Tuesday, December 18, 2012

The Perfect Hope (Inn Boonsboro, #3)The Perfect Hope by Nora Roberts
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The third and final conclusion to Inn Boonsboro ties things up rather nicely. Sexy, swaggering, tool belt toting, and oldest brother Ryder Montgomery is at odds with the lovely city girl and innkeeper Hope. Admittedly Hope runs his mother's inn like clockwork, smoothly and perfectly. When the inn's resident ghost and matchmaker, Lizzy, locks them in the penthouse together, the only thing to do pucker up and make Lizzy happy. Hope's best friends, Avery and Clare, are delighted to see the romance progress and want Hope to be included in the Montgomery family.

MacTavish's Restaurant and Tap House gets finished and another building begins demolition and rehab. The dialog is hilarious as usual, the way the Montgomery men interact with their children, as in Men night, is a hoot and learning what led to Lizzy's fiancee's death during the Civil War is heartbreaking. Great series to finish!

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

A Winter Dream

A Winter DreamA Winter Dream by Richard Paul Evans
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Richard Paul Evans is known for his inspiring messages set in a compact little format. His new novel parallels the well known bible story of Joseph's coat of many colors. The same Joseph that saves his brothers from certain death.

Talented, young Jacob Jacobson has 11 brothers and one sister - all who work for a very successful Denver marketing firm run by their father, Israel or Izzy to his friends. Jealous of their father's attention to Jacob, his brothers plot the day when Jacob can be ruined. When youngest brother Ben "borrows" money from the business, the plot is hatched and Jacob, in order to save Ben and the company's name, is forced to leave his job and hometown. Even his fiancee jilts him. As his world falls around his feet, Jacob tries to pick up the pieces in a new town and new agency, only to find himself on the disadvantage again...

A lovely modern twist....

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The Christmas Garland: A Novel

A Christmas Garland: A NovelA Christmas Garland: A Novel by Anne Perry
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Another little Christmas gem by Anne Perry spun around the events set in the 1850s following the horrendous massacre of many during the siege of Cawnpore in India. The British military is depending on one young man to unravel a mystery, a thankless job, that can only point the way of restoring loyalty and the code of honor during the Christmastide. Lt. Victor Narraway is chosen to defend a medical orderly named John Tallis because Tallis is the only man unaccounted for his whereabouts during a bloody prisoner escape. With no way to prove his innocence Tallis is likely to hang - against all odds can Lt. Narraway somehow find a clue?

Perry is a writer of detail and horror - this book lacks neither. You'll feel Narraway's despair over his hopeless task as he learns the details of the escape and the earlier massacre of men, women, and children and you'll cheer him on as he decides not to give up on the condemned Tallis. Christmas is time of hope.

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Thursday, December 6, 2012

Those We Love Most

Those We Love MostThose We Love Most by Lee Woodruff
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three normal but flawed generations of family, who are already close to splintering, are broken when one of the youngest is involved in a fatal accident. Can love and loyalty overcome even the deepest hurt?

Two favorite quotes:

"People always came out of the woodwork at a time like this, for good and bad. There was some need in human nature to insert yourself immediately, to take action, even if you knew the person only tangentially. The proximity to tragedy and sorrow caused an immediate evaluation of your own relative good fortune. The people who really understood, though, would hang back until the right moment, knowing that the real work began when all of the cars had left the driveway."

"Trust took such a long time to earn. And yet it could all come unmoored in an instant. She was smart enough to know at least that. People kept secrets. People built walls. It didn't mean they couldn't and didn't love with all their hearts. And so this was what she would have to make peace with: this was what she would have to hold close. Like the cross section of a tree, the bad period would be marked in interior rings, the years of drought, the blunt force trauma to the heart, all of it only visible after death. Maybe silence was a price we sometimes paid for loving so completely, the price we sometimes paid to protect those we loved most."

Lee Woodruff's main characters are well fleshed out and you will feel their families' gamut of emotions as heartbreaking events unfold.


