Wild Dark Shore

Hi all. How’s your week been? Things are ramping up now with spring and the nice weather. I am in California for a long weekend for a celebration of my parents today. I’ve been walking around and biking. It’s nice to see people swimming in the Pacific even after 5 p.m. when this photo was taken, but so far I have not stuck my toes in yet. It’s too cold and the waves have been a little too rambunctious, lol. I am waiting for a warmer, calmer day.

In book news, you might have seen that Percival Everett’s novel James won again … this time for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction last week. I admired the novel last year when I read it, which also won the National Book Award in the fall. It’s one of the rare novels that have won both awards. Here are the eight other novels that have won both the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award:

The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Rabbit is Rich by John Updike
The Fixer by Bernard Malamud
A Fable by William Faulkner
Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
The Collected Stories of Katherine Anne Porter

What do you think — have you read any of these? I have read The Shipping News and The Color Purple, which I admired quite a long time ago. I’m not sure why I never got to The Underground Railroad, but there’s still time to read others on this list. Meanwhile congrats to Percival Everett once again for his novel James.

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

Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte McConaghy / Flatiron / 320 pages / 2025

4.0 stars. There’s plenty of drama, trauma, and eco-concerns amid the backdrop of a beautiful wild island in this novel set in the remote southwest Pacific Ocean. Dominic Salt and his three kids whose mother has died are caretakers on Shearwater Island that holds a seed vault to regrow plants in case of the apocalypse. A group of researchers used to be there too studying plants and creatures, but they’ve since left as the waters are rising and storms are wreaking havoc.

Soon Dominic and his family will be leaving as well after eight years or so … but before that happens an injured woman (Rowan) washes up from a shipwreck. Over time they become more attached to her and she to them, but both sides have secrets that they aren’t sharing about what’s up.

It crossed my mind that the plot seemed a bit contrived but I went along with it. It’s fairly entertaining and visual as you begin to latch on to Rowan and what her deal is coming to the island. Her husband Hank used to be a researcher there so it appears she’s trying to find out where he is or went. But there’s some graves on the island that need explaining among other things. I thought the story was alluring in its mysteriousness and the setting on the remote island with all the elements, and Dominic’s three kids too make for enticing characters you come to know, though the story turns a bit crazy towards the end and a late twist seems to stretch its believability.

I’ve finished all three of McConaghy’s novels (2 by audios, one in print) and have liked them for their eco-settings and concerns about the planet and wildlife and for being visual, adventure plots. Her books often have broken people as the main characters living in a world with more intense climate change, ones who’ve suffered hard traumas or much loss. And this one was no exception. Rowan and Dominic’s family have had their share of heartbreak and adversity. While sympathetic, I tire at times a bit of this aspect … so I thought the tale had some hits and misses for me. Still I was entertained enough traveling to Shearwater Island. Of McConaghy’s, I think I liked her first novel Migrations best … maybe because it was a bit new and potent back then. But they all share some similarities. I plan to keep reading her.

First Lie Wins by Ashley Elston / Pamela Dorman / 352 pages / 2024

3.75 stars. This author has written a clever plot line that features a sharp protagonist in Evie Porter, aka Lucca Marino and enough twists and turns to make for a topsy-turvy experience, but did I hang on for the ride? Just barely. I got lost a couple times — no fault of the audiobook, but I retraced my tracks to get back onboard. Lucca is doing illegal missions for her mysterious boss Mr. Smith in which she always gets a new identity and needs to assimilate into a new neighborhood. But then she gets introduced to a woman who has her own name and must figure out if her boss is setting her up, or if the woman is trying to expose her and why.

When something happens to the woman and Evie’s later arrested on an outstanding warrant for a mission that happened years ago, Evie has to decide whether to trust the boyfriend she’s taken up with whom she’s been investigating — along with her techie friend Devon to help her get out of the situation. It’s a bit convoluted, but I was mostly onboard with what Lucca has to unravel. Still I was thoroughly exhausted by the end. I know a lot love these cat-and mouse kinds of benders … but I think I’ll need to leave town if ever a Evie Porter or Lucca Marino moves to my neighborhood.

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

Posted in Books | 20 Comments

May Preview

Hi all, we’re into May now, yay. How’s your spring going? Mid-May is our planting season for our vegetable patch and the annuals around the house — also our spring yard cleanup and mowing begins. It’s a busy time around here, but first I’ll be returning to SoCal later in the week for a short trip to attend a Celebration of Life for my Dad that his work colleagues are giving and to meet my new grandniece born on Earth Day April 22. She has arrived into our lives at a much needed time and I can’t wait to meet her.

Yesterday was my first bike ride of the season and it was nice to be out and about. It’s oddly already reaching 80 degrees now after snowing last week. Crazy but true. Apparently it seems we’re going straight from winter into summer without much spring. My summer golf league here will start this Wednesday and I need to get out on the practice range, so I can hit the ball consistently. This is my second season in the league and I’m still a newbie. I played some golf earlier in my life then have re-picked it back up decades later. It’s a pretty fun sport when you’re with a group of others.

Unfortunately the news continues to be dismal with announced cuts now to NPR, PBS, libraries, museums, theaters, education, and people’s jobs. It’s horrible! So much for the arts, sigh. And the economy is shrinking with grocery and other prices staying high. It’s hard not to doom scroll one’s days away. I’m staying informed but also trying to find escape in the outdoors and reading. Here is my book recap (below) for March and April. I think I only finished three in March and six in April.

What do think about this group of reads? There’s some heavier ones mixed with a couple lighter reads. I think Enter Ghost and The Scrapbook (coming in June) were my favorites. And I’ll be reviewing Wild Dark Shore next time.

And now let’s chat about new books releasing in May. There’s new novels by such well-known authors as: Fredrik Backman, Ocean Vuong, Kevin Wilson, Brendan Slocumb, Michael Connelly, Stephen King, and Isabel Allende among others. While those look enticing, my head has sort of glommed onto a few others — maybe because of the news and what I can tolerate these days.

