Dream Count

Hi bookworms, how’s it going? It’s been another quick week here with more windy, mild conditions. Our dog Willow has been out sunning herself with the pumpkins on the front stoop. She’s apparently protecting them, lol. It’s almost Halloween (already?!) and I realize I haven’t read any ghoulish kind of fiction this month. I usually like to pick up some kind of spooky thing. Though I did read the crime novel The Death of Us this month and watched The Lost Bus movie about the fire in California, both of which have some scary elements to them. But it’s not the same as a Shirley Jackson kind of tale or a movie or book that’s got haunted houses and ghosts causing havoc in the night. Have you read any this month? What would you recommend (either book or show)?

And I know it’s late October, but it’s better late than never to talk about a recap of my Summer reading Challenge. The ones pictured above were the 15 books I picked at the end of May that I hoped to get to. And I did finish them all except for one, which was Tim Winton’s novel Juice. That novel alluded me and it’s not easy to find, but I still plan to read it sometime. The rest were all quite good and I didn’t find any duds among the bunch. It’s hard to rate which ones I liked best or that stood out to me (most were four stars), but I’ve tried to list them below in some kind of order of which I thought were strongest. I’m still tinkering with the order.

  • Audition by Katie Kitamura — it’s up for the Booker
  • A Marriage at Sea by Sophie Elmhirst — an unreal lost at sea true tale
  • Nesting by Roisin O’Donnell — an Irish women’s abusive marriage and escape
  • Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall — a British love triangle gone wrong
  • The Death of Us by Abigail Dean — a married couple’s struggles after a home invasion
  • Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie — the lives of four African women who are at a crossroads
  • Heartwood by Amity Gaige — an all out search for a lost hiker
  • Rabbit Moon by Jennifer Haigh — a hit-and-run accident upends a women’s life in Shanghai
  • The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali — a lasting female friendship set during the political upheavals of Iran
  • Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid — the early days of female astronauts in the space program
  • So Far Gone by Jess Walter — an older reclusive man journeys to protect his grandkids from a militant group
  • Tilt by Emma Pattee — a pregnant woman’s journey across her city in the aftermath of a major earthquake
  • The Last Secret Agent by Pippa LaTour — a female spy’s true tale of her days in Nazi Occupied France
  • The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus by Emma Knight — a woman at the University of Edinburgh tries to find out secrets about her parents

So there you have it. All in all, it was a pretty lively summer of reading with these books. And I pretty much liked them all. Did you read any of these?

And now I’ll leave you with a review of what I finished lately.

Dream Count by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie / Knopf / 416 pages / 2025

Synopsis: Each segment of the novel follows a different African woman during the pandemic who are all friends — Chiamaka, Zikora, Kadiatou, and Omelogor — as they come to crossroads in their lives and figure a path forward.

Chiamaka is a Nigerian travel writer who recalls her past lovers and struggles with her choices and regrets. While Zikora is a lawyer in D.C. about to experience motherhood for the first time and upset that her partner has left. Whereas the outspoken Omelogor leaves a job of fraud in Nigeria to enter an MBA program in the States, only to find herself angered by her righteous classmates. And most disturbingly, Kadiatou is assaulted by a prominent man while at her hotel cleaning job and it blows into a public scandal.

My Thoughts: This was one of my last books on my summer reading list, lol. I thought there would be more interaction between the four women and it would be about their friendship, but no, the segments for the most part are pretty separate and it’s mostly about each of their lives and what they experience separately. It almost seemed like linked stories of the women, all of which have echoes of feminist themes.

I listened to it as an audiobook and the different narrators enlivened the story, and the first half with the women Chiamaka, Zikora, and Kadiatou I was engaged with. But then the latter half with Omelogor and a final part with Chiamaka went a bit off the tracks for me. My mind wandered and it sort of exhausted me as it went on too much. So the early parts kept me interested and the later parts tired me a bit. It seems I might have liked her 2013 novel Americanah slightly more, but I was glad to have finished this one too as I liked the women generally and the book’s feminist themes.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read any of these and what did you think? How’s your reading been?

Posted in Books | 24 Comments

The Fact Checker

Hi ho, it’s been a quick week. First off, thanks to those who participated in the No Kings peaceful protests yesterday, so good to express one’s first amendment right to free speech against what is happening under the current U.S. administration. It looked to be a great turnout!

We didn’t have any near us in Canada, but we do support the sentiments. It’s been a while since I flew to Denver in January 2017 to participate in the Women’s March, and if I had more notice, I’d like to have done so again. I was just in D.C. and I missed the march this time. But my brother shared some protest photos where he was in Pasadena, Calif., and my sister in San Francisco. All and all it seemed a great day. 

It was a bit quieter here. Our snow from last week melted and we’re back to fall again. I’ve been walking our younger dog Willow down our road. Stella is too old now to go too far. 

And I’m gearing up for a knee replacement surgery I’m having the second week of November. Sigh. I’ve been through this before — two years ago I did the first knee, now I’m doing the other. It’s quite an ordeal … but after three months I hope to be back walking okay and feeling fairly normal. And the good news might be: I’ll be ready for activities come spring and summer next year. Yay.

In book news, I don’t think I ever pictured the Booker Prize shortlist so here it is above. The prize will be announced on Nov. 10 and I would be a bit of a fool to pick which one will win since the judges seem to like to trick us at the last minute. I have only read Katie Kitamura’s novel Audition so far but I’d particularly like to read Flesh and Sonia and Sunny when my copy at the library comes in. I think the winner will be likely one of those three. Though then The Land in Winter or Flashlight will get it right? I’m slightly leaning towards Kiran Desai’s novel Sonia and Sunny for the win, but I haven’t read it yet, so what do I know. Katie Kitamura is certainly a beguiling kind of writer with her odd/lone protagonists and I’ve read and liked all three of her books. So your guess is as good as mine.

And now I’ll leave you with a couple reviews of what I finished lately. 

The Death of Us by Abigail Dean / Viking / 336 pages / 2025

Synopsis: This novel follows the lives of a young married couple in their 30s in London (Isabel and Edward) who struggle in the aftermath of a violent home invasion that changes their lives. Twenty-five years later, divorced and in their 50s, they find themselves (along with the other victims) gearing for the upcoming trial of the arrested perpetrator. Told in alternating chapters by Isabel and Edward you get their differing views on the case, their faults, and struggles, but also their connection to one another and love. 

My Thoughts: 4.0 stars. I don’t often read crime novels but this one was hailed very highly when it came out in April and I added it to my summer list. It’s a pretty potent crime story … of a serial killer/rapist on a spree, so trigger warnings abound. But it also unfolds quite convincingly and effectively and you come to know and root for the married couple Isabel and Edward. What happens to them impacts their lives and marriage in ways that catch you up and propel you through the story. 

The story swirls around quite long with small developments in their case and in their marriage as it crumbles a bit. They get to know a few of the other victims as well as the detective Etta Eliogu closely and Isabel makes a fateful decision when the case goes cold that she hopes might lure the perpetrator out in some way. 