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Saturday, December 1, 2012

Dawn Comes Early

Dawn Comes EarlyDawn Comes Early by Margaret Brownley
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Certainly if you can write a potboiler about ranching there should be no problem living the real deal - right? College-educated Bostonian Kate Tenney is about to find out that ranching in Arizona territory is not all romance and roses. Determined to be the heiress that toughened Eleanor Walker needs to inherit her ranch, Kate will outlast the other applicants - even if means signing the dotted line to never marry. No big deal, her past life experiences have taught her never to trust men - any men. Unfortunately for her and Mrs. Walker, blacksmith Luke Adams and local hombre, Cactus Joe might have a say in the matter.

I love Brownley's characters, especially faith filled ranch hand Ruckus and Luke's aunts - Bessie and Lula-Belle. These two ladies are a hoot and when Bessie decides it's time to make her husband's toes curl with passion - don't be surprised to find yourself laughing out loud!

Next book in the series The Brides of Last Chance Ranch: Waiting for Morning

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The Age of Miracles

The Age of MiraclesThe Age of Miracles by Karen Thompson Walker
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was middle school, the age of miracles, the time when kids shot up three inches over the summer, when breasts bloomed from nothing, when voices dipped and dove. Julia is eleven, going on twelve and like every California girl in middle school, worries about puberty, boys, homework - but never about if the earth's rotation would slow to a crawl. Soon nights are longer, days shorter, the landscape - scorched, birds fall from the sky and humans begin to feel the loss of equilibrium. Julia's mother becomes a hoarder of emergency supplies and food and her father stays away from home for long periods of time. In the middle of all this fear and upheaval, Julia falls in love.

I agree with a few other reviews that suggest this book would be better billed for a young adult audience - even the cover, to me, screams YA. At some parts the writer gives it a dreamy quality, glossing over the scientific reasons of the slowing and focusing on family and peer relationships. Regardless, it was an interesting book, dystopian in nature - even at the end you're not sure if earth will continue with some kind of life.

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

So Far Away

So Far Away: A NovelSo Far Away: A Novel by Meg Mitchell Moore
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Natalie Gallagher, 13 and neglected - due to her parent's divorce, a father who is caught up in his new girlfriend and a mother who has slid into deep depression - is a girl on the brink. Her once best friend is now a cyberbully partner with popular Taylor Grant and the two send text messages that are cutting, cruel, and demeaning. When Natalie finds an old diary in the basement, while looking for family birth records, she heads to the city library archive where she meets 50 something Kathleen Lynch - who has lost her own teenage daughter to drugs. Kathleen, with the help of her coworker, Neil, is determined to decipher the diary's illegible writing and save Natalie.

Very current, very deep, and very moving - once again I found a book that couldn't be put down.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Taming the Wind

Taming the Wind (Land of the Lone Star, #3)Taming the Wind by Tracie Peterson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Carissa Lowe loves her young daughter, Gloria and has made a new life after the death of her abusive husband – but it includes never trusting another man and never marrying just to have a father for Gloria. Living in Texas with her sister Laura’s family, while her parents are away, proves to be one harrowing adventure after another. When the man who saved her life comes calling at the door, Carissa stands her ground that she’ll never need another, but Gloria has no doubts that Tyler could be her new papa.

Set in Texas when anger still burns hot from the Civil War and dangerous cattle drives and Indian raids are the norm, Taming the Wind, finishes the adventures of the Land of the Lone Star.


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Thursday, November 15, 2012

An Outlaw's Christmas

An Outlaw's Christmas (McKettricks, #16)An Outlaw's Christmas by Linda Lael Miller
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A light little historical romance from Linda Lael Miller on yet another grandson of matriarch Angus McKettrick. This time Sawyer McKettrick is riding into town from the station to take over the position of town Marshall and contemplating the snow squalling around him when a gunshot enters his shoulder. Unconscious but resolutely hanging onto the saddle Sawyer soon drops from his horse into the snow that surrounds a tiny schoolhouse. Inside Piper St. James, the schoolmarm is ready to brave the storm outside to fill her meager supply of water when she trips over his body. Somehow dragging him into the warm building, Piper is now left to clean and bandage the stranger's wounds alone until the storm abets. Tongues will wag when the town harpies hear that Blue River's unmarried teacher has a man in the schoolhouse.