First off, Virginia Evans’ novel The Correspondent (April 29, okay it’s a late April book!) is said be a “charming debut … that takes the form of letters and emails exchanged by a divorced and retired woman with her friends, family, foes, and literary idols.” She’s lived a full life as a mother, grandmother, wife, divorcée, and distinguished lawyer, but when letters from someone in her past force her to examine one of the most painful periods of her life, she realizes she must send the letter she’s been unwilling to send before. This novel has very high ratings on Goodreads and includes a strong older female protagonist who’s apparently a lovable curmudgeon. I’m usually not a big reader of epistolary novels but with all the high praise about it, I must give it a go.

Next up is another clever debut novel titled The Names (out May 6). This one is by Florence Knapp that spans thirty-five years and follows three alternate storylines of a British family’s lives, which includes mother Cora, her daughter Maia, 9, her new born son, and her controlling husband Gordon. In each of the three timelines, Cora assigns the baby a different name, and the lives of the family members unfold quite differently. Apparently, the three storylines turn in surprising ways and explore the effects of domestic abuse, the ties of family, and the possibilities of healing. I’m not usually an alternate plot kind of reader, but this novel is said to be one of the most anticipated novels of the year and so I don’t plan to miss it. Will it live up to its positive hype? It seems to contain some trigger warnings of abuse and mental health, so I’ll put that out there but I’m hoping it’s a beautiful read too.

And lastly in books for this month are two nonfiction titles that I can’t quite ignore. Ron Chernow’s 1,200 page tome about the life of Mark Twain (1835-1910) comes out May 13, which looks to be a whopper of a biography. Twain seemed to have had his hand in so many facets of 19th-century life; he was everywhere, and was quite the personality and the quintessential American author.

Apparently the book explores many of his contradictions. Granted it’s a bit intimidating as I haven’t read a book this long in quite a while. The novel Gone With the Wind might have been my longest. What about you?

The other nonfiction book is Last Secret Agent: My Life as a Spy Behind Nazi Lines by Pippa Latour with Jude Dobson. Latour, who died in 2023 at age 102, was the last surviving undercover British female agent of the (SOE) in World War II, who parachuted into Normandy and worked as a radio operator in occupied France. She called in German troop deployments and relayed info for Resistance efforts.

Apparently Latour didn’t reveal her wartime story till late in life when her kids found out about it from the internet, but it’s said to be a remarkable account — one filled with inspiration and true courage.

On the screen this month, there’s two films with particularly strong real-life female protagonists. The film Words of War (out May 2) is getting much coverage and is based on the true story of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya and her brave crusade, fighting for an independent voice in Putin’s Russia. Tragically she was gunned down in 2006, but her story lives on in this portrayal of her by British actress Maxine Peake.

Also the movie Lily (out May 9), starring Patricia Clarkson, looks good based on the life of Lilly Ledbetter, who was a tire factory supervisor who fought for equal pay for women. Both films’ storylines appear to be strong along with their performances.

In TV series this month, there’s Murderbot (on AppleTV+ starting May 16), based on the popular book series by Martha Wells, about a security android (played by Alexander Skarsgård) who struggles to hide his free thoughts while balancing dangerous missions. I have not read these novels yet, but others have loved them.

Also Season 2 of Nine Perfect Strangers (starring Nicole Kidman) about a group of rich city folk who visit a health resort where they’re promised transformation begins on May 21 on Hulu. Its premise seems quite a bit like The White Lotus’s eh? Both shows are pretty cukie, but they make for pretty good escapes when you need one. Though if you’re looking for something a bit calmer, try the four-part series Miss Austen on PBS starting May 4, that explores why Cassandra, Jane’s sister, burned most of Jane’s personal letters after her death. Hmm. That’s one way to tick off fans.

Lastly in music releases this month, there’s new albums by Arcade Fire, Counting Crows, Maren Morris, Thom Yorke, Suzanne Vega, The Head and the Heart, and Anderson East among others. I’ll pick Anderson East’s new album Worthy coming out May 30 since he has a great voice. For a listen, here’s his new single “Say I Love You.”

Whoosh that’s all for now. What about you — which releases are looking forward to this month? Happy May.

Posted in Top Picks | 40 Comments

The Wagoneer

Hi all. I hope everyone has had a good week. I’m away this weekend reffing a tennis tournament of 14 and 18-year-olds a couple hours north of where we live. It’s pretty exhausting since it goes 10+ hours a day, so I won’t be home until Sunday evening.

Meanwhile my husband is home gardening with the dogs. Here is timid Willow in the wagon doing her part. But what is going on there? Lol. And where is Stella?

It’s hard to believe we’re at the very end of April now. Has spring sprung where you are? We might hit 70 degrees today, but it sure has been windy. I’m completely wind-blown. It’s true that you need so much chapstick in this part of the world, lol. 

Meanwhile  a bit earlier this month the shortlist for the Walter Scott Prize was announced and here above are the six novels that made the cut. The prize honors the best in historical fiction each year and is open to novels written in English that were first published in the UK, Ireland, or the Commonwealth during the preceding year (so it’s not American). Just briefly here are when/where the finalists are set:  The Heart in Winter — Butte, Montana in 1891; The Mare — during and after WWII; The Book of Days — during the reign of Henry VIII in 1546; Glorious Exploits — In 412 BC after Athens’s invasion of Syracuse; The Land in Winter — during the Great Freeze that was the winter of 1962-3 in rural England; and The Safekeep — rural Holland, fifteen years after the end of WWII. It seems The Safekeep has made various prize lists this year but will it win? Stay tuned for when the winner is announced on June 12. 

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

We Do Not Part by Han Kang / Hogarth / 272 pages / 2025

3.7 stars. Holy smokes this novel has a lot of pain in it … in the present and in the past and here, there, and everywhere. Is it in the top 10 of all time? It unloads a decimation. And maybe now was not a good time to listen to the audiobook of it after my own loss as I drove back and forth from the city. What was I thinking? I just didn’t want to lose my place in line to try the writing of this Nobel Prize Literature winner. And I thought it would be a story about a friendship. 

