I read this with my book club and really looked forward to this "reread." In the end, however, I was disappointed. Why didn;t I like the book as much the second time around? Hard to say. Because I knew what was going to happen? I doubt it because I forgot so much. It was so long. Parts of the history of NYC were glossed over and I wanted to learn more about Boss Tweed and that part of our history.
Have been keeping this blog since 2008! It's a place to keep track of what I've read.
Monday, April 19, 2021
Forever by Pete Hamill
I read this with my book club and really looked forward to this "reread." In the end, however, I was disappointed. Why didn;t I like the book as much the second time around? Hard to say. Because I knew what was going to happen? I doubt it because I forgot so much. It was so long. Parts of the history of NYC were glossed over and I wanted to learn more about Boss Tweed and that part of our history.
Tuesday, April 6, 2021
The Push by Ashley Audrain
From GoodReads:
A tense, page-turning psychological drama about the making and breaking of a family–and a woman whose experience of motherhood is nothing at all what she hoped for–and everything she feared.
Wednesday, March 31, 2021
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
From GoodReads:
Between life and death there is a library, and within that library, the shelves go on forever. Every book provides a chance to try another life you could have lived. To see how things would be if you had made other choices . . . Would you have done anything different, if you had the chance to undo your regrets?”
A dazzling novel about all the choices that go into a life well lived.
I enjoyed this book a lot. Made me think about life, choices, regrets, successes, etc. I recommend it. I must say that the end was not my favorite part of the book, but I totally understand why the author ended the book the way he did.
Friday, March 19, 2021
White Ivy by Susie Yang
This was a compelling and disturbing book about a young woman with lots of problems! From USA Today:
"Ivy Lin was a thief but you would never know it to look at her," the book begins. Little do readers know, settling in to read, that Ivy Lin is many other things she doesn't appear to be.
The question of how far one a person will go to get what she wants is explored in many novels. But how far Ivy will go is another question altogether, as is what she's willing to lose along the way, giving the book the feel of a thriller, but not in the classic sense. It keeps readers on their toes the entire way.
Since the main character is Asian I was disturbed because of all the recent discrimination against Asians; reading a book about an evil Asian woman was disconcerting at this time. Her problems do stem from her feeling of not being "trendy, preppy and American" however.
There are lots of twists and turns in the book. It was certainly a page-turner and good psychological study of a young woman trying to attain happines.
Tuesday, March 2, 2021
The End of October by Lawrence Wright
I first heard about this book at the beginning of the pandemic; the author was interviewed by Pamela Paul on the NYTimes Book Review podcast. I thought to myself, "I am not ready for that book yet." So I didn't even attempt to take it out.
As time went on and we became used to the current state of affairs, I kept recalling that interview...how uncanny it was that the author (so well-respected for his NON fiction and a Pulitzer Prize winner) wrote this book BEFORE this current pandemic.
Then, when talking about the book with my daughter, she told me how the book was written by the father of a friend of hers from Brown, who I had met years ago. The sheer coincidence prompted me to check out the book.
And I am not sorry! It was a gripping page-turner, but so informative and revealing about viruses, and I just could not stop reading. Thank God, it goes way further than our pandemic has gone, so it was not quite to close to home. But you realize, that what happens in the book COULD happen to us.
Here is a quote from the NYTimes Book Review:
"...much of the book not only reads like nonfiction, it is nonfiction: Wright weaves into the book accounts of historical epidemics, descriptions of Russian cyber- and biowarfare capabilities, the story of the 1803 attempt to save the New World from smallpox, and other curious nonfiction set pieces. In writing the novel, he interviewed scientists, epidemiologists, government officials and military officers. His understanding of world affairs, Middle East gossip, politics and governmental ineptitude is exceptional."
Highly recommend this book!
Friday, February 19, 2021
Monogomy by Sue Miller
I have not read anything by Sue Miller in a while, but I do recall loving her books, especially "The Good Mother." In the latest book she deals with marriage and loss and infidelity:
Graham and Annie have been happily married for nearly three decades when Graham’s sudden death leaves Annie reeling — not only from the loss of her husband but also from the secrets his passing reveals. Those truths challenge everything Annie thought she knew about Graham and force her to reconcile the vision of who she thought her husband was with who he turned out to be. Sue Miller weaves an engaging story of marriage that Publishers Weekly describes as being “grounded by vibrant prose, vividly portrayed secondary characters, and the resiliency of everlasting love.”
A good read!
Friday, February 5, 2021
The Forger's Daughter by Bradford Morrow
Read this for the Book Club. It was OK but not great. And we all seemed to agree. Part of the book was interesting - learning about forgery and old books, etc. "It is a loveletter to the art of forgery." Listened to an interview with the author and referred to it this way. This was a sequel to another book and without having read that one, pieces of the story were missing.
I won't be recommending this - except maybe to people who are interested in the art of forgery.