I usually don't read Miller's romances but I do enjoy her Christmas series - great reads for those who love her McKettrick series.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The Bridge: A NovelThe Bridge: A Novel by Karen Kingsbury
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Charlie and Donna Barton have given their all to those who enter their quaint little bookstore in Franklin, Tennessee. It has been a meeting place for students, young lovers, and getaways for older married couples. When the 100 year flood rolls through and ruins their inventory, there is no money to restock the shelves and Charlie, especially, feels as though life is over. As he mulls over his future, Charlie realizes that he's worth more dead then alive and actually puts thought into planning an "accident." As his car begins to slip on the icy road home, Charlie is distraught over what Donna will go through after his death - but the car has already lost traction...

Karen Kingsbury writes another little inspirational book for Christmas, reminding me of the first wonderful little books I read of hers - the Red Glove series.

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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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The Reason

The ReasonThe Reason by William Sirls
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

During a horrible storm, lightning strikes the huge wooden cross outside of St. Thomas' Church - Pastor Jim Lindy and his almost nonexistent congregation do not have the funds to replace it. When little five year old Alex Thomas and his mother Brooke, who live with Pastor Lindy, his wife Shirley and grown son Charlie, mention it at the hospital where he's having tests done, Dr. Macey Lewis rounds up a few people to lend a hand. They include her co-worker Dr. Zach Norman, NP Kaitlyn Harby , and carpenter and volunteer Kenneth, who keeps oddly repeating, "only believe." Dr. Lewis makes quick friends with Alex and his family and although dismayed when the test conclude Alex has aggressive leukemia - she knows as a oncologist, she is the best at what she does - finding answers and helping children like Alex beat cancer. But, what do you do when leukemia will not respond to the strongest medication and treatments. Kenneth repeats, "only believe."

A compelling look at faith, doubts, and miracles...

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

Short-Straw Bride

Short-Straw BrideShort-Straw Bride by Karen Witemeyer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

If you want to read a light, wholesome, historical romance - then this is the perfect novel. Set in the 1880s, Texan Meredith Hayes is determined not to marry ambitious Roy Mitchell and when she overhears him plotting to burn the barn of her childhood hero Travis Archer - she lights out for the reclusive Archer farm to warn him and his three brothers. But as she gets caught up in the fight to save the barn, Meri is seriously hurt and ends up staying for days, compromising her reputation. Under threat from Meri's uncle, the Archer brothers draw straws to determine who will marry the feisty gal and to her delight Travis is left holding the short straw. The only woman now on the land, Meri sets out to teach the Archers a new kind of love and courage.

Also written by Karen Witemeyer:
A Tailor-Made Bride
Head in the Clouds
To Win Her Heart


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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Sea Change

Sea ChangeSea Change by Karen White
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ava never felt like she belonged to her family - youngest sister of four brothers, who could be identified as funeral directors, just like her father. She had always deeply yearned for a sister. When Ava suddenly announced she was marrying Matthew and leaving landlocked Antioch, GA for the seashores of St. Simons Island, her mother Gloria took to her bed. Oddly enough as she left, her grandma Mimi, who had lived with Mimi forever, reminded her that some endings are really beginnings. As they draw closer to the island what Matthew doesn't know is that Ava, a professional midwife, has a very deep rooted fear of the water. Matthew has a few secrets of his own - some that when come to light, threaten their new marriage. As Ava settles in her home, she has a feeling of really coming home - it seems the house holds many secrets of its own and it's up to Ava to unlock them.

This is one of the best books I have read in awhile - it contains beautiful descriptions of the lush island and of earlier times so that it feels as if you are in that time period. Told with the voices and thoughts of three women, history and modern times entangle themselves into a story that is just so hard to put down.