And it is a story of two friends Kyungha and Inseon who gets injured after accidentally cutting her hand and is in the hospital and asks Kyungha to go to her house on Jeju Island to find and save her pet bird. Both women are not doing well … Kyungha, who lives near Seoul, suffers from migraines and is having nightmares … and the first part of the novel is of her traveling to Jeju and getting in a snowstorm there and trying to save the bird. Some of it is hard to know what is real or part of a dream. And it’s a bit confusing, but snow images are nicely descriptive. 

Then the latter half of the novel is more about the brutal massacre that happened on Jeju Island by military forces in 1948-49 and how Inseon’s family was affected by that. It’s more straightforward in its telling than the first part and really lays down a whopper of the brutality … the executions, mass graves, and inability to find remains. The harshness and pain is certainly palpable. And it seems personal and very specific. 

I’m sure it’s good the author explores and excoriates this awful event in history, but it might not have been my time for it. Still the writing in areas is visceral and illuminating. I first read about the Jeju Island massacre in Lisa See’s novel The Island of the Sea Women, which is also quite intense with the trauma. I liked the story about the sea women. Have you read that one? 

Beartooth by Callan Wink / Spiegel & Grau / 256 pages / 2025 

3.5 stars. I know some were pretty high on this novel, but I was expecting more from this story about two brothers in their 20s who are living in a rundown house near the Beartooth Mountains of Montana. Their father died not long ago and they are still messed up about that, and their hippie-ish mother who left them early on has returned. The boys are pretty rough around the edges and are in need of more funds — they’re hunters and loggers looking for a way to make money due to the house having some debt.

Then they meet this dude called the Scott who’s with a girl he calls his daughter … apparently he wears a kilt and once killed a young thief pointblank — and he wants the brothers to do something illegal for him. He wants them to get a secret haul of elk antlers out of Yellowstone National Park, which they end up using a raft for to transport along the river. You’ll have to see what happens … it takes a turn of sorts. And late in the plot it introduces another element that seemed a bit odd or out of place. Maybe the story sort of petered out a bit for me. The momentum of the book goes a bit up and down, but my favorite parts were the action in Yellowstone.

That’s all for now. I think I will save chatting about Charlotte McConagh’s novel Wild Dark Shore, which I just finished, for next time. I’m still thinking it over and need to grab a breath of air after its ending.

What about you — have you read any of these books and if so, what did you think? 

Posted in Books | 30 Comments

Moose and Bunnies

Hi all. Happy Easter weekend. I hope you have some fun plans ahead. I think we are pretty much chilling at home and might just hit some golf balls, yay. Yesterday we weeded out the garden beds. And now it looks like maybe a rainy weekend is here, so we’ll see. We could really use the moisture. We went out to dinner last night as a treat and on the way home we saw this moose by the side of the road. He sort of blends into the landscape eh? It’s always fun to see a moose and lucky too I think, though he seemed a bit scraggly — not sure if he was old or just losing his winter coat, or a bit lonely. We wished him well. 

It must be the week of critters because a few days earlier we watched a red fox on our street for a while as he was carrying something in his mouth. We think it was part of a chicken, alas. Also a skunk was out last night and he sprayed something (luckily not our dogs), so it seems the critters are out and about as spring opens up here. And along the roadsides there are plenty of Richardson’s ground squirrels (often called prairie gophers) popping up that look a lot like prairie dogs but are a bit smaller. We do our best to weave and miss them when they run out on the roads, but they really like to flirt with danger. 

Here is some more library loot that I picked up this past week, combined with earlier loot. When will I get to Eowyn Ivey’s new one? I’ve read her two other novels: The Snow Child and To the Bright Edge of the World and hope to get to this one sometime too.

And then there’s also Eric Puchner’s novel Dream State, which is about three close friends and a wedding of one of them in Montana. Apparently 117 others at the library are waiting for a copy of it — thanks to Oprah picking it for her book club. But I’m not sure I will be able to get to it this time around with all my others going on — it’s a longer yarn too. But I see that Anne Tyler’s short novel Three Days in June is also about a wedding. What is it about wedding plots these days? There’s also the popular The Wedding People by Alison Espach, which I plan to get to on audio sometime. We’ll all become experts on wedding plots soon enough. 

And did you know that April 10 was the 100th anniversary of Fitzgerald’s classic The Great Gatsby, which came out April 10, 1925? Wow. I heard about it on a couple news programs recently and the New York Times did a pretty good podcast about the anniversary too. I’m a bit of a Fitzgerald fan and I last read Gatsby in May 2013 before the Baz Luhrmann movie with Leo DiCaprio came out of it. I’ve also read Fitzgerald’s debut novel This Side of Paradise and his last one Tender Is the Night. But Gatsby in 1925 was quite the literary landmark.

I think I will honor it by reading it again sometime later this year. And speaking of which, if you like literary anniversaries, 2025 marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth — she was born Dec. 16, 1775 in the village of Steventon in North Hampshire — so there are many festivities and readings to join in for her as well. 

Meanwhile, I thought I should say something about Season 3 of The White Lotus, which we finished a while back. It was a pretty crazy season, right? LoL. For those who don’t know: it’s about a group of rich guests and a couple employees at a luxury resort in Thailand over a week’s time.

The show was in the news quite a bit and popular. And the finale killed off one of the characters and you have to wait to see who it is and who did it, so that is the main gist … along with getting to know the crazy characters, their problems, and what they partake in. One episode’s particularly weird drug-induced orgy-like party with two brothers has been endless fodder for talk. But overall Season 3 certainly provided a decent escape from everything else going on. And since Season 1 was set in Maui and Season 2 was in Sicily, Italy, and this latest season is in Thailand … I’m thinking maybe they should set the next season at a snowy ski resort next time. Maybe in the Alps? What do you think?

Now we are onto watching the final Season 3 of Bosch Legacy, which I am suspecting will set up the new protagonist cop detective Renée Ballard and her spinoff series coming later in the year. Yay! Constance at the blog Staircase Wit gave me a heads up about that. (She’s one of our Michael Connelly experts.) Only thing is Bosch star Titus Welliver says he will not be in the spinoff show but that Maggie Q as Renée Ballard is great. So we will see. I’m just psyched the series continues in some way and somehow.