It’s a different kind of crime story — not really a whodunit since you come to know that — but more of a victims’ story. The novel has a couple ebbs and flows in it and maybe a couple confusing transitions — since it jumps non-chronologically between the timelines — that I had to go back for in the audiobook. Still it’s easy enough to follow and you really get a sense of the characters of Isabel and Edward as real people … and root for their marriage and an arrest of the South London home invader. It’s a crime novel that was well worth my while.

The Fact Checker by Austin Kelley / Atlantic Monthly / 256 pages / 2025

Synopsis: This novel follows an unnamed protagonist who’s an obsessive fact checker at the New Yorker magazine circa 2004 in NYC. His job is to check every little detail on articles to make sure they’re the truth. He’s handled various serious pieces on terrorists, but then later he gets tripped up on an easier article he doesn’t expect to have any problems with …. about an organic farm that brings produce to the farmer’s market in the city.

He spends time (and a night) with a woman named Sylvia who works there who says something “nefarious” is going on but then she disappears the day after. He becomes worried and goes on a quest to find out what happened to her and if allegations about the place are true.

My Thoughts: 3.7 stars. I’m bucking the trend of the book’s low ratings on Goodreads (it did receive critical praise elsewhere). Austen Kelley deserves more love for this quirky, amusing novel. I too dabbled as a newspaper copy editor for years and I had to laugh particularly at the start of this debut. Then parts of it get a bit weird, other parts are amusing as he eventually makes a trip to the farm (a cult like place) to find out what’s going on. 

Along the way the protagonist comes off as a pretty endearing bar-going, baseball-loving, factoid-loving mess of a nerd who can’t let things go. He must get to the bottom of it and his search for truth and the facts and to help Sylvia. And he will … probably by mistake one day into the future. I think I could have a drink with him, but I don’t know where his friend Sylvia is. You’ll find out a little at the end. Note: the novel has one trigger warning for an odd scene of a sheep being killed, which I didn’t care for, so that was my quibble. Otherwise thumbs up.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read either of these and what did you think? How’s your reading going?

Posted in Books | 36 Comments

October Releases

Hi all. It’s been a while. I’ve been away. I had a good trip to Virginia, Maryland, and D.C. and visited some old friends and saw some sites too, including Mount Vernon, the WWII Memorial, and the National Gallery of Art, yay. Of course, that was just before the government shutdown — which is an ugly mess now, Grrr.

And you might wonder about the photo — it’s from a walk I had with a friend along the C&O Canal towpath, which meanders 184.5 miles from Georgetown in D.C. to Cumberland, Md. The towpath was originally built in 1828 for the canal mules to walk beside the canal as they “towed” the canal boats through the waterway carrying goods. Back then President John Quincy Adams was on hand for the groundbreaking ceremony. And today luckily it’s been left as a recreational path for bikers, runners and walkers, which is lovely. You can walk to your heart’s content.

Admittedly while away my reading took a bit of a hit — I finished only one book, though I hope to get back on track soon. And in book news, I see that a couple award shortlists were announced last week, including the National Book Award Fiction finalists (pictured above top row) as well as Canada’s Giller Prize shortlist (bottom row). I have not read the National Book Award contenders, but I wonder if Megha Majumdar’s new novel might win (on Nov. 19) as I thought her 2020 debut novel A Burning was quite impressive. For the Giller Prize, I have read The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus, which I liked well enough, but it’s a debut, so I wonder a bit if Mona Awad’s satirical novel, or the novel Pick a Colour might win instead. Stay tuned for the Giller announcement on Nov. 17. Have you read any of these?

Now let’s talk about October releases. There’s a slew of choices that include books by such notable authors as Thomas Pynchon, John Banville, Adam Johnson, Louise Penny, John Grisham, Catherine Newman, Beth Macy, and Malala Yousafzai among others. There’s even another posthumous book by Harper Lee!

And I’m looking at a few others that include Megha Majumdar’s novel A Guardian and a Thief (due out Oct.14) about two families whose “fates become disastrously intertwined” in a world ravaged by climate change and food scarcity in a near-future India. Majumdar is said to masterfully depict morality under siege in a world where people are attempting to survive and protect their own, which is a bit daunting to read right now.

Perhaps a bit happier is Susan Orlean’s memoir Joyride (due out Oct. 14) about her personal life and career as a writer and how she found her creative calling and purpose. Orlean’s been at the New Yorker since 1992 so she has much to share about her various articles, tips for writers, and the notable staffers she’s worked with.

I have read and liked her nonfiction books The Library Book and On Animals and also liked the movie adaptation of her book The Orchid Thief, so I am game to find out more about her. I went to her book talk here when she discussed The Library Book in 2018 and she’s funny and a big animal lover, which is a big plus.

Next up is Gish Jen’s novel Bad Bad Girl (due out Oct. 21) which is said to be an autobiographical novel that traces a tumultuous mother-daughter relationship. It’s apparently based on the author’s own mother who was born in war-torn Shanghai. In the novel the family immigrates to New York City where the mother is tough on the young daughter who is berated for her curiosity and asking too many questions. I gather the mother is stuck in the old world and the daughter in the new.

Harvee at the blog Harvee Reads read an advanced copy of this book back in July, so my interest was piqued by it then, and I have not read Gish Jen yet whose many books have received various awards and honors over the years.

Another writer I’d like to read sometime is Susan Straight whose new novel Sacrament comes out Oct. 28 and is about “a group of nurses fighting through the first year of the pandemic and the beloved California community they will risk their lives to protect.” These are ICU nurses at a hospital in San Bernardino (where my dad once worked) whose tale is told in alternating points of view and captures the heroism and sacrifice of healthcare workers during the pandemic.

Apparently Susan Straight writes about Southern California and its landscape like no other and since I grew up there, I need to check out her various novels. Kirkus says Sacrament is a Covid-19 novel but also so much more.

On the screen this month, we’ll be watching the Major League baseball playoffs since the Toronto Blue Jays are making a run. They beat the Yankees (!) to move on to the next round. Oh yeah. It’s all very exciting for us here in Canada. The Blue Jays for so many years were in the basement cellar but now it’s all: Go, Go, Go!

Also we’ll check out The Lost Bus movie on AppleTV+ (out Oct. 3), though it looks scary about the fire in Paradise, California that consumed the town in 2018. Matthew McConaughey and America Ferrera star as a duo who work to drive 22 children in a school bus out of a towering inferno. Oh man, it’s a tinderbox. To this day, fire is a real big fear to me. And the director Paul Greengrass, who made movies like United 93 and Captain Philips, knows just how to make you feel what’s on the screen is happening. So get your pitchfork and boots and drive out of there like there’s no tomorrow.

If I need some laughs after that I might try The Chair Company, a new TV comedy series premiering on HBO Max starting Oct. 12, starring Tim Robinson as a guy who says he’s investigating a wide-ranging conspiracy. It looks a bit funny but maybe it’s too over-the-top, so we’ll see.

