventually find themselves as homeless migrant workers in California.
I don’t want to spoil the story but must elaborate on the brilliant descriptions of the time and place. I could FEEL the dust in my nostrils. The cold wet nights of homelessness. The despair of hopelessness. And most importantly, the strength that Elsa finds within herself.
If you’ve missed Hannah’s other historical novels, you owe it to your hungry reader self to pick them up. Four Winds is the most recent, but only the beginning. Brava, Kristin Hannah!
I was granted access to this book by Net Galley and St. Martin’s Press. Four Winds releases today, February 2, 2021.
Sunday, January 24, 2021
What’s Worth Keeping, Kaya McLaren 5*.
(Warning: This book has graphic depictions of cancer and recovery, as well as first responder ptsd)
What’s Worth Keeping, Kaya McLaren
This is a beautiful book in so many ways. Kaya McLaren clearly speaks from experience as she describes her character, Amy's, journey through diagnosis, treatment and recovery from breast cancer. Poor Amy has it bad enough with just that, but when she discovers divorce papers completed by her husband Paul, she needs to leave her family and return to nature to find a way back to herself. She revisits National Parks and Monuments from her childhood and lets the majesty of those sacred places help her heal.
In the meantime, Paul, who has never recovered from the PTSD of being a first responder at the Murrah Building bombing in Oklahoma City, must find his way out of the nightmares, reliving tragedy at every turn. On top of that, Amy and Paul have an 18-year-old daughter on the brink of her own future who punishes her parents for their "shortcomings."
The settings of this novel, the national parks and Great Aunt Rae's outfitting operation in New Mexico are breathtaking, and the author renders them perfectly. The story of each of the characters, told in alternating chapters give a uniquely personal insight into the emotions and physical challenges each of them face and the author is able to resolve the issues in a way that feels hopeful.
Aside from being a wonderful story, I would recommend this book to anyone close to someone facing any of these crises…cancer, PTSD recovery and teenagers whose parents must deal with normal life amid near tragedy. An emotional journey not often told well. Brava Kaya McLaren.
This book was provided to me by the publisher, via NetGalley.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Perfectly Impossible, well written, but ....3*
Perfectly Impossible
This light and sometimes heartwarming book felt like a throw-back to the sixties, when escapist reading often delved into the lives of the uber rich and the problems that they create just by being. I didn’t care for them then and didn’t love this book now. I’d rather read about accessible people, not modern-day fairy tales.
Yet if you take away the glitz and glam, you are left with Anna, an undiscovered artist who pays her way by working for The Rich and Famous and Vacuous KissyVon Bismark (only her husband calls her Bambi.). Anna is a personal assistant extraordinaire, who can and does solve problems from the tiniest to the unimaginable. She’s so good, in fact, that she’s unbelievable. I wanted to believe in her, and if I suspend my disbelief enough to accept the over the top things she does for her boss, I can, but the world I know and the one created just doesn’t let me go that far. Maybe I’m too much of a pragmatist for this one.
If you like tales of the rich and the world they inhabit, you will enjoy this one. It is an easy read, and well written.
Thanks to NetGalley for letting me read it.
Tuesday, October 06, 2020
Sometimes, we all need a do-over. In a Holidaze by Christina Lauren. Great holiday escape!
In a Holidaze
When the annual family holiday trip to the mountains takes an unexpected turn, Maelyn Jones is devastated. Not only has she engaged in a snog fest with the wrong brother, but the cabin where her family has vacationed all her life, with her parent’s college friends and families, is going to be sold and she’ll never have a chance at a do over with the right brother.
Only she does. Again and again. Maelyn gets thrown back in time and had to play out the entire vacation from the beginning, and only she knows what happened the first time.
This is a delightful holiday novel, just right for a season too busy for serious books. The characters are the well drafted people who inhabit all our families, whether biological or chosen and they act accordingly. On top of that, it’s hilarious. It’s a perfect book for 2020, because who wouldn’t want some “do overs?”
I received an ARC of In a Holidaze from NetGalley. It’s release date is October 6, 2020.
Monday, August 31, 2020
Amazing Research is Jodi Picoult's Wheelhouse. Great read. Five Stars!
Dawn MacDowell is a gifted Egyptologist with a specialty in The Book of Two Ways, the direction for ancient Egyptians to guide them in the afterlife. But while she is absorbed with the historical treatment of death, the reality hits too close to home when her mother tells her she is dying. Dawn must leave the work and the man she loves to be with her mother and care for her young brother. When her mother dies, she is trapped with the need to handle her mother’s debt and the care of her small brother. Egypt is so far away. Dawn runs away from her first loves and drawing on the experience she’s had with her mother, becomes a Death Doula, helping terminal patients deal with the myriad of things left unfinished. The struggle Dawn feels over her lost career, the man she loved first, the family and career she’s created conflict in heartbreaking ways.
When I started reading this book, I was afraid that the Egyptology portions which are so important to this book were beyond my understanding, but as Jodi Picoult is so good at doing, by the end of the book I just wanted more.
I loved this book. I enjoyed each level of the story and enjoyed the timeline hopping because it made it easy to understand why Dawn was so confused. I loved learning about the history of Egypt, Death Doula’s and even the quantum physics Dawn’s husband teaches. I cannot recommend this book highly enough.
Thank you to the publisher, Ballantine, and to NetGalley for allowing me to read this book in advance. The book will be published on September 22, 2020.
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
Great summer read: Better Choices, Rod Pennington and Jeffery A. Martin. 5*
![Better Choices by [Rod Pennington, Jeffery A. Martin]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51fVjnB9yRL.jpg)
Exciting Times, Naoise Dolan. Millennials in Hong Kong

Tuesday, April 14, 2020
What You Wish For, another great Katherine Center book, 5*

The Second Home, by Christina Clancy 4*

Monday, March 30, 2020
Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear by Matt Salesses
Disappear Doppelgänger Disappear by Matt Salesses
Friday, March 27, 2020
Big Summer by Jennifer Berg. 5*

This was a Read Now selection from NetGalley and provided by the wonderful publisher, Atria Books.