Now I will leave you with a couple book reviews of what I finished a while back ago. 

Enter Ghost by Isabella Hammad /Grove / 336 pages / 2024 

4+ stars. Whoa, by the end I was thoroughly impressed by all that went into this novel, which I listened to as an audiobook, and seems to include the author’s heart and soul along with it. It’s essentially about an actress in London — Sonia Nasir from a Palestinian family — who after ending an affair goes to visit her sister Haneen in Haifa, Israel, who teaches at the university in Tel Aviv. Once there, Sonia meets the dynamic director Miriam Mansour who’s putting on an all-Palestinian Arabic-language production of Hamlet and eventually convinces Sonia to play Gertrude. 

Much happens as Sonia begins to learn her lines and takes part in rehearsals for Hamlet with Miriam and the cast and as she begins crossing check points to spend time in the Palestinian city Ramallah. Things become politically charged and as opening night nears the theater troupe faces various hurdles to put on the production. Through it all, Sonia seems to undergo a period of self-discovery as she returns to her ancestral roots. 

I found it a good eye-opener into the geography there, which I was following on maps, and Israeli-Palestinian issues, dating before the Oct. 7, 2023 attack. I was intrigued following Sonia’s journey and the production of Hamlet, and its meanings in light of everything were revealing. There were various layers to this novel that made it into a dynamo. I will be interested to see whatever Isabella Hammad writes next. 

Great Expectations by Vinson Cunningham / Hogarth / 272 pages / 2024

3 stars. There was some good writing throughout this novel … about David, a 24-year-old black man who comes to work on a senator’s race for the presidency, who is not named but seems like Barack Obama. Apparently before joining the campaign, David flunked out of a college after becoming a young father and involved with all that entails. 

Yet the novel at the same time also felt episodic or like an essay on a variety of topics that David comes across on the campaign, or through the people he meets, or the recollections of his upbringing in a Pentecostal church that it didn’t come together fully for me as a story. The loose plot withered for me and I struggled greatly to stay engaged with it. I usually love political novels, but this one seemed to be that only peripherally. It seemed more interested in the detours it takes talking about religion, race, film and many other topics. So just be forewarned. It’s not exactly a campaign novel.  

That’s all for now. What about you — have you read any of these novels listed above, or seen the TV shows, and if so, what did you think?

Posted in Books, TV | 41 Comments

April Book Releases

Hi all. It’s been a while. I hope everyone is well. I want to thank all those who left kind comments and their condolences on my last post about my father’s passing. It was very helpful to see your notes. I appreciate each one of you over these years that I’ve gotten to know while discussing books. You’ve made it fun and a positive experience. And we have a very good and caring community here in this book blogging world, so thanks much.

I know my Dad was a fan of the Cue Card and reading and would want me to continue on, so here I am again.

Now I’m back from California rather dazed and sad but trying to continue on. What have you been reading? I look forward to visiting your blogs again over the next few days to catch up. Here’s a picture of my current library loot. I still have The Frozen River on the pile, lol, it’s been there for a long while.

For the week ahead, I sort of want to focus on Frozen River along with Stone Yard Devotional, and the classic Brideshead Revisited, which Tina at the blog Turn the Page and I have started. Emily Feng book’s is a nonfiction book about China that looks good too. And Tim Winton’s novel Juice is a post-apocalyptic tale of suspense and survival. As always there’s much to read. 

And you might have seen that the shortlists of various book prizes recently came out. The Women’s Prize for Fiction is a big one, and it appears I have read three on the shortlist including: Tell Me Everything, The Safekeep, and the debut novel Good Girl. I have no idea which of the six books the judges will pick as the winner on June 12, but I think I need to read Miranda July’s strange-ish novel All Fours sometime. Not sure its premise seems appealing to me, but it certainly has received some critical acclaim, so I’ll likely check it out. Apparently it’s about a mid-40s aged woman who’s a semi famous artist set to embark on a cross-country road trip but instead drives to a nearby motel and becomes obsessed with a local man. The character seems sort of out there but is trying to reinvent herself and find fulfillment as she faces menopause and mortality. (I say … just wait till your 50s and 60s, lol). 

The novel All Fours also recently made the shortlist for the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction (see the five pictured), but I’m sort of pulling for Aube Rey Lescure’s debut novel River East, River West, since I’ve read and liked that one. The prize winner will be announced on May 1, so there’s not a lot of time to read these beforehand. I don’t know the other novels, but I have read Sarah Manguso before with her prior novel Very Cold People. Her books are pretty bleak, so I’m sort of avoiding Liars, which apparently “paints an excoriating portrait of a marriage,” but it received starred reviews from both Publishers Weekly and Kirkus. Though I wonder if All Fours might be the favorite?

Also the shortlist for the International Booker Prize came out and these are translated into English works that I don’t know as well. Small Boat by Vincent Delecroix  is a French novel about a dingy full of migrants that capsizes in the English Channel; On the Calculation Of Vol. 1 by Solvej Balle is a Danish novel about a bookseller in France who finds herself trapped in a time loop reliving the same day; Under the Eye of the Big Bird by Hiromi Kawakami is a Japanese dystopian novel about AI mother beings who oversee isolated tribes of almost extinct humans; Perfection by Vincenzo Latronico is an Italian novel about an expat couple living in Berlin who feel increasingly trapped in their picture-perfect life; Heart Lamp by Banu Mushtaq includes 12 stories that captures the lives of women and girls in Muslim communities in southern India; and lastly A Leopard-Skin Hat by Anne Serre is a French novel about a mentally ill woman who is helped by the male narrator and her father to endure life’s challenges. Hmm which book would you pick up to read? The winner will be decided on May 20. 

Meanwhile I didn’t get a chance to do my April Preview post at the beginning of the month as usual, so I’ll put forth these five novels coming out this month that look appealing to me.

