I picked this book because it was written by the same author as Major Pettigrew's Last Stand, which I loved. I ended up really likeing this one as well. Not only is Simonson a brilliant word crafter, but she has such a delicate touch with characters and relationships. She does a good job of balancing the heart wrenching realities with light hearted jabs at small town social wrangling. The story unfolds like a rose bud, a little at a time until it reaches full bloom. This is another historical fiction that I will be recommending to a lot of friends. (2016, 512 p.)
Thursday, September 29, 2022
The Summer Before the War by Helen Simonson
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Great Courses: Augustine: Philosopher and Saint by Phillip Cary
Of course, having been a humanities major focusing on the middle ages, I had heard of Augustine, but listening to this lecture series, I realized how little I really knew about him and his teachings. Professor Cary gives interesting and rather animated lectures and seems to be well informed on his topic. I enjoyed listening to the lectures, but I didn't gain a lot of respect for Augustine. He really does seem to have ignored much of what we know about God and Christ from the Bible, and instead tried to God into the philosophies popular at the time in Rome. Augustine was clearly brilliant, but, in my opinion, misguided.
(1998, 6 hrs)
Wednesday, September 21, 2022
The Fix by David Baldacci
This is the third in the Memory Man series. I really like this series. It is intellectual, and Decker is an interesting character. Alex is also a good character, and the new character introduced in this book, Harper Brown, also has promise. There is action, but it isn't all action. There are enough clues that the reader can try to figure things out, but the ending isn't totally predictable. As I have said about this series before, I am glad it doesn't have some of the more distasteful elements you find in other "thriller" type mysteries. (2017, 434 p)
Thursday, September 15, 2022
The Lost City of the Monkey God by Douglas Preston
This is fairly sensationalized nonfiction about a modern day explorers. It was very interesting and written in an engaging style. Preston captures the contrasts of the thrill of seeing a completely unspoiled jungle environment, with the terror of being surrounded by animals and insects that could kill you with one bite. The end of the book took an unexpected turn. (spoiler alert) with a discussion about the role contagious diseases have played in world history, and specifically, in the devastation of populations of indigenous peoples of the Americas. I knew that great numbers of natives were killed by small pox and other diseases but I had no idea how many. It was interesting to have him end with dire predictions that the world could face another global pandemic like the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918. Of course this was written before 2020. Um. Been there. Done that. (2017, 448 p.)
P.S.
I was a little bit delighted with how this tied in with the last Charlie Thorne book I read. I didn't realize the Charlie Thorne book was based on a real legend.
Tuesday, September 13, 2022
Still the One by Susan May Warren
I am always on the lookout for new source for good clean romance. I hadn't read anything from this author before so I thought I would give her a try. There were some things I liked. I thought Cole's voice was very charming. He sounded, in my head, like I would imagine a handsome x-Army Ranger would sound. The host of secondary characters were also decent, making Deep Haven seem like an inviting Halmark-movie-type setting. The weakness of the book was the pacing. Ugh! it was so slow. I kept thinking, "come on, we need something to happen here." I almost didn't finish the book. Finally, I skipped an entire hour of the recording and jumped to the last 1/2 to see how it would end. I found, by doing that, that I didn't actually miss any important plot points. So maybe Ms. Warren isn't going on my favorite Christian romance writers list. (248 p. 2021)
Sunday, September 11, 2022
The Merchant and the Rogue by Sarah Eden
Here is another in the Dread Penny Society series. I enjoyed it, but have to admit that the books in this series are starting to all sound alike. I guess it would be normal for an author to use the same turn of phrase and discriptors in all their books. The heroines and heroes have very similar personalities, and they have been fighting against the same crime lord in all the books. I think I just read them too close to each other and would have enjoyed this one a little more if I had waited a few months. There is one more in the series, and the summary sounds pretty good, but I think I will wait a while before I read it. (368 p. 2021)
Saturday, September 10, 2022
The Higgs Boson and Beyond by Great Courses
Monday, September 5, 2022
Lost Girl by Chanda Hahn
I decided I hadn't read a YA novel in a long time, and this one came highly recommended. I was a little leery since the last Peter Pan remake I read wasn't that great. This one turned out to be much better. I thought Ms Hahn did a great job with both Peter's and Tinkerbell's personalities, and also with working in a lot of details from the original book into the new setting. Wendy is pretty emotional--in love one minute, in despair the next--but that is kind of how it is with YA heroines. It is the first in the series, and I am not sure I will read the rest, but I might, (which is pretty high praise for me when it comes to YA). (320 p. 2016)
Friday, September 2, 2022
The Pioneers by David McCullough
I have read and enjoyed David McCullough's histories before. This one was well researched and engaging as his other books have been. As I read about how the settlement struggled with starvation the first few years, but slowly got a foothold in a new land, I couldn't help but think of my own ancestors who went through the same process, a couple of decades later, in Utah. McCullough ends the book with excepts from the obituaries and tributes given about the men that were the focus of his narrative. He talks about how there were no greater "Christian Gentlemen" to be found than these men. As I read that, I suddenly realized that this book was written almost entirely from a white male perspective. There was some mention that the native peoples who were driven out of their ancestral homes by the settlers, but in the end, McCullough portrayed the relief of the main characters when the natives were finally driven to land north and would no longer be a bother. There was very little said about the contribution of women, except in how they had lots of children and supported their husbands. There were scattered mentions of people of color, but none were the main focus of any sizable part of the book. It reads like a book published 30 years ago and I was a little surprised when I saw that the publish date was so recent. (352 p., 2019)