As a gardener myself I love these two phrases:
"Ava and I had always known that sticking our fingers in the dirt was a lot like holding the past and the present in your hands, understanding that decaying plants nourished the soil for new seedlings" and "being a mother is like being a gardener of souls."

...and one more:
"Because sometimes we have to be a hero and do the right thing, even if it's just for one person and even if nobody else notices."

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

The Christmas Pony

The Christmas PonyThe Christmas Pony by Melody Carlson
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A sweet little Christmas story to fall in love with - it's 1937 and 8 year old Lucy wants a pony for Christmas, but times are hard, and her mama - a young widow - has to take in boarders to barely make ends meet. Grandma helps with the cooking and Lucy does a lot of chores on the neglected farm. When she walks into town to do the weekly shopping, Lucy comes across two stranded motorists. Asking them to stay at her farmhouse and fill the rooms while their car is repaired, Lucy falls in love with the exotic woman and George, her handsome companion. With one prayer answered for paying boarders, Lucy gives up her wish for a pony and prays instead for her Mama's smile to come back.

I love Melody's little Christmas books - this gem is told from Lucy's perspective and is so heartwarming and hopeful. Read with a snuggly blanket and a hot cup of tea!

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

One Mountain Away

One Mountain AwayOne Mountain Away by Emilie Richards
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A story of pain and forgiveness, attrition and healing..Charlotte Hale is fighting cancer but fighting it alone. Charlotte is estranged from her ex-husband and daughter, definitely not a favorite at her church or the business she built from the ground up. Friends - none. Charlotte swore when she left the mountain the day after graduation that she would never be poor or looked down upon ever again - to be in total control has made her enemies and lost her family. But when she receives the diagnosis of cancer and sees a "nurse" in the hospital that others have never seen, Charlotte begins to make amends for poor treatment of others. But forgiveness from her ex and daughter, who now has a small daughter of her own, seems to be out of reach.

Quote: "The way we nurture and protect our memories of people who lived before us. The good they did? Like those seeds of your grandmother's, it doesn't die. It's passed from person to person. It lives on in other forms, in other places, but the essence of what it was at the beginning never changes."

Have a box of tissues nearby!

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An Irish Christmas

An Irish ChristmasAn Irish Christmas by Melody Carlson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Colleen and her grown-up son, Jamie, have kept secrets from each other, not little secrets - but blow it out of the water secrets, secrets that could tear apart their fragile relationship. While Jamie was in college, his Dad/Colleen's husband passed away from a heart condition. Now alone and adrift, Colleen sells the flourishing shoe business that Jamie does not want to run and is seriously considering downsizing her beautiful but much too large home. When Jamie comes home from college and with a sudden decision, but really a cover-up announces his plan to join the military - Colleen makes a sudden decision as well. A trip to Ireland at Christmas will be where she tells Jamie the secret only her and her late husband hid.

Rather predictable, sometimes downright unbelievable, but with beautiful descriptions of Ireland, the pubs, and a small Irish island named Inishbofin, Carlson writes a sweet little inspirational with a nice surprise ending.

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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, September 26, 2012

Blood Feud: The Hatfields and McCoys: The Epic Story of Murder and Vengeance

Blood Feud: The Hatfields and the McCoys: The Epic Story of Murder and VengeanceBlood Feud: The Hatfields and the McCoys: The Epic Story of Murder and Vengeance by Lisa Alther
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Lisa Alther tries to uncover some of the myth and legend surrounding the blood feud surrounding the West Virginian Hatfields and Kentucky McCoy rivalry with a touch of dry humor in her new book. In her quest to discover new information and dispel untruths, Alther discovered that her family, by marriage, tied into the infamous Fighting McCoys. Running on the heels so closely to the History Channel's miniseries, "The Hatfields and McCoys," Blood Feud is a good book to fill in all the spaces.

I was fortunate enough in 1978-80 to attend the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. One of my acquaintances and fellow art students was a young man who resembled Johnse Hatfield in the movie. Guess what his last name was?