I was a fan of Katie Kitamura’s earlier novels — A Separation and Intimacies — and so I plan to get to her new novel Audition (out April 8), which according to Kirkus is about an older woman and a younger man who “struggle to grasp who they are to each other in a slippery and penetrating tale.” Kitamura’s quiet, chilly (psychological) tales might not be for everyone, but I think her writing is not to be missed. Kitamura recently spoke at Politics & Prose bookstore in D.C., which you can hear here

Also I liked Amity Gaige’s last strong novel Sea Wife, so I will check out her new novel Heartwood (out April 1), which apparently takes you on a “gripping journey as a search and rescue team race against time when an experienced hiker mysteriously disappears on the Appalachian Trail in Maine.”

It’s said to be part thriller-ish as well as a moving exploration of the complexities of mother-daughter bonds. Publishers Weekly calls it a mixed bag due to its unfocused plot, while Kirkus calls it a “winning portrait of a woman, and community, in peril.” With Amity Gaige, I need to get to it regardless. Her books are a go. 

Then Kate Folks’ debut novel Sky Daddy (out April 8) seems an unusual funny story about a woman who has an obsession with airplanes. She doesn’t simply love them she’s apparently in love with them. She flys on them when she’s not working and going about her mundane life.

Author Gary Shteyngart says the novel is the “craziest, funniest book I’ve read in a while” and Electric Lit calls it “a zany, charming, and unexpectedly poignant portrait of a woman who feels herself to be unassimilable to the world of normal people.” I’m not sure what to think about it, but we could use something funny about now, so I’ll put my name in for it at the library. 

Meanwhile The Death of Us (out April 15) by Abigail Dean looks like an engaging intense literary thriller about a London couple that struggles with the aftermath of a violent crime and an upcoming trial. Thirty years ago a couple endured a violent break-in — they survived but their marriage never recovered. Now the invader’s been caught and the former couple are in their 50s and are preparing to deliver victim statements before his sentencing, which describes their lives and what they’ve been through.

I don’t read many thriller-type books anymore, but this one has received high praise (from Stephen King and Mick Herron) and starred reviews from PW and Kirkus for its storytelling and focus on the victims, so I’m curious. 

Lastly is Jennifer Haigh’s new novel Rabbit Moon (out April 1) about an American woman in Shanghai who winds up in a coma after a hit-and-run. Her estranged divorced parents fly to be by her side and the story alternates between their perspectives and their troubling questions about their daughter’s life there and then later the perspective of the woman’s adopted sister. It sounds like a family in turmoil. Haigh’s novels have been a bit hit-and-miss for me over the years — I liked Faith (2011) but not so much Heat and Light (2016) but this one’s setting of Shanghai entices me,  so it’s a go. 

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

Posted in Top Picks | 36 Comments

Taking a Breather

Hi book friends. I’m sorry to say we received some very sad news this past week that my Dad had a bad fall in his cottage in California late overnight into Tuesday and was taken to the hospital. My siblings and I flew to be with him. Unfortunately he was unable to overcome his injuries and passed on Wednesday afternoon. It is a shock and devastating and comes about a year after my mother’s passing. He was a very special person to us and loved dearly by so many who knew him. So I’m going to be taking a bit of a blogging break for a couple weeks while I’m away in California. I would usually do an April Preview now, but I will need to postpone. I wish everyone a peaceful and good reading month and thanks for your kind thoughts.

Posted in Daily Cue | 44 Comments

Libraries on the Run

Hi bookworms. I hope you are hanging in there. It’s becoming more spring-like here now though early in the week we had a frosty morning that formed a bit of hoarfrost on the trees, which often has a neat effect. And we had several sightings this week of bald eagles on our road. I took a picture of one, which I’ve posted below. He was a big bird — majestic — and he watched me and our dog Willow as we walked quietly past. I think the eagle sat there for an hour or so while he gathered his thoughts, rested, and looked around. We’ve also had a couple flyovers by eagles and their wingspan is quite fantastic. I will keep my eyes peeled for more. 

Meanwhile in disturbing book news this past week the U.S. president signed an executive order to eliminate “to the maximum extent consistent with applicable law” the federal agency (IMLS) that funds libraries and museums with grants and development with its budget of nearly $295 million. So apparently if this happens it will be “catastrophic” for libraries and museums across the country and will likely mean among other things that the availability of shared e-book collections and interlibrary loan services will be decimated. So if you depend on libraries for reading, things just got tougher. Make no mistake, libraries and books are under attack with funding cuts, book bans, and operational development and oversight.

By no coincidence, I received an email this past week from the Houston Public Library, where I reserve e-books and e-audiobooks as a paid nonresident library card holder, telling me they won’t be renewing nonresident memberships anymore due to “changes in library funding and operational needs.” Yikes all the rural users and people who don’t have access to a decent library will be out of luck. I’m beyond my city’s boundary and they don’t allow e-books or e-audiobooks to nonresidents here, so that’s why I sought out a nonresident card from Houston’s library system and it was very helpful for a couple years before this new funding cut, which I plan to call my representative about the need to save IMLS funding. It’s a shame right — along with the banning of books. We need more books to get to people, not less. 

In more positive news, here is my library loot in hardback for the week. Though I’m not sure when I’ll have time to get to these since I’m reading three other books (not-pictured) currently. Still they look really good. Have you read any of these?

In other news I see that the National Book Critics Circle announced the winners of its 2024 book awards this past week, giving the top fiction prize to Hisham Matar’s novel My Friends and the top nonfiction prize to Adam Higginbotham’s book Challenger: A True Story of Heroism and Disaster on the Edge of Space. Also deceased Russian dissident Alexei Navalny won in the memoir category for his book Patriot. I’d like to read all three of these at some point and I know several of you have read and liked My Friends, which is about a Libyan exile living in London and his two friends who come together and apart over decades struggling with their loyalties to themselves and their homeland. I started it once and put it down but plan to pick it back up another time.

And now here are a couple reviews of what I finished lately — which were two good reads of historical fiction. 

The Riveter by Jack Wang / House of Anansi Press / 392 pages / 2025

3.75 stars. Chinese Canadian Josiah Chang is a strong character who meets Poppy Miller while working in a shipyard in Vancouver, B.C. in 1942. (He uses a rivet gun to put together the metal on cargo ships. Hence the book’s title.) Josiah and Poppy fall hard for one another but her father won’t give his consent for them to marry since Poppy will lose her citizenship if she marries a resident Chinese alien like himself. So after a fight with a guy in the shipyard, Josiah runs off to join the Canadian army thinking that fighting for freedom and against the Nazis might also help him obtain his citizenship and marry Poppy in his homeland. He opts to prove himself further by training with an elite unit as a paratrooper and landing in Normandy during D-Day. 