And in October music releases, there’s new albums by such artists as Taylor Swift (you might have heard), Brandi Carlile, Florence & the Machine, Of Monsters and Men, Rachael Yamagata, Bahamas, and Madi Diaz among others. Chrissie Hynde even has a duets album, which seems pretty cool. I’m a bit all over the place about what to pick, but let’s go with Rachael Yamagata’s new Starlit Alchemy since it’s her first album release in nine years. Welcome back Yamagata. Here is the single Birds off that.

And now I look out this morning to see it snowed overnight. Oh my. A snow day on Oct. 12! Woohoo. Good thing we closed down the vegetable garden yesterday.

That’s all for now. What about you — which new releases are you looking forward to?

Posted in Top Picks | 34 Comments

Colorful Changes

Hi Bookworms, how goes it? What are you up to this fine weekend? We have fall colors happening here! It’s been very dry with no rain for over a month but clear, cool mornings and warm days.

Which was perfect for my birthday yesterday. I’m starting a new decade now and it’s a bit hard to believe. Let’s keep with the adage that you’re only as old as you feel. Perhaps that’s the best way to go about it. I’m not sure how I feel, but I don’t think it’s as old as the number suggests.

This Thursday I’ll be going on a trip to the Washington D.C. area as well as to Richmond, the capital of the Confederacy, lol. I’m just there to visit old friends and maybe see a museum exhibit or two. I once lived in Virginia pre-2008 before coming out here, so it’s a return of sorts.

I have not been back since 2016, and I think it might be very different in this current political climate. My D.C./Va. era dates from 1993-2010-ish. And I was there during 9/11 and man was that a somber day to be there and see the Pentagon.

And now in book news, I see that the National Book Awards for Fiction put out its longlist, which is above. I have not read any of these, but I’m looking to read Angela Flournoy’s novel The Wilderness (due out Sept. 16) that follows five black women through decades of friendship, and Megha Majumdar’s novel A Guardian and a Thief (due out Oct. 14) that looks to be a dystopian tale set in Kolkata, India. I have my radar on both of these, but also what about Joy Williams’ collection of stories The Pelican Child, which comes out Nov. 18? The list of Finalists will be announced Oct. 7 and the winner on Nov. 19. So keep your eyes out. Do you know any of these above?

Also don’t forget that the Booker Prize shortlist comes out this Tuesday. I have only read Katie Kitamura’s novel Audition so far from the longlist, and I’m not sure if it will make the shortlist, but I heard two BookTubers say their favorite book on the longlist is Benjamin Wood’s novel Seascraper about a man in England who earns a meager living trawling for shrimp on the beach until one day he meets a filmmaker who changes his outlook on life. Hmm. It comes out here Sept. 23. I will try to get a library copy.

And now I’ll leave you with a couple reviews of what I finished lately.

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans / Crown / 304 pages / 2025

Synopsis: This epistolary novel follows the life of a divorced, retired woman, Sybil Van Antwerp, as she corresponds from 2012 to 2021 with her family, friends, acquaintances, and literary idols.

Sybil, is 73, when it starts in 2012, and is pretty set in her ways. She’s a bit gruff and prefers to communicate through letters. She has two grown kids — Fiona and Bruce, and a child who died as an adolescent — and a brother and a couple close friends.

Through a series of circumstances she comes to have quite a bit weighing on her shoulders, which includes: an anonymous harasser; an eyesight condition; a couple suitors; a DNA test; hosting a friend’s kid at her house; and fixing things with her daughter. Through her correspondence over several years, she tries to resolve things and in the process comes to learn more about herself and grows as time goes on.

My Thoughts: 4.4 stars. This novel has been one of the most popular hits this past summer. I read it as a buddy read with Tina at the blog Turn the Page. We both seemed to really like it. Overall I found it engaging and touching. The protagonist Sybil is a character, particular in her ways, whose story comes around through her correspondence and you come to understand what writing means to her and why she values it so much. I don’t want to say too much to give anything away, but she goes through some personal growth that helps her and is someone you feel you know by the end. I don’t think I’ll forget Sybil anytime soon. Thanks to Tina for reading and discussing the novel with me.

Early Sobrieties by Michael Deagler / Astra House / 272 pages / 2024

3.5 stars. A recovering alcoholic, Dennis Monk, age 26, is about six or seven months sober after he gets kicked out of his parents’ house in the burbs and sets off for south Philadelphia bumming stays on old classmates’ or friends’ couches and washing dishes at times at restaurants to make ends meet. He also tries to do apartment fix-ups for friends or help with odds and ends, so he can crash at their place.

His is a meek existence trying to navigate his early sobriety with getting by amid the gentrifying neighborhoods. Each chapter is like a different episode of whose place he’s at and what crazy thing is going on. The wily cast of characters he meets up with for a stay is colorful and not always safe. Monk was an English major and is trying through it all to observe and write something about the street life around him.

His narration is funny at times and though he seems a bit hopeless (whether it’s tugging out old carpet at a girlfriend’s, or watching out for a person’s parrot that escapes out a window) you root for him to resist the bottle and make it through this stage in life. Along the way, there’s amusing and astute writing here and there and some of the quirkiness, humor, and trouble of staying sober reminded me of a cross between John O’Toole’s novel A Confederacy of Dunces and Frederick Exley’s novel A Fan’s Notes. So that’s pretty high praise from me. It’s just that some of Monk’s journey grabbed me more than other parts that lagged a bit. It also turned out to be more episodic or like linked stories than I was hoping for …. from a coming-of-age sobriety novel. Still Deagler is a writer to watch.

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read any of the books pictured above and if so, what did you think?

Posted in Books | 40 Comments

Strong Lion Women

Hello. How was everyone’s week? We’ve had some nice warm September days here and I was out biking into the countryside and stopped at the village of Longview, population around 297 (give-or-take a few, lol). It’s a nice little place and is known for the oil they found there in 1937, which gave the unemployed something amid the Great Depression. Also apparently Clint Eastwood filmed some of the movie The Unforgiven there in 1991. What I like about it is the hay bales and large ranches and livestock that I see along the way and its views of the front ranges of the Rocky Mountains. The route there offers a rural road for cycling. 

Meanwhile in book news, Tina at the blog Turn the Page and I are doing a buddy read of the epistolary novel The Correspondent by Virginia Evans, which is about an avid letter writer in her 70s who has some spunk and is going through some stuff. So far so good. The novel came out April 29 and might have been the sleeper hit of the summer with a 4.60 rating on Goodreads and 4,756 reviews. It seems like a lot of people liked it.

In comparison, a novel like Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid, another summer bestseller that came out June 3, has a 4.37 Goodreads rating, with 60,774 reviews, whoa. TJR has a bit of a bigger market … with her books and following over the years. But still The Correspondent has done well.

