My daughter, Diane, recommended these to me. They are not available in audio yet, so I waited until I was going on a trip to read a print-based version. They are unusual books. Each volume is quite short, and all the chapters are written as entries in Emma's journal. Both short volumes ended quite suddenly without any satisfying conclusion. Emma has a irreverent, sarcastic personality, world weary but delighting in the ridiculousness she sees in the people around her. They are super fun to read, mostly because of the snappy patter between characters. Now that my vacation is over and I have only read the first two of the seven in the series, I have to decide whether to press on and read the others, or wait until my next vacation. (V. 1, 2022, 119 p. V. 2. 2022, 160 p)
Thursday, August 29, 2024
The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion by Beth Brower Volumes 1&2
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Mrs Quinn's Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford
A friend recommended this to me and I really enjoyed it. After all the shallow, self-centered characters of the previous book, the deep rich relationships in this one are as sweet and Jenny's treacle tarts. The writing is lovely, and Bernard is the most unlikely but likeable of all love interests. I also enjoyed the "behind the scenes" view of being in a televised baking show. I wonder if the author was allowed to visit and research what it is like to be on the British Baking Show (for that it what it was) or if she just has a very vivid imagination. The book was very sweet and poignant, but also delightful. I will be recommending this one to a lot of friends who like clean reads. (284 p. 2024)
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
The Secret of Platform 13 by Eva Ibbotson
I thought I had read this book years ago, but as I went through it, I had either totally forgotten it, or I never read it in the first place. Ibbotson is a wonderful storyteller. This is classic children's literature at its best. The conflicts are straightforward and there is a healthy heap of humor in every chapter. Good is good and evil is evil and you are always sure right will win out in the end. Raymond is deliciously horrible and one can't help but wonder if he was a model for Dudley Dursley when Rowling wrote Harry Potter three years later. Odge is also an endearing character. I enjoyed it and now I am tempted to go back and read more Ibbotson. (256 p. 1994)
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Winter in Paradise by Elin Hilderbrand
This book was recommended to be by one of my patrons, but I will admit that I only got through 4/5th of it. It was not only too spicy for my taste, but I also realized that all the main characters where pretty shallow and I didn't really like any of them. Even though I was mildly interested in what actually happened to the husband (it was clear that he wasn't really dead, but that he had faked his death to get out of some kind of trouble with the law), the author wasn't focusing on the mystery at all, but instead on how quickly the mother and both brothers (one of which was married with a child) abandoned their whole prior life to go chasing after people they had just met. Maybe if I had spent the final two hours to see how it turned out I might have liked it better, but after I had to skip several steamy pages a second time, I decided it wasn't worth it. Sorry, Ms Hilderbrand, you are going on my "Authors to avoid" list. (2019, 336 p)
Sunday, August 18, 2024
The Camel Club by David Baldacci
Here is another political thriller by Baldacci. Like the other books by him that I have read, it is relatively clean but contains a fair amount of language and violence. Baldacci is good at intricate plotting with a large host of characters, and as you are reading you have to stay on your toes to keep track of all the different names and backstories. Baldacci gives each one a personality and motivation. He also sneaks in a fair bit of social commentary. (At one point I skipped to the end of a chapter because I got a little tired of it.) The book is old, so the politics it deals with are dated. Also, the series of events at the end of this book are pretty improbable. As I was reading, I thought to myself, this is a fantasy as much as a realistic fiction. Still it was fast paced, mostly engaging, and interesting, and I am glad to have another book to recommend for our middle-age-plus male patrons. (2006, 624 p)
Tuesday, August 13, 2024
Grace and the Preacher by Kim Vogel Sawyer
I haven't read something by Sawyer is quite a while, and I had forgotten how overtly religious her books are. There is a lot of preaching going on in the book, and not all by the minister. Neither Grace or Theophil has any degree of wit or even intelligence. I usually don't like reading about people who are stupid, but even though Grace and Theophil aren't particularly intelligent, they are not stupid. They are making good choices based on their knowledge. They are simple souls trying to make their way in the world and everyone is trying very hard to do what they think God wants them to do. The book has a different kind of vibe from most of the historical romances I read, but I enjoyed it nonetheless. I am, myself, pretty overtly religious and I was Ok with them spouting scripture and repeating
admonition to turn to the Lord. I would not want to read this style of book every week. It is not great literature, but it suited my mood this week. I will probably read more from this author when I again need a break from the grit I find in other books. (2017, 352 p.)
Saturday, August 10, 2024
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child by J.K. Rowling, Jack Thorne, John Tiffany
When this play script was first released as a book I made a decision not to read it. I had heard that it wasn't that good, and I didn't want to mar my memories of the series with a below par sequel. Recently, however, I heard that they were considering making a movie of the script so I decide I better read through it. I actually think the plot wasn't too bad. The plot had some of the feel of the books, and some of the interpersonal relationships were in keeping with might be suggested in the books. The thing that wasn't so great was the characterizations of the original characters. They felt counterfeit. Harry was kind of like Harry but not quite. Ron was a caricature of Ron, instead of the real Ron. Draco Malfoy was perhaps the worst. He was one of the really deep and complex characters in the book, but in the play he is almost comic relief.
After I read the play I found out that the rumors about the movie are false. The original cast is not willing to come back as their adult selves, and it wouldn't really work without them. After reading the script, if they had made the movie, I would have gone to see it. (2016, 343 p)
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
The Princess Protection Program by Alex London
This is a story aimed at the kids who like the "Whatever After" series or the "Descendants" books. It is cute, but also deals with serious questions like, "what if following your dreams means hurting someone else?" and "How much freedom are you willing to give up to be safe?" Some elements of the story make it appropriate for fairly young readers. For example, nobody actually gets hurts or kills anyone, and their is a pretty strong idea that no one is truly evil, they are just misguided. One of my favorite parts of the book is a battle between some unicorns and a dragon. The unicorns are the sparkly kind with brightly colored manes whose flatulence smells like freshly baked cookies. Protective parents should be aware, however, that the reason there is one prince at the academy is because he prefers to find another prince, rather than a princess, for his happily-ever-after. If you are not ready to expose your third grader to that concept, then you might want to avoid this book. Otherwise, it is a fun addition to the fractured fairytale genre. (224 p, 2024)
Sunday, August 4, 2024
Faith by Beverly Watts
When I checked this book out, I forgot that the first one in the series had more sexual element than I was comfortable with. The true was the same with this book. 98% of the book was just fine, but one chapter suddenly depicts them jumping into bed together. The description was at a level some might not object to, but it was too much for me. Actually, the references to sextual arousal, though pretty tame, were throughout the book. I think I need to start a companion list to my "clean romance writers" list. This one will be "Not so clean romance writers to avoid." Watts will be my first addition. (2021, 254)