Josiah has some harrowing experiences with his regiment while fighting through France, Holland and Germany … as well as trying to stop a couple atrocities and crimes he sees from happening. And along the way, he becomes a veteran soldier all the while corresponding with Poppy in B.C. who worries for his safety as she continues work at the shipyard. 

In some sense The Riveter is much like a traditional WWII story but from a Chinese Canadian perspective where Josiah’s the only one of his race in his regiment, which apparently was historically the case. He endures flak for it but proves his worth and sacrifice time and again. By the time the war winds down, you need to stick with it to see if he survives and if Poppy and Josiah will stay together post-war after so much time apart. Will they even be able to be together? That is the question. There is a little twist near the end that I didn’t foresee and it threw a new hurdle into the mix. 

All in all, I learned a bit more about WWII and its paratroops from the Canadian side. The novel is fairly easy to read, but there is a density to the pages that took me a while to get through the book. By the end, it felt like I had journeyed far and wide with Josiah.

Crow Mary by Kathleen Grissom / Atria Books / 348 pages / 2023 

4 stars. This novel, which I listened to on audio, enlightened me about a real life indigenous girl (Goes First) who grew up in Montana with her Crow parents and tribe in the 1860s and ’70s and ends up marrying at age 16 a white fur trader (Abe Farwell) at a ceremony in Fort Benton, Montana. There, Mary (as her husband calls her) befriends a married Metis woman Jeannie who helps her deal with her new life and learn English. 

But then Abe and Mary set off on a long trip to his trading post in Saskatchewan, Canada, where in time they fall for one another. And all goes well there for a season, until they cross paths with a group of drunken traders and hunters who think some natives stole their horses. Abe tells them otherwise and tries to calm them down, but what results is the Cypress Hills Massacre of 1873, which is a brutal attack that kills a number of Nakota Indians. Crow Mary (as she calls herself), armed with two guns, puts herself on the line trying to save some native women from the marauders. 

Afterwards a trial arises over what happened that ends up having life-long consequences for Abe and Mary who are called to testify as witnesses. Along the way, the story unveils what life and marriage was like on the frontier for young Crow Mary, who was quite brave and competent handling horses and guns, surviving in the outback, and sleeping in a tepee. Her husband and her were quite close for years and had three children, but things after the trials begin to fray. Mary is one of those figures in history who becomes caught between the native and white worlds, struggling with the collision between the two. I was glad to learn of her life story and this real historical tragic event that she was involved in. I thought the author did a great job putting the reader in her shoes.

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

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Good Material

Hi Bookworms, I hope you’re doing well. You might wonder why I still have a winter header up above. Well we still have some snowflakes here and there so I will keep it up for a while longer. It’s been a busy week of doing taxes (ugh) and swapping out my old laptop for a new one and having things transferred over. Wow it’s been over a decade. This new one is shiny and clean, which I’ll try to maintain. The photo is from one of our walks near here, where we take the dogs up a hill and this was coming back down. The fields give me some solace.

And since it was another brutal news week, my husband and I started and finished another 1000 piece jigsaw puzzle. This one called Greetings From Canada is a bit similar to the last one we did in that it spotlights the various Canadian provinces and what they’re about. It’s put out by Cobble Hill puzzle Co. for those interested. I was a bit blown away that Rachel at the blog Waves of Fiction actually found and did our last puzzle. She probably did it in her sleep as she seems a master “dissectologist” (puzzle aficionado). I had to look that word up, which seems a strange fit, don’t you think?

Lately at night we’ve been watching The White Lotus Season 3 set in Thailand. It’s pretty frivolous but all right for an escape. We finished the thriller series Prime Target starring British actor Leo Woodall as a mathematician who’s on the run from those trying to stop his work with prime numbers, which was okay. And we’ve been watching the series Pachinko, which has a dual timeline and is a pretty good drama, set in Asia during the ’30s and ’40s, and in New York in current times. I liked the 2017 book and still await Min Jin Lee’s next novel. 

Meanwhile, last week after I highlighted the Women’s Prize for Fiction longlist, Carmen reminded me of some other big literary prizes going on that look good and have their shortlists coming out in April. For translated lit fans, there’s the International Booker, which will announce its shortlist April 8. I’m trying to read more translated foreign fiction this year, so I’m eyeing this longlist (above). I only know about the novel Hunchback by Japanese author Saou Ichikawa so far, but I will look into the other books more. Apparently several on the list are very short books, for example Hunchback is just 112 pages. So here’s our chance to sample some shorter works of translated lit. 

Also similar to the Women’s Prize, the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction celebrates the excellence in women authors from Canada and the U.S. and will announce its shortlist on April 3. There’s several novels I recognize on the longlist (above), including All Fours, Creation Lake, Liars, Bear, and River East, River West. I’ve only read River, East, River West by Aube Rey Lescure, which is a good coming-of-age debut set mostly in Shanghai, but I still need to check out some of the others.

Next up is the Walter Scott Prize, which honors achievements in historical fiction and has its shortlist coming out April 15. I’ve read two on the longlist (above) so far — The Safekeep and Clear, which were both quite good. I might try to get to Kevin Barry’s novel The Heart in Winter which apparently is a rip-roaring western set in Butte, Montana. I’ve been reading quite a bit of historical fiction lately, but I don’t know some of the ones listed here. Do you? 

And lastly I would be remiss not to mention the Stella Prize, which celebrates Australian women writers and will announce its shortlist on April 8. I’m a newbie to this award now in its 13th year, but I like Aussie writers and look forward to trying a couple of these on the longlist. Apparently the longlist includes seven fiction, four nonfiction and one poetry collection. They mix the prize’s nominees of various formats together. Hmm … which must be tough a bit to judge. I’ve been eyeing The Burrow novel (above) with the rabbit on the cover.