And now just a recap of what I finished in July (top row above) and August (bottom row). Some I read in print, others were audios. Several were quite short novels (Audition, Tilt, Hunch Back, Wreck). Not sure I picked them for that but most here were on my summer list. I liked most of them so it’s a bit hard to pick which one was my top favorite of these though the one nonfiction book A Marriage at Sea made a lasting impression since it’s a pretty wild true tale and captured the imagination of being lost at sea. So there you have it and I will be doing a recap next time of how I did on my summer reading challenge. How did yours go?

And now I will leave you with a couple reviews of what I finished lately. 

The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali / Gallery / 336 pages / 2024

Synopsis: It’s the story of a decades-long friendship between two Iranian women (Ellie and Homa) starting in the 1950s whose lives are upended by their country’s political upheaval. The two meet at school at a young age and become fast friends. Ellie seems more traditional and concerned with what others think, while Homa is adventurous and spirited and throws caution to the wind. 

They fall out of touch when Ellie’s mother, a widower, moves them to another area of town to remarry, but later the two reunite in high school and go on to attend Tehran University. While Ellie gets caught up in plans to marry her boyfriend, Homa, who dreams of becoming a judge, is out protesting for students’ and women’s rights. Things turn dicey when Homa starts protesting the shah and regime change looms. The two friends undergo a harsh reckoning amid dangerous times that will haunt them into the future. A married Ellie is able to leave for New York, while Homa is captured behind. 

My Thoughts:  4 stars. I don’t want to say too much in detail about what happens in this novel as a couple dramatic events turn the tide for these two friends. Ellie narrates the story, which starts slowly about their school years, then it ratchets up once the Iranian Revolution begins. Kamali is a dynamic storyteller and I knew after her last novel The Stationery Shop, which captivated me, that I would need to get to this one as well. Historical novels set in Tehran are often fascinating — especially how the strong women there fight and form bonds to rise above harsh realities of the country’s oppressive regime. While this one might get a little drippy with everything it tries to tackle, it still makes you root and hope that the human condition and strong bonds can rise above such terrible circumstances and upheaval.

Catalina by Karla Cornejo Villavicencio / One World / 224 pages / 2024

Synopsis: This is a novel about the senior year of a Harvard University student in 2010 who’s an undocumented immigrant as she navigates uncertain times ahead. 

My Thoughts: 3.7 stars. I enjoyed listening to the audio and hearing about the protagonist Catalina Ituralde who was born in Ecuador and has lived in the U.S. since she was five when she was sent to her grandparents in NYC’s Queens after her parents were killed in a car crash. 

Catalina is smart and witty and feisty at times. She cares about her grandparents (also undocumented) who raised her and hopes the Dream Act bill (before Congress then), which would offer her permanent protection from deportation, will pass. She interns at a museum and starts dating another student. Then the Dream Act fails, and she finds deportation letters her grandfather hid in a drawer and tries to find a lawyer to help them. 

At first I found the book seemed more like a monologue of Catalina’s thoughts rather than a narrative of her life. But then as it goes on it branches out more into a story, which I was glad for. It’s not always easy to follow, but I liked Catalina and her perspective into the Dream Act and being an undocumented immigrant while being a student at Harvard. She has much personality and her struggles are eye-opening. 

I think I first heard about this novel when it was longlisted for the National Book Award for Fiction in 2024. It seems to follow the author’s own life story as an undocumented immigrant going to Harvard. Apparently she was one of the first to graduate in 2011. She is very bright and a good advocate for the undocumented. I will be watching for whatever she puts out next. I believe she is still in the U.S. and is pursuing a PhD in American Studies at Yale.

I have another review to share, but it can wait till next time. That’s all for now.

What about you — have you read any of these books pictured above and what did you think?

Posted in Books | 40 Comments

September Preview

Hi Bookworms, I didn’t have a chance to write last weekend, but I hope everyone had a nice Labor Day break. We’ve made it to September! Crazy right? Where did the summer go? Well, it’s still pretty hot in most places. We’ve had smoke here this past week from areas west and north of us. And I can say: gray skies are no fun.

So instead of posting a photo of that, I’m going to put one of our dog Willow on a mountaintop, lol. My husband took her with his hiking group a few weeks ago and she was a popular addition. I like the photo because it sort of makes her out to be like Underdog, which was a cartoon show I watched as a kid. Underdog could fly and do anything but mostly he had to save Sweet Polly Purebred from the bad guys. That’s about what I remember. The photo and view below are also from that hike from the front range of the Canadian Rockies.

And now, let’s talk about September releases. You might wonder how I figure out which books to pick each month. Well if there’s well-known authors, or authors I’ve read and liked before, then I often pick their books. Also I do a bit of research on the book, for example I’ll check its rating on Goodreads and see on Amazon what the blurbs are on it. I’ll also see if it’s received a starred review on Kirkus and Publishers Weekly. If the novel has received stars on both of those, then I’ll take a closer look at its synopsis and see if it might be for me.

I like contemporary and literary fiction best, and sometimes historical fiction and nonfiction too. Some popular genres like: sci-fi, fantasy, romance, and mysteries are not often my picks. For whatever reason, they are not in my reading wheelhouse. But I guess every once in a blue moon, I’ll read one. Do you have genres you don’t typically read? 

So the first new release is Lily King’s novel Heart the Lover (due out Sept. 30) about a love triangle — between a girl and two guys — who meet in literature class senior year in college. The three become close, and apparently choices made then will alter their three lives forever. But then decades later a surprise visit and unexpected news will bring the past crashing back to the present, uh-oh. Love it when that happens. And apparently two of the characters become writers so writing and books I think are featured prominently in the plot, yay. 

It sounds like a winner, so what are we waiting for? I have read and enjoyed two of Lily King’s novels before: Writers & Lovers from 2020 and Euphoria from 2014. So I will continue on with her.

Next up is Nathan Harris’s second novel Amity (out Sept. 2) about a formerly enslaved brother and sister in the tumultuous aftermath of the Civil War. Their odyssey to find true freedom takes them across the deserts of Mexico to escape a former master still intent on their bondage. It’s been called both harrowing and deeply moving — and an “epic tale of a budding genius pulled through the borderlands,” according to author Andrea Barrett. 

I’ve been meaning to read Harris’s much praised writing before. I still have his debut novel The Sweetness of Water, which was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2021, on my shelves to be read. It’s got some dust on it, but hopefully I’ll get to both sometime.

I’m also looking to read Kiran Desai’s big 688-page novel The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny (due out Sept. 23), which is on the Booker longlist this year. It seems to be an epic, sweeping love story between two young Indian writers who “discover their conjoined destinies by leaving home, coming back, connecting, disconnecting, and swimming in the ocean at Goa,” according to Kirkus Reviews. Publishers Weekly calls it “A sweeping page-turner … a kind of Romeo and Juliet story for a modern, globalized age.” 

I don’t often read such long, long novels, but all the praise on this book  makes me want to get it. I’m betting it makes the Booker shortlist, which will be announced the day the novel comes out on Sept. 23, so we’ll see. I’m wondering if it might even win.