Websites to visit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield...

http://www.wvculture.org/history/crim...

http://www.history.com/shows/hatfield...

www.trailsheaven.com/

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Sea Glass Summer

Sea Glass SummerSea Glass Summer by Dorothy Cannell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Leaving behind a crummy divorce, thanks to her ex and best friend's dalliance, Sarah Draycott is delighted to move to the pretty little town of Sea Glass, Maine. With the coast at her back door and her front door facing the town, Sarah is ready for a do over in a big way. Right away energetic, 90 year old Nellie Armitage, knocks at the front door and makes friends. Then, Sarah makes the acquaintance with 70 something Gwen and her son, Sonny plus little Oliver, an orphan with a huge vocabulary. Sarah finds herself fitting in rather comfortably with the residents of Sea Glass.

I've never read Dorothy Cannell until this book and and found to my surprise that I really enjoyed her writing. I must say she really get detailed and sometimes that can derail your reading but Cannell also has a sense of humor that makes it fun.

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Reunion

Reunion: A NovelReunion: A Novel by Lauraine Snelling
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Great contemporary, Christian fiction by Snelling - this read is based on two families, related by blood but also best friends. Keira Johnston has just been presented a trip to Norway by her husband. The only thing stopping her from getting her passport is finding her birth certificate. When it is finally found, she is shocked and unsettled to discover that her beloved father was not her birth father. Why didn't her mother tell her and how can Keira tell the big Sorensen clan at the upcoming reunion? At the same time, her niece Kirsten Sorensen is days away from her high school graduation when she's overcome by nausea and uncertainly takes a pregnancy test. The results may keep Kirsten from accepting a college scholarship in the Fall and break her family apart. The secrets kept by both women tug at the close kinship and need to brought into the open for healing.

Very contemporary and moving, Snelling's main characters are strong women who have human flaws. Please read the Afterword to see how the story personally relates to the author.

I'm also a big fan of Snelling's Red River of the North Series - again the characters face real life and death issues as they try to farm and settle the land in the Dakota Territory, amidst sickness, hardships, and blizzards.

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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

The Time Keeper

The TimekeeperThe Timekeeper by Mitch Albom
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Dor and Alli live near the beginning of "time", before time was even a word. Dor is a curious child who studies the movement of light and darkness, the sun and the moon and who actually creates the first calendar and becomes the "Father of Time." When Alli's becomes ill Dor tries save her life by climbing the highest tower to reach the gods and stop time. As the only human to reach the top of the tower, Dor finds himself in a cave, trapped for what seems like forever, listening to the cries and groans of the mankind below - crying and groaning for more time, less time, and the misery of counting the moments. After 6,000 years Dor is allowed to return to earth but only to teach two souls the real meaning of time.

Most of us are short on time, in a hurry, and want things done yesterday. A small, quick read by Mitch Albom - although it isn't my favorite book by him, it does remind us how to "enjoy our time" and live in the moment.

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Little Night

Little NightLittle Night by Luanne Rice
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

In New York City lived two perfect and exceptionally close daughters , Anne and Clare Burke. From their father's affairs they learned to keep secrets and from their mother - acceptance and resignation. To escape their parent's constant fighting, they roamed Central Park and discovered raptors in the night. Now grown up and grown apart from the horrible event, almost 20 years ago, that placed Clare in lock up for two long years, Clare is trying to slowly move on with her life. When Anne's daughter Grit shows up alone are her doorstep, memories are relived, hatred is brought alive, but healing and forgiveness that has been buried deep in the bog - begin at last....

"Their old house, the poem, birds, history, and their own imaginations delivered them from family unhappiness. Born city girls, they learned early to escape into nature. Central Park was a haven, thirty-seven blocks and a world away from home. Exploring the park and the dusty corners of their own house taught the girls to look for meaning, magic, and comfort in places they least expected it."


Another great contemporary read from Luanne Rice.