So there you have it — enough book prize lists for a while. I’ll be keen to see which books make the shortlists when they come out next month. And now I’ll leave you with a review of what I finished lately.

Good Material by Dolly Alderton / Knopf / 336 pages / 2024

3.75 stars. This light-ish relationship kind of novel, which surprisingly made the New York Times 10 Best Books of 2024 list, is about a British couple that has recently broken up. Andy, a 35-year-old comedian, is having a terrible time coming to grips with why his girlfriend Jen broke up with him and especially right after they came home from a vacation in Greece. They had been together for over three and a half years and lived together, but Jen seems to have had enough of Andy and said she’d rather be alone. So poor Andy around and around he goes wallowing in the heartbreak and trying to figure it out for six months or so. 

It’s put him into a sad sap frame of mind and he starts drinking during the day and his comedy career hits the skids. He’s in a bad way, obsessing about Jen. But luckily there are some light amusing moments along the way … his attempts to live on a small leaky house boat and later with an odd 78-year-old roommate who corresponds with Julian Assange, oh my. Then Andy runs into Jen on a date with a man named Seb, and he starts seeing a 20-something model-ish woman named Sophie. But can the two really move on from one another? 

You have to wait to near the end to see what becomes of Jen and Andy, but the story’s narration changes hands from Andy to Jen near the end. Both characters are narrated well by actors Arthur Darvill and Vanessa Kirby for the audio, which I listened to driving back and forth from the city. All and all, I thought it was entertaining and heart-affirming despite the sad sack of both Andy and Jen who spy on one another after they’ve broken up. I didn’t get Jen’s side of the story as well as I did Andy’s … who came off more appealing to me. 

I’m new to British writer Dolly Alderton who’s a newspaper columnist in the U.K. and has also written a popular memoir, but she writes with such ease in a conversational and often witty way. Though I wondered at times if Andy’s narration seemed authentically how a guy would react to things along the way, but I gave it the benefit of the doubt. And I look forward to seeing what Alderton writes next. 

I was going to add another review, but I’ll post it next time as this has gone on long enough. So 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 | 44 Comments

Across Borders

Hi. I hope everyone is doing well. Here are the girls — Stella and Willow — looking a bit pensive out for a walk with my husband. They usually are pretty popular and bring goodwill, so they get put in posts fairly regularly. I’m posting them on a week that unfortunately saw the start of the U.S. tariffs on Canada and Mexico for no good reason, which could potentially cripple the Canadian economy and also raise prices in the U.S. Sigh. I don’t know what will happen, but I don’t think it will be anything good. 

And I just saw that in a sign of protest Canadian author Louise Penny has canceled her U.S. book tour for the fall launch of her next mystery The Black Wolf. She says her decision is not meant to punish Americans but to stand with fellow Canadians. She is hoping Americans will come to her Canadian events, especially one at the tour’s end at the Haskell Free Library that borders Quebec and Vermont. Hmm. You can see her full announcement on her website here and on Facebook

Anyways, I just put it out there. We’re all in this together. And we’ll struggle on. Meanwhile we’ll exchange book ideas and talk for free across borders wherever you are in the world! And now I have a few book lists to post and discuss.

The first is my book recap for this past January and February, pictured above. I finished five in January and six in February (top row). Four of them were about immigrant stories (Good Girl, Wandering Souls, Owner of a Lonely Heart and The Leavers) as I was on an immigrant binge for a while. Then three were nonfiction (The Stalin Affair, Owner of a Lonely Heart, The Friday Afternoon Club) and one was a classic novel (The Forbidden Notebook). I liked them all but my favorites were probably The Safekeep and Fifteen Wild Decembers about the life of Emily Bronte and her family, which is due out April 1. Look for it.

My next list pictured above is my library loot for this week. I started the novel My Father’s House set at the Vatican during WWII, but then my husband took it, so I moved onto reading The Riveter, which is also a WWII-set story about a Chinese-Canadian man who enlists and sees much action. I had started Ali Smith’s dystopian novel Gliff on audio, but I couldn’t really make much of it after nearly two hours so I set it down (not sure I’ll go back to the book). A couple of these books I’ve picked up from the library a couple separate times (The Frozen River and Creation Lake) but I still haven’t found time for them yet. I hope to! Confessions also looks good. It’s a debut novel by Catherine Airey that follows three generations of women from New York to rural Ireland and back again. I look forward to pouncing on it sometime. Yay! 

And lastly pictured above is the longlist of the Women’s Prize for Fiction, which was announced this past week. 16 books were picked and so far I’ve read three (The Safekeep, Tell Me Everything, and Good Girl). There’s others I already had on my library list (Nesting and Dream Count) and two others I know about (All Fours and The Ministry of Time), but the rest I’ll have to find out more about. I don’t know know them yet. Later the shortlist, which will consist of six books, will be announced on April 28. I wouldn’t be surprised if the first six I listed above make the cut. They seem pretty prominent. I will try to read the novels that make the shortlist once they’re selected. How about you — do you know these?

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

The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden / Avid Reader / 272 pages / 2024

4.5 stars. This novel was shortlisted for last year’s Booker Prize seemingly for good reason. I liked how it is set in post-war 1961 Netherlands and starts with three siblings who gather for dinner — Isabel nearly 30, her gay younger brother, Hendrik, and their older sibling, Louis, who brings his latest girlfriend Eva. Then later when Louis leaves for work travel he asks if Eva can stay at Isabel’s — who lives in the old big house they grew up in with their parents who have since died.

Isabel is a cold, solitary girl (except for a guy Johan who likes her and a maid who cleans the house) and having lively inquisitive Eva come is definitely not to her liking. This development brings all sorts to light … including secrets, which may or may not come as a surprise, and changes too. I would rather not say too much more, though many seem to already know what the story entails. 

The novel might not be for everyone, but I thought it was really well done, the feeling of the grim post-war, the grief over their parents, and the relations that ignite the plot. Though I wonder a bit if the ending would’ve been better if it had been a bit less tidily tied up. I thought it had finished a bit earlier, but then it came back around to end it with more resolved. With some novels I like an ending with a tidy resolution and other times (like this) it seems better a bit more muddied. It just depends I think on the book. What do you think about endings?