Lastly in books, I’ll mention the novel The Wilderness (due out Sept. 16) by Angela Flournoy about five Black women over the course of their twenty-year friendship, as they move through the hectic period between young adulthood and midlife. From all the blurbs I’ve read, this one sounds like a good friendship novel, and the best novels about that can be really rewarding. 

And for whatever reason, I missed Flournoy’s 2015 debut novel The Turner House, which was a finalist for the National Book Award, so I might like to go back and read that novel sometime as well. It’s been 10 years since then, but now Flournoy’s new second book is coming out, yay.

In screen releases this month, there’s a lot of notable ones coming out, so I’ll try to be brief. For those who liked the gritty crime series Mare of Eastown set in Pennsylvania, you might also like the series Task (on HBO, starting Sept. 7) by the same creators about an FBI agent (played by Mark Ruffalo) who heads a Task Force in Philadelphia to put an end to a string of violent robberies led by an unsuspecting family man. This crime drama looks pretty action packed and gritty, so hold onto your hats. Mark Ruffalo is usually quite good, so bring it on. 

Also for those who like the comedy-drama Only Murderers in the Building, Season 5 begins Sept. 9 on Hulu. I have not followed this show, but I know many enjoy it and I think all the same stars and characters are back. 

There’s also another Downtown Abbey movie (not series) titled Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale, which apparently is a sequel to the 2022 Downton movie A New Era if you saw that. This one follows the Crawleys and their staff as they enter the 1930s and Mary causes a public scandal when she gets a divorce and the family faces financial troubles. Apparently the Crawleys must embrace change as they prepare for the next generation to lead Downton into the future.

Unfortunately this is said to be the third and final film so we won’t get to see anymore, argh. I always like watching Downton for the grandeur of the sets and costumes and characters … and also to see if the yellow Labrador is still part of the family. I really hope so. 

And for fans of the TV series The Morning Show, Season 4 will start Sept. 17 on AppleTV+. This is a crazy drama-filled show we follow about a major TV station in New York with various broadcast news divas played by Jennifer Anniston and Reese Witherspoon and has a large cast that includes Billy Crudup, Jon Hamm, and now Marion Cotillard. What AppleTV says about the new season: Two years after the business merger in Season 3, “the newsroom must grapple with newfound responsibility, hidden motives and the elusive nature of truth in a polarized America. In a world rife with deepfakes, conspiracy theories and corporate cover-ups — who can you trust?” Well my answer is for the current power brokers sadly not many at all. 

Next is the British spy series Slow Horses Season 5 (starting Sept. 24 on AppleTV+). This is an enjoyable show led by Gary Oldman as the unkempt, rude Jackson Lamb, the head of the MI5 unit known as Slow Horses, and it seems the entire cast including Kristin Scott Thomas and Jack Lowden (now married to Saoirse Ronan in real life) will be back, yay. This new season finds the misfit spies investigating a series of bizarre events and terror plots occurring across London — and how it all might be connected to their IT expert’s glamorous new girlfriend. There’s just six episodes this season (like the others) so it’ll be quick.

Two more screen releases to possibly think about: the biographical movie Swiped (out Sept. 19) stars Lily James as Whitney Wolfe Herd, the founder and CEO of Bumble, an online dating app. She was previously co-founder of Tinder but left in 2014, not that I know much about dating apps, but it is with Lily James and that might be reason enough to check out the movie.

Also the TV crime series The Savant (starting Sept. 26 on AppleTV+) stars Jessica Chastain as an agent who infiltrates online hate-groups in order to prevent large-scale public attacks. It looks pretty intense and scary to think about, so I’m not sure if that one will be for me, but I’ll put it out there for Chastain fans. 

Lastly in music this month, there’s new albums by Ed Sheeran, David Byrne, Sarah McLachlan, Amanda Shires, Robert Plant, Neko Case, and the band Wednesday among others. I’ll pick Sarah McLachlan’s new album Better Broken (out Sept. 19) since she’s a Canadian and it’s been nine years since her last one. There’s also a documentary (Lilith Fair: Building a Mystery) about the Lilith Fair tour, which she founded in 1997, coming out on Hulu Sept. 21, so that’ll be interesting. You can hear the single off her new album here. Happy listening.

That’s all for now. What about you — which new releases are you looking forward to this month? Happy September.

Posted in Top Picks | 50 Comments

Summer Siesta

Hi bookworms, how was your week? I got back from California on Tuesday evening and have been catching up on yard work and chores around the house ever since, lol. I will leave you with a photo of the beach where I had to say goodbye to the Pacific. I had some nice swims in the ocean, which felt cold but refreshing after being in the hot sun and I enjoyed some beach reading and walks. Now we are having some beautiful weather in southern Alberta, so I can’t complain. I’m squeezing in some golf, tennis, and bicycling each week and I’m loving it. But how did summer go by so quickly?

Currently I’m reading a PW novel and listening to Marjan Kamali’s novel The Lion Women of Tehran, which was on my summer reading list. I’m liking it and hopefully the ending will be good.

Also we are watching the TV series Say Nothing (on Hulu and Disney+) based on the nonfiction book by Patrick Radden Keefe about a group of people involved with the Irish Republican Army and their actions over decades during the Troubles. It’s quite good and a nail-biter. I have not read the book, but the series is worth it. It brings the conflict to life and touches on the Disappeared and particularly the murder of Jean McConville in Belfast in 1972. Have you read or seen this? I know I’m a little late to the party, but it’s pretty potent and gives a glimpse into Northern Ireland during those violent scary days.

And now I’ll leave you with a couple reviews of what novels I finished lately. 

Rabbit Moon by Jennifer Haigh / Little Brown / 288 pages / 2025

Synopsis: Set mostly in Shanghai, this novel is about a young woman Lindsey Litvak, 22, who goes over to China with her college boyfriend to teach English, but after a year he leaves and she starts supporting herself through dubious means. Then early on, she’s in an accident and winds up in a coma in the hospital and her divorced parents fly to sit by her side in a foreign city where they can’t speak the language, or manage very well.

Lindsey was a bit estranged to them but close to her younger adopted sister Grace, born in China, who’s in summer camp in the U.S. while this is going on. What happens to Lindsey and how she became estranged to her parents and how they’re impacted by her accident unfold as the book goes along. While a final section is narrated by her sister Grace and how she comes to grip with her Chinese identity and her sister’s accident.

My Thoughts:  4 stars. I fell into this story very quickly and worried about Lindsey’s wayward personal journey. She’s a naive flawed girl who learns a bit late some of life’s hard realities, despite being bright and knowing the language and being enthusiastic about Shanghai. I liked her parts best in the book (and kept rooting that she would change her ways), but then when her accident happens her parents arrive and it goes into the family’s backstory a bit, along with the younger sister Grace’s.