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Monday, September 10, 2012

The Cellist of Sarajevo

The Cellist of SarajevoThe Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This year's choice for One Maryland, One Book, 2012 is the exquisite and hauntingly written novel of a true character, a cellist who played for 22 days straight to memorialize his 22 neighbors killed by a mortar, set in the midst of the war besieged, once lovely city of Sarajevo. The author, Steven Galloway, chose three main characters to be part of the story - a young married man with a family set on getting the basic need of water across town, an older man, a baker, who is paralyzed by fear trying to cross bullet-ridden intersections to get to his job, and a female sniper - a young, talented woman, whose job is to take out soldiers and initially against her wishes, protect the cellist. Told by each viewpoint, the reader is drawn into Sarajevo's terror and dread.

The story of Sarajevo has always pulled at my heart strings, so beautiful a city revered by its inhabitants and used as an example of fine culture and religious diversity for so many years, but finally toppled to civil unrest and greed - a lesson for us all, but all too common. The courage/fear/humanity shown by the four main characters are not soon forgotten and as I've read the book over a week ago at the time of this review - I am still moved and disquieted by its words...

On an interesting note, did you know: Sarajevo was also the first city in Europe and the second city in the world to have a full-time operational electric tram network running through the city, the first being San Francisco.

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When We Were the Kennedys

When We Were the Kennedys: A Memoir from Mexico, MaineWhen We Were the Kennedys: A Memoir from Mexico, Maine by Monica Wood
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I can't describe what a wonderful feeling this book gave me - whether it's because I too live in a small town that is kept afloat by a nearby paper-mill (New Page to boot) or the sweet childhood camaraderie of the Wood sisters or that many of my childhood friends were Catholic and we grew up in the 60s... A sweet, exceptional memoir written by Monica Wood, "When We Were the Kennedys" is definitely a worthy read.

From the prologue, you will find the pivoting event that all chapters refer to: Monica's beloved father, only 57, who worked as a foreman at the huge paper-mill and biggest employer in town, the Oxford Paper Company, dies from a massive heart attack as he prepares to enter his car and go to his morning shift at the mill. At home still is Monica, nine, with two young sisters, an older sister who teaches in nearby school, and Mom, who had the three younger girls late in life, and is so distraught over her husband's sudden death that she takes to her bed. Fortunately, Monica has an uncle, Father Bob, who suffers his brother-in-laws death severely as well, but steps in until he too succumbs to despair. At the same time, on the national scene, the handsome, young Catholic leader, President Kennedy, is shot and killed and the Wood family is rallied by his brave widow Jackie O. and small children who are living through similar shock and pain. The book ends on a sweet note with an update of Monica's family and friends.

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Thursday, September 6, 2012

The Coal Gatherer

The Coal GathererThe Coal Gatherer by Janet Woods
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Callie Ingram, one of the many living children of Mary and Ebeneezer, has higher hopes than to marry young, bear babies, and gather coal from the sea. She has watched her mother, once from a family of respectable shopkeepers, carry and then mourn the death of her babies and suffer the blows of her father. Befriending the local gentry opens the doors to another life that Callie can only imagine. Can Callie escape this impoverished and brutal life before Ebeneezer marries her off to cruel Sam Brown?

Being from coal country, the title pulled me in. I had never heard of coal being carted off from the sea and had to do a little research. Sea-coal is coal that has been washed up on the beach, coming from coal seams in sea cliffs or underwater deposits. For centuries this coal was collected and used for cooking, heating and forging metals. It is probable that European cultures back to the Romans and before used sea-coal. In places where this coal occurred it could be a dependable source of fuel and there were professional sea-coal gatherers and small local industries existed to gather and sell the coal. This continued in many areas, particularly in northern Britain and parts of Scotland as other sources of fuel were expensive and more difficult to obtain.

