Showing posts with label islands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label islands. Show all posts

Saturday, January 3, 2015

An Island Christmas

An Island ChristmasAn Island Christmas by Nancy Thayer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Jilly can't wait for her daughter, Felicia, to be back for her Nantucket wedding. Nevermind that Jilly doesn't care for Felicia's betrothed, Archie, or the house must be merrily and perfectly decorated for the reception or the cat that she and her husband just adopted will climb the tree. Lots of humor pours forth as Jilly has to lay down her ideas of the dream wedding that she had in mind.

Wonderful reminders to lay down our own "perceptions of a perfect Christmas"...

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Friday, August 22, 2014

The Time Between

The Time BetweenThe Time Between by Karen White
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Eleanor's favorite times and worst times were on Edisto Island, where she grew up with the sweetgrass and salt marshes and memories of her loving, piano playing father. Eleanor's guilt holds her prisoner - guilt over her sister Eve's accident on Edisto...guilt over how she feels about her brother-in-law, Glenn. When Eleanor's boss offers her a job taking care of his Aunt Helena on that same island, she jumps at the chance to go back and relive her memories, not realizing that Helena carried her own guilt-ridden secrets.

I had forgotten how much I enjoy Karen White's writing. A favorite line from her book that Aunt Helena, who had suffered and lost so much says, "That adversity in life does not rob your heart of beauty. It simply teaches it a new song to sing."

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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Harbor of the Heart

Harbor of the HeartHarbor of the Heart by Katherine Spencer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

5th in the Angel Island series, Harbor of the Heart continues the storyline between inn owner Liza Martin and carpenter/EMT Daniel Merritt. With summer approaching Daniel is considering taking his board exams over to return to the medical field but it means a season away from Liza and the inn. Plus, it means facing and overcoming his old fears. Meanwhile as he and Liza consider the cost to their relationship, a small white sailboat flounders off the shore near the inn and the sailor is thrown into the churning water, nearly drowning - if not for Daniel's quick reactions, with Liza and Claire's help. Who is this sailor that reportedly has no family except for a huge friend named Edison?

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Tuesday, November 5, 2013

The Cottage at Glass Beach

The Cottage At Glass BeachThe Cottage At Glass Beach by Heather Barbieri
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Nora Cunningham is taking refuge on Burke's Island, a small remote strip of land off the Maine coast and settled by the Irish centuries before. Her famous husband and his affair have been splashed over tabloids so Nora and her two girls, Annie, 7 and Ella, 12 going on 21 are hiding out. Nora's earliest memories are of Burke's, being able to swim like a fish, and her beautiful mother that disappeared when she was only small. Nora's elderly Aunt Maire lives in the old homeplace nearby and who summoned her with a letter still believes in the magical legends of the island including selkies - a mythical creature. As the island begins to heal Nora, she is drawn towards a quiet fisherman who guards his own secrets but Ella blames her parent's breakup only on her mother, causing her to say and do things that put her and her sister into danger.

Beautifully written and full of mystery, The Cottage at Glass Beach, makes a good anytime read.

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Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Sweet Salt Air

Sweet Salt AirSweet Salt Air by Barbara Delinsky
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Charlotte Evans is a freelancing travel writer - she loves her travels around the world and is more than good at her job. Nicole Carlysle, a photoblogger with a huge following, lives on the island of Quinnipeague and blogs about food - delicious, fresh food and herbs. At one time, the two women were almost like sisters on the island, spending all their time together until one huge mistake. Although Nicole has never been aware of the aberration, Charlotte has carried the guilt for ten years - never going back to Quinnipeague until Nicole suggests a collaboration to work on a book of delicious, organic island cooking. What Charlotte doesn't know, is that Nicole carries her own heavy, heartbreaking secret. Can this summer be a time of honesty and truth for the once best friends?