It’s a bit sad overall but seemed a pretty propulsive tale, which I listened to as an audiobook. I think the novel is my favorite of Jennifer Haigh’s novels so far … still I thought the ending could’ve been managed a bit better. The last section goes on a tangent into Grace’s narration and life, though I was still caught up on Lindsey whom I thought the book was mostly about. The Grace part, though worthy in itself, felt a bit separate and lopped onto it. Still I liked most of the book and will watch for what Haigh writes next. This was #11 on my summer reading list.

Hunchback by Saou Ichikawa / translated by Polly Barton / Hogarth / 2025

Synopsis: This novella follows Shaka Izawa, a mid-40s woman confined in a group care home (during Covid) who suffers from a rare congenital muscle disorder that leaves her with a curved spine and using a wheelchair and a ventilator. She spends her days taking online university courses, tweeting incendiary thoughts, and writing pornographic stories for money, which she sends to charities. She’s wealthy and owns the group home due to an inheritance from her parents who are now gone. During this time she learns one of the caretakers has been following her tweets and she makes him a sexual proposition.  

My Thoughts:  3.5 stars. This is a bit of an odd novel and not for everyone, but for its originality and depiction of a feisty disabled woman (Shaka), I ended up admiring it and reading it twice since it’s only 90 pages. Some of the passages are powerful or biting and throw your assumptions aside about the severely disabled, other passages are a bit vulgar as the protagonist likes to tweet provocative things such as: “In another life, I’d like to work as a high-class prostitute,” or “My ultimate dream is to get pregnant and have an abortion just like a normal woman.” She wants to experience such things and yet sees herself as a “hunchback monster.”

Shaka breathes through a tracheostomy tube in order to breathe better so she’s often having to wipe away the mucus that gets in the way. Holding and reading a physical book hurts her spine and she writes that the able-bodied don’t know how good they have it. This novel speaks to the rights of the disabled. 

I won’t say what happens about the proposition Shaka makes to the caregiver, but it isn’t something you can forget anytime soon — and not in a good way. It’s a bit bleak and strange, but I’m glad to be introduced to Saou Ichikawa’s writing. She pulls no punches, and made me see things in new ways. Obviously most able-bodied people have no clue about serious disabled people or the steep hurdles they face each day. Though I’m still wondering about the book’s ambiguous ending … I could’ve used something a bit more concrete at that point but no. 

I first heard about this novel, which was published in Japan in 2023 and in North America in 2025, when it made the International Booker Prize longlist. The author Saou Ichikawa is like her protagonist in that she suffers from congenital myopathy, as does her older sister, according to Wikipedia. The New York Times did a profile of Ichikawa back in May, which you can read here

That’s all for now. What about you — have read these and what did you think?

Posted in Books, TV | 30 Comments

In the Beach Bag

Hi bookworms. I made it to the beach and I’ve been enjoying some peaceful days bike riding and beach-going. I have not been in the ocean yet as it’s been a bit overcast and cool, but yesterday my things got wet anyways after a wave suddenly sent water over the sand incline bank and into the area where I was sitting quite a ways from the shore, argh. My library book got a little wet, which is not good, and my backpack and towel were drenched and sandy. Grrr, what are the chances. Today I’ll be back and prepared, lol, and the day should be nice and sunny and good for a swim. On my evening stroll, I saw this sailboat heading out of the harbor. I’ll be leaving in a few days, so I need to enjoy everything while I can. I’ve visited with my brother, niece, and four-month-old grandniece … who was a thrill to see and I’m hoping they return for a beach day. 

And now I’ll leave you with a few reviews of what I finished lately. These three books were #8, #9, and #10 on my summer reading list. 

Audition by Katie Kitamura / Riverhead / 208 pages / 2025

4 stars. Synopsis: This is about a married middle-aged accomplished actress who’s in play rehearsals for an upcoming premiere in New York. At the beginning she meets a young attractive man in his twenties at a restaurant and you don’t know who they are at first to one another, whether a lover, co-worker, or something else. But later the stranger tells her that he might be her son … which sets things off on an odd, disorienting path.

My Thoughts: The novel (about a family) is split into two parts … which are not completely congruent or linear to one another, so it’s a bit like a puzzle, or a play with the characters playing various roles and you come to see how they fit or not together. Part 1 has the accomplished actress and the young stranger who comes to work as an assistant to the play’s director; while Part II has the actress, her husband and an estranged son moving back into their apartment. I think there are various interpretations of what unfolds and some might see Part 1 or 2 as an unreal fantasy, or maybe just on another different timeline.

Katie Kitamura, whose writing is alluring, keeps your footing a bit on uneven ground with the family of three. But if you like novels more concrete, you might think twice about this novel. I’ve read Kitamura’s other novels A Separation and Intimacies and will continue to read her mysterious and provoking books because for one thing, she writes like a dream. Audition has been longlisted for the Booker Prize … whether it will make the shortlist we need to stay tuned on Sept. 23 when it will be announced.

Tilt by Emma Pattee / Simon & Schuster / 240 pages / 2025

4.2 stars. Synopsis: Annie, a 35-year-old very pregnant woman is shopping for a crib in IKEA when a major earthquake hits Portland, Oregon. She’s gets out from being trapped and sets out on a mission to walk to her husband’s job site to find him. They don’t have much money as he’s a struggling, auditioning actor and works at a cafe, and she gave up being a playwright to earn money as a manager at a start-up company. As Annie ambles through the wreaked city, she has various experiences as she comes upon various people and situations, and remembers earlier days with her husband and when they met 17 years ago. 

My Thoughts: I wasn’t sure about this protagonist Annie at first as she seems sort of harsh or bad-mouthed at the book’s beginnings, but also a bit funny too, sarcastic in how she looks at things. When the quake hits early at the onset, she becomes a survivor and turns quite determined and strong to make it through for her unborn baby “bean” and to find her husband Dom. As she makes her trek across the city, many thoughts run through her head from the past (the loss of her mother) and regrets she’s had when she last saw her husband. She told him not to take an understudy part in King Lear but to continue his job at the cafe for the money.

She thinks over her life quite a bit and talks to her baby while dealing with thirst and rubble, and so you’re stuck in Annie’s head or narration for the whole novel, but it’s a journey you want to see her through. Annie seems to soften a bit as time goes on and tries to help a few others along the way. But the story is sort of darker towards the end than I had imagined it’d turn out, but it also grabs you. So beware: earthquake disasters aren’t for the light of heart. For a debut novel, I was impressed by Emma Pattee’s writing and the many details she imparts. It’s quite a potent short-ish novel that the author seems to pour much heart into. I will look for what she puts out next. 

Heartwood by Amity Gaige / Simon & Schuster / 320 pages / 2025

4.0 stars. Synopsis: After 42-year-old Valerie Gillis, a nurse, goes missing from the Appalachian Trail in Maine, a massive search begins. The novel alternates chapters among various people who know or are searching for Valerie as well as chapters of Valerie herself and her journal. She went on the hike to find herself after dealing with the Covid pandemic and all the deaths while working at the hospital.