I was thinking of posting another review, but I think I’ll shorten this and wait for next time.

So that’s all for now. What about you — have you read any of these books mentioned above and what did you think? Happy reading. And for most of you: don’t forget to set your clocks ahead tonight, whoa it’s that time again.

Posted in Books | 46 Comments

March Preview

Hi all, we’ve made it to March. Yay it won’t be too long now before spring is on the way. We had such warm weather this past week that our snow melted away as you can see from this shot at the end of the road.

We need to get going on planting the vegetable seeds in our indoor pots. We usually can’t put them in the ground here till mid-May, so we have time to sprout these things for a while. 

 Meanwhile there’s plenty going on this month (besides all the bad news): the Academy Awards are on tomorrow night (with Conan O’Brien hosting); the Indian Wells pro-tennis tournament starts this week (yay!); the time change happens on the 9th; March Madness basketball begins on the 16th; then St. Patrick’s Day; and later spring break for many school kiddies across the land. Whoosh, I’d like to swing a golf club at some point. Lately I’ve been playing tennis doubles twice a week indoors, which is fun. I drive back to the city for that — crazy!  

There’s many new releases to discuss, so let’s dive in. Novels by such well-known authors as: Laila Lalami, Susanna Kearsley, Karen Russell, Lawrence Wright, Emma Donoghue, and Kristen Arnett have new ones coming out this month … along with there’s Chris Bohjalian’s Civil War novel The Jackal’s Mistress (out March 11) and Colum McCann’s cable-repair ship novel Twist (out March 25), which I read early copies of last year. I won’t be spotlighting them here now, but I liked and recommend them both. See what you think. 

Others I hope to get to include Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s new novel Dream Count (due out March 4), which Publishers Weekly says is about “the fleeting joys and abiding disappointments of four African women on both sides of the Atlantic.”

I remember reading Adichie’s last (adult) 2013 novel Americanah for a book club that dissolved just last year, so now 12 years later we are getting the new one. She had written some nonfiction and a children’s book during that time, but for whatever reason her next novel took a while. So yay, she’s back! And a slew are on order at the library.

I’m also keyed up to read Australian author Charlotte McConaghy’s new thriller-ish novel Wild Dark Shore (due out March 4) about a family and a stranger trapped on a research station’s island with no communication. I gather there are storms arising and apparently they must be able to trust one another to protect precious seeds they have in their care. Whoa.

I have read McConaghy’s two other novels: Once There Were Wolves and Migrations … and the natural world and climate change seem to figure prominently in all. She’s an eco-writer you could say and has a large following now.  

Next up is British author Natasha Brown’s novel Universality (due out March 4) about a journalist who sets out to uncover the truth about a brutal attack at an illegal rave event on a Yorkshire farm. Apparently the journalist solves the mystery, but her viral exposé ends up raising more questions than it answers.

Natasha Brown writes short, whip-smart novels that skip around a bit and you have to be on your toes. I liked her 2021 debut novel Assembly, which received a lot of recognition, so I’m back now for more. She was only 31 when she published her first novel. 

I’m also thinking about adding Emma Pattee’s debut Tilt (due out March 25) about a pregnant woman who comes to navigate through the aftermath of a major earthquake in Portland, Ore. It sounds scary. Lesley at the blog Coastal Horizons reviewed an early copy last fall and said it was intense but an impressive debut.

If I lose courage with that, then I might check out Nathaniel Ian Miller’s novel Red Dog Farm, which apparently is an atmospheric novel about a young man who tries to find purpose on a struggling Icelandic cattle farm …and must choose between home and the wider world. I don’t know this author, but it’s gotten some good reviews and I like it’s farming theme. 

In screen releases, there’s quite a few adaptations to check out this month, including the eight-part TV series Long Bright River (due out on Peacock March 13), based on the novel by Liz Moore. It’s about a female Philadelphia police officer (played by Amanda Seyfried) who works in a neighborhood with high drug use where a series of murders take place, and she has a druggy sister who goes missing. Uh-oh. The book was good but quite gritty, which this looks to be too. 

Next up is the six-part TV series: Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the Light (out on PBS, March 23), which along with Part I that aired in 2015 are adapted from the novels by Hilary Mantel that follow Thomas Cromwell, the chief minister in King Henry VIII’s court. It is so sad that Mantel died of a stroke at age 70 in 2022, but her works live on. I read one of the books Bring Up the Bodies, so I’m interested in seeing the series but need to find Season 1 in a set first. Have you watched it? 

Also coming out is the third and final season of Bosch Legacy (out on Prime Video March 27) that is based on the police procedural novels by Michael Connelly. Yeah we’ve watched all the episodes and seasons of Bosch and now Bosch Legacy. They’re good and I wish they’d keep going. They’re addicting and one could get through an entire winter on a box set alone, lol. There’s been some good characters with Bosch along the way, including his daughter, his partner Hector, the chief, and the defense attorney “Money” Chandler, lol. Let’s give the series a big sendoff goodbye. Could there be more Connelly works in the hopper?

Lastly I’ll just mention a movie that looks a bit cute. It’s The Friend (out March 28), starring Naomi Watts, which follows a story about a writer in NYC who adopts a Great Dane that belonged to a late friend and mentor. It turns out the dog and the writer are both grieving over the loss of the friend and they help each other to heal over time.

It’s based on the novel by Sigrid Nunez, which I reviewed here in 2018. The book has various meandering thoughts and tangents in it that I don’t think the movie can match. Still I’ll likely see it. It reminds me that I need to get to more of Nunez’s novels. 

In new music for March, there’s a plethora of notable albums coming out, including those by such artists as: Lady Gaga, Jason Isbell, Charley Crockett, My Morning Jacket, Mumford & Sons, and Alison Krauss & Union Station. These are all excellent artists to check out and are hard to choose from, but I’ll pick Jason Isbell’s album Foxes in the Snow (due out March 7) as my choice this month. It’s his first solo acoustic album without his 400 Unit band.

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

Posted in Top Picks | 38 Comments