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Wednesday, November 7, 2012

The Light Between OceansThe Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I’ve always been drawn to stories of lighthouses and this one did not disappoint me! Another story of love, loyalty, and loss – this time set on a small island, Janus Rock, nearly a hundred miles off the coast of Australia. The only inhabitant, Tom Sherbourne, fresh from the horrific memories of war on the Western Front, has returned as lightkeeper with his new bride Isabel. Isabel loves the lonely island as much as Tom and revels its beauty, but after two miscarriages and a stillborn birth, the grieving Izzy is not the same woman who arrived. When a boat washes up on the beach with a man who no longer breathes and a crying baby, Izzy comes alive, claims the child as her own and calls her Lucy. Tom is beside him with what to do, even as he falls in love with the tiny Lucy, as he records a daily journal of all events on the island. With each passing day his dread escalates - especially since shore leave, which comes only every three years, will soon be upon them. Unknown to them, back on the coast, a woman named Hannah has never given up hope that her baby is still alive.

The Light Between Oceans is M.L. Stedman’s very first novel and is a winner. Descriptions of the lovely, lonely island are inspiring and I googled Janus Rock to see if it was for real! (alas it is not, but I can pretend) The character of Tom, loyal to his wife, but torn between right and wrong, honesty and love will make you understand his pain and dilemma. Although I was upset with Izzy’s crossover into belief that Lucy was really hers without much of a qualm, I’ve never dealt with her excruciating losses. A very deep book that will leave you with conflicting thoughts for days after.


From an exclusive interview with M.L.Stedman:
Is Janus Rock real? If not, what inspired this place and does the name "Janus" have any significance?
Janus Rock is a figment of my imagination (I hate to disappoint any would-be visitors…). It just appeared as part of the story, and at some stage I realized it was located at the point where the Indian Ocean and the Great Southern Ocean meet.
The name is taken from Janus, the Roman god who has two faces looking out in opposite directions. The doors of his temple in the Roman Forum were open in times of war and closed in times of peace. He stands for beginnings and transitions, so his image is often found on doorways and thresholds. Janus's two faces are a literal reminder of one of the main themes of the book, namely that there is more than one way of looking at things.
In contrast to Tom and Isabel when they make their fateful decision on the eponymous island, Janus can see the past and the future. In some ways, too, the figure is symbolic of Lucy, who effectively has two lives in two worlds. It also ties in with the motif of division that runs through the book, particularly when Tom and Isabel can no longer see eye to eye.



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Monday, October 1, 2012

Tidewater Inn

Tidewater Inn (Hope Beach, #1)Tidewater Inn by Colleen Coble
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Libby Holladay loves to save old buildings and renovate them; her partner Nicole convinces the property owners to entrust them to Libby's care. While talking with Nicole by way of a live cam and a laptop, Libby actually views Nicole's kidnapping by two men at Hope Beach, where her friend has been exploring an old life-saving station for possible renovation. After calling 911 Libby races to Hope Island to help find her friend but is actually viewed with much suspicion by the local police. Now, this read is already turning into a mystery, but Libby finds out (on page 3) that her late father who died when she was five, was very much alive until just a month ago. To top that off, Libby discovers that she now has two half siblings and an aunt living on that same Hope Island. Mystery after mystery is solved as Libby is determined to find Nicole.



Inspirational, mystery, and throw in a light romance, Tidewater Inn is very good read.



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Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Call It Courage

Call It CourageCall It Courage by Armstrong Sperry
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I haven't read Call It Courage, a juvenile Newbery Medal winner, in many a moon. A friend had returned it to the library and she left a note about how much she had enjoyed reading it as a child. So to refresh my memory - I reread it myself. This particular copy included the preserved original, beautiful blue and white illustrations.

Mafatu, 15 year old son of a Polynesian island chief, has had great loss in his life. His mother died when he was only three. Both had been at sea in their small canoe when a great storm flung them into the shark infested water. Barely alive, both had been washed to a nearby island. Only Mafatu survived - but was left with nightmares and a fear of the water so great that it impairs his daily life. At last, tired of the talk and judgment in the eyes of his people, Mafatu decides to strike out and confront his fear of the ocean - with only his friends, Uri, his pup,in the canoe and Kivi, his pet albatross, in the air. In the coming days, Mafatu's courage is tested over and over again and although he feels very small and alone in the world, he rises to meet the many challenges. With each hurdle crossed, Mafatu becomes more self assured and confident.

Anyone that is bullied or has a fear confronting an issue, juvenile or adult alike, would be advised to read this simple but rich story of historical fiction published originally in 1940. And in its simplicity, lies part of the charm...

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