The chapters include those with: Bev Miller, the Maine official who’s leading the search; and a big guy from the Bronx named Santo who befriended Valerie on the trail; and Lena, a nursing home resident who’s trying to piece together tips she finds online of where Valerie might be. It’s a race against time as most people who disappear in the woods are found alive only in the first couple days. 

My Thoughts: I listened to this on audio and the various narrators do a good job bringing the characters to life. And there’s a heartwarming quality between missing Valerie and her mother, who are close. It also has a pandemic angle to the story — as Valerie, a nurse, is in search of a break to find herself after the covid pandemic and goes to hike the AT — that seemed interesting and relatable after recent hard years. Some of the alternating cast of characters get a bit uneven as the story goes on. I came to like Bev, who’s leading the search quite a bit, but I sort of tired with much focus on Lena, the elderly lady who is following it online. Though it is Lena who finds a key contact online who might know something.

Still, despite some unevenness, the vivid descriptions of the trail and woods and the overall cacophony of people trying to help Valerie — made me want to tramp through the wilderness to help find her too. This novel will make you want to: put on the boots, get the moleskin and the insect repellent and get out there on the trail and search. There’s only a few hours left to find her. 

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these and what did you think?

Posted in Books | 48 Comments

August Preview

Hi bookworms, how’s life? I missed posting over the weekend because busy life got in the way, but I’m pleased now to be back to talk about August releases. Can you believe we’re this late into summer already? Argh. When you live in a northern country you begin to worry a bit about the short time you have left for warm weather. We need to cram our vegetable season in. Our hay bales were cut just last week and we had enough to make seven bales in our backfield, but last year we had eleven bales. Hmm. Not sure if all the rain gave us less growth (you’d think more?) but perhaps that’s what happened. 

Lately we’ve had some epic storm clouds and thunder. I try to come in from the yard before it looks like there will be lightning. I’d rather not risk it even if the storm is a bit farther away than I realize, lol.

Anyways next week I’ll be flying to California to enjoy a week at the beach. I’ll take a dip in the ocean and bring a bag of books. And of course I’ll miss my parents and will be thinking of them there. It’s just been four months since I lost my dad, very sadly. But I hope to see my brother, niece, niece-in-law, and grandniece.

And now let’s talk about the Booker Prize longlist (photo above) that was announced recently. It looks like a good list of 13 novels. Have you read any of these? I have not read any yet, but Katie Kitamura’s novel Audition is on my summer list and I plan to get to it this month. I have read Kitamura’s other novels and have read two previous novels of Susan Choi’s … as well as the first novel of Natasha Brown titled Assembly, so I’m familiar with a few of these authors. But I wonder if I’ve heard the most hype about David Szalay’s novel Flesh and Kiran Desai’s upcoming novel The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny due out Sept. 23, so I’m slightly thinking these two might have the edge for the Prize. But it’s crazy that Desai’s novel is coming out the same day as the shortlist is being announced. It’s a long novel too at 688 pages! Good luck reading it before the Booker Prize is announced on Nov. 10. 

And now let’s talk about books coming out in August. This month there’s many new-to-me authors, so it makes choosing books a little more uncertain. I’ve only read author Jason Mott before (Hell of a Book), who’s coming out with a new novel titled People Like Us on Aug. 5.

I’ll likely get to it, but I also have my eye on a few others first … particularly Sam Wachman’s debut novel The Sunflower Boys (due out Aug. 12) about a 12-year-old boy wrestling with his sexuality as war breaks out in modern Ukraine. It’s said to be a compelling coming-of-age story that depicts brutal war scenes from the Ukraine-Russia war and has received much high praise. It’s written by a 25-year-old debut author (whoa) from Massachusetts who has Ukrainian roots. So we will see.

Next up is a novel called Fonseca (due out Aug. 12) by Jessica Francis Kane, which is based on the true story of a trip taken in 1952 by British author Penelope Fitzgerald who wrote such modern classics as The Bookshop (1978) and The Blue Flower (1997) to a desert town in northern Mexico. She sets sail to New York with her six-year-old son then they go by bus the rest of the way to Mexico in search of a much-needed inheritance, but when she gets there nothing goes as planned.

Apparently the novel pays homage to the author and is much more. (Carmen, since you read many of Fitzgerald’s novels earlier this year, you might be curious about this novel based on a real trip the author took.) I hope to read Penelope Fitzgerald’s novel The Bookshop soon to better enjoy Kane’s story.

Also getting some buzz are debut novels by Addie E. Citchens (Dominion) and Lisa Ridzen (When the Cranes Fly South), which both come out Aug. 19 and look good. Dominion is said to be a Southern family drama in which “sins of a favorite son rock a small Mississippi town” and “a family unravels amid shocking violence.” It’s received starred reviews from both Kirkus and PW, and author Roxane Gay says:

“This is one hell of a novel. It will grab you in the gut and hold you there. It’s absolutely outstanding.” Others call it a stunning novel not to be missed, so I’m game. It’s been a long while since I’ve read a hardcore Southern novel in the vein of Faulkner.  

The second one When the Cranes Fly South apparently received Sweden’s book of the year award and was a big bestseller there. It’s said to be a moving debut novel that follows an elderly man’s attempts to mend his relationship with his son before it’s too late.

The Guardian calls it: “A simple yet effective meditation on mortality, love and care. . . . Anyone anywhere who has worried for a crumbling parent, or worried about the crumble in themselves, or simply worried that their dog understood them better than their family, will identify with Ridzén’s novel and take it to heart.” So I guess I better check it out. 

On the screen this month, there’s the gritty film adaptation of Night Always Comes (on Netflix Aug. 15) based on the novel by Willy Vlautin about a flawed, determined woman (played by Vanessa Kirby) who “embarks on a dangerous, one-night odyssey through Portland’s criminal underbelly in a desperate attempt to gather enough cash to keep her family from eviction.”

This looks sort of scary, but if anyone can do it, I think a hell-bent Vanessa Kirby (previously in The Crown) can find enough cash in time, but she has to risk everything along the way of course. And the best part? Jennifer Jason Leigh plays her messed up mother! 

Also a remake of War of the Roses is afoot … this time with Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Coleman as the picture-perfect couple whose marriage turns into a tinderbox of competition and resentments  in The Roses (out Aug. 29). You remember the first film in 1989 with Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner? Well I don’t recall it too well, but they were at each other’s throats like cats and dogs. And now Cumberbatch and Coleman will pick up the roles and should make it a fun black comedy. 

I’m also curious about the indie movie A Little Prayer (due out Aug. 29), which stars David Strathairn as a man who tries to protect his daughter-in-law (played by Jane Levy) when he discovers his son is having an affair. Now that would be awkward. The drama was filmed in Winston-Salem, N.C. David Strathairn is a gem of an actor whom I once ran into in Albany airport. He has small roles here and there and appeared a bit in the excellent film Nomadland

And lastly in music for August there are new albums releasing by The Black Keys, Charley Crockett, Molly Tuttle, Maroon 5, and Kathleen Edwards among others. They all seem quite good, but I’ll go with Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards’s new album Billionaire due out Aug. 22. She’s been working with Jason Isbell of late who co-produced the album. Here is her song Little Red Ranger from the album. Enjoy.

That’s all for now. What about you — which releases are you looking forward to this month? And are you reading anything good?

Posted in Top Picks | 44 Comments

A Marriage at Sea

Hi all, how has your week been? Last week was quite busy here with sports and yard mowing. I had a tennis inter-club match, 18 holes of golf league, epic field mowing, and a cycling bike ride event a couple hours south of us all in one week, and now I’m resting. I must be crazy, lol. I’m no spring chicken. I should’ve taken a photo at the bike event yesterday, but I was full on — trying to go 50km (31 miles) quickly. It went better than expected and I finished third woman in my 50+ age group. My husband did well biking the 100km (62 mile) longer route. And now we’re taking a breather and it’s good that it’s a bit rainy this morning and we’re catching up on things. I’m adding this happy cow picture to ward off any crazy bad news. 

I’m reminded at times that when I was working full-time in my 20s, 30s, and 40s I didn’t have time for blogging. It was only in my later 40s when I went part-time did I really have or make any time for it. So I’m impressed by bloggers today who somehow find time when they work full-time and/or are moms to young kids. That’s a lot! I think being mostly retired helps (my husband still works), though retirees are pretty busy too. What about you — did you ever blog while you were working full-time? Or did you start afterwards?

In book news, I see that author Margaret Atwood is coming out with a memoir of sorts on Nov. 4 called Book of Lives. Oh yeah, it’s going to be big in Canada. People who are Atwood fans are already aflutter with the news. I learned about the memoir from the Wordfest book festival here, which plans to host Atwood to come speak about it on Dec. 10. So I’ll gear up for it. I have seen Atwood speak before (she appeared like an ant on the stage as I was in a faraway seat in the balcony), but I heard her quite clearly. The two-time Booker Prize winner is always worth seeing and reading. 

Next weekend I plan to post my August preview. Can you believe July is almost over? Ugh. And did you see the New York Time’s article about the man who read 3,599 books and his list?  It’s sort of an entertaining read. He’s way more manic than I am about it, yay.

And now for a couple reviews of what I finished lately.

A Marriage at Sea by Sophie Elmhirst / Riverhead / 256 pages / 2025

4+ stars. This is an old-fashioned survival tale, based on a true story about a British married couple, who in 1972 set sail from England in hopes of making it all the way to New Zealand. They were a bit of a different couple, Maurice Bailey was an awkward loner type who had a miserable childhood with his family and didn’t know women particularly well. He was 8 years older than Maralyn, whom he met at age 29 through a mutual acquaintance. She, on the other hand, was an outgoing adventurous type who took to his hobbies of long hikes and boating well and surprisingly said yes to his marriage proposal a year later in 1963. They weren’t traditional in the sense of wanting to settle down with jobs and kids in England but wanted to chuck it all to leave and not come back. They wanted a different kind of life. 

So the Baileys had a 31-foot yacht — the Auralyn — built. But for their journey Maurice decided not to have a radio transmitter onboard … he wanted to travel by the stars and be on their own. Maralyn, for her part, couldn’t even swim. Still they didn’t seem too concerned. They were eager to set sail in 1972, making it to Spain and Portugal and the Canary Islands before eventually crossing the Atlantic Ocean and appeared to be having quite a time, but it was later while trying to cross the Pacific that things took a fateful turn. And what an epic ordeal it turns out to be. 

I don’t want to say too much of the particulars to give it away, but how had I not heard of this couple and their predicament before?! As a kid of the 1970s in California, I recall Patty Hearst and the Manson murders all too well (but not the British Baileys) and later I became well-acquainted with survival tales of the most direst of circumstances from Sir Ernest Shackleton’s and the other polar explorers’ to the 1972 airplane crash in the Andes (Alive), to Chris McCandless going Into the Wild in Alaska. But in particular, the Baileys’ ordeal reminded me slightly of Lauren Hillenbrand’s book Unbroken about the true tale of Louis Zamperini whose plane crashed into the Pacific in 1943 during WWII leaving him stranded on a raft for a long time. Poor Louis, I felt his agony in the open ocean on every page that I turned. And now I’ve added the Baileys’ story to my collection. 

I think because of the book’s title I had thought it would be a survival tale that disintegrated their marriage while at sea. But I assumed wrong. In fact, their marriage is something uplifting in their ordeal that helps and binds them together. Maralyn turns out to be mentally strong and optimistic, whereas Maurice has spells of throwing in the towel and despair. Their yin-and yang combination helps their will to fight. And their tactics are a bit illuminating should you ever become in trouble. 

The author, journalist Sophie Elmhirst is interested in this marriage angle of the Baileys’ story: how they fit and worked together — two sort of oddball people and what they manage to do. It kept me engaged with it. And for squeamish folks, it’s not for the light of heart, since raw seafood is fair game when you’re all alone with dwindling supplies in the vast Pacific Ocean. My only quibble with the book … is that the writing style is short and simple and somehow made it feel a bit muted at times. Still I consumed the book quickly, lapping up every detail and committing it to memory — the odd history of the Baileys. Some of it is sort of sad, even later, or kooky, and other parts inspiring. See what you think. It was on my summer reading list as Book #6. 

The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus by Emma Knight / 304 pages / 2025

3.75 stars. This is a coming-of-age novel — a genre I often like — about a Canadian girl (Penelope known as Pen) who goes to her first year at university in Edinburgh, Scotland. There she falls in with a group of friends as they navigate young age, school, independence, and their love lives.

She also gets in touch with a friend of her fathers’ — aristocrat Elliot Lennox, a mystery writer — in hopes that he might know something about her divorced parents’ past — what happened with them and what they seem to be not telling her. The Lennox family lives in an old mansion on a rural estate, where Pen is soon visiting as she befriends the entire family, including the swoon-worthy son, Sasha, whom she begins to dream about. 

This is a promising debut by a 36-year-old Canadian author … and there was much to like. The author has a lively style with a good vocabulary, and Pen is an empathetic, young protagonist whom you feel for as she’s learning the ropes around school, going out with friends, but not being fully sure of herself, or confident in the love department. Then she meets Sasha who seems dashing and worth it, but is he available or not? She’s curious too about finding out a secret about her parents’ past, which by the end she figures out from her visits with the Lennoxes. And it’s a doozie of a secret. 

So I liked much of it, though it’s a novel perhaps a bit too chock full of its varied cast and their particulars. Pen’s best friend Alice comes to narrate some chapters about her affair with a rogue professor, which I didn’t think was really necessary. And Sasha’s mother Christina is delved into quite a bit. To me, it was Pen’s journey and so, I would’ve streamlined these other distractions and plotlines and expanded hers a bit more. Still I think it was promising enough to want to see what Emma Knight will write next. This was Book #7 on my summer list of 15. 

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these and if so, what did you think? 

Posted in Books | 34 Comments