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South of Superior

South of SuperiorSouth of Superior by Ellen Airgood
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Meet the people of McAllaster, a tiny rough and tumble town on the edge of Lake Superior, where times are hard and people are tough, but generations have looked out for each other. There's Mary Feather, a Scotswoman and her terrier, Jack, who lives in a couple of tool cribs bolted together and who makes maple syrup like no other. Then there is Albert the fruit and vegetable man and his helper, Gus, who set their stand up anywhere and are run off by the politically and socially correct in town.

Citified Madeline Stone from Chicago arrives in McAllaster to live with stalwart Gladys Hansen and help care for her sister, sweet Arbutus. Gladys and Arbutus are as unlike as night and day. Madeline doesn't know it yet, but Gladys has a few secrets about Madeline's estranged grandfather that had abandoned her when she was a young orphan. Feeling ever the outsider, Madeline begins to fall for the town and its unusual characters.

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Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Whispers in the WindWhispers in the Wind by Lauraine Snelling
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Book 2 of the Wild West Wind series by Snelling continues the story of Cassie Lockwood and her rag/tag family from the Wild West show searching for her father's ranch in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The second book picks up where Cassie had just found her ranch already owned and occupied by the Engstrom family, close friends and partners of her deceased father. Trying to find a way to fit in, as she really does own the deed to a share of the Bar E Ranch, Cassie is warmly welcomed by Mavis Engstrom, her daughter Gretchen and younger son Lucas, but not so much by Ransom, the eldest son. Cassie's Wild West family, no shirkers of hard work, jump in to help where they can on the ranch before the worst of winter arrives. However, Cassie feels responsible for them, and worries incessantly over the money it will take to feed and clothe them and feed their troupe of animals as well. Can Cassie trust in the Lord to answer her many needs?

A sweet book about faith and trust and fitting in. I'm looking forward to number three in the Wild West Wind series.

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Tuesday, September 4, 2012

The Dawn of a Dream

The Dawn of a Dream (At Home in Beldon Grove, #3)The Dawn of a Dream by Ann Shorey
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Luellen O'Connell, against the wishes of her parents, eloped with a man who drove freight for the railroad. When she finds that he has another wife in Chicago, Luellen is forced to move back home with her parents and soon to be married sister. Applying for a scandalous divorce, but determined to attend Allenwood Normal School for teaching several hours away by train, Luellen buckles down to classes and seems to making headway until she discovers she is with child. How will Luellen finish her schooling, work on the side to earn money to even attend college, and attend to a baby?

An honorable story of determination and strength. It is always such an eye-opener to discover how women were treated in days gone by. Female teachers were not allowed to be married. Divorce was a scandal, almost unheard of, even attending a teaching school and being pregnant was grounds for dismissal and shame. This book is the third in the series: At Home in Beldon Grove.

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Over the Edge

Over the EdgeOver the Edge by Mary Connealy
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another comical, historical romance about the Kinkade brothers - The Kinkade Brides #3, Over the Edge is just a hoot as was the first and second. This time the main character is youngest bro #3 Seth, the on-the-edge, blue-eyed civil war veteran, who has horrendous nightmares of the war and the accident in the caves. Because of this Seth has lost big chunks of time, including the fact that at some point he had gotten married. The book opens with Seth's Texan wife riding into town in the stagecoach, with their child, trying to hold off several robbers with her Colt in her left hand and a Winchester in her right. Tough as Texas, Callie has come to claim help from Seth and his brothers. Little does she know what she is letting herself in for with joining the Kinkade clan.

As I've said before, Mary Connealy makes me giggle with her ornery characters, their thoughts, and sayings. I hate to set this series down - I might have to reread them.

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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Good Dream

The Good DreamThe Good Dream by Donna VanLiere
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

What happens when you're just an independent, 30something, according-to-the-town spinster, who goes against the naysayers to save a poor, abused little boy from the hills? Lonely since the death of her beloved mother, Ivorie Walker is just putting one foot in front of the other. Doing her daily chores, milking the cow, weeding the garden, canning the vegetables, Ivorie's life is just an empty routine rut. Other than her dog Sally, her brother Henry, and his wife Loretta, there's no family nearby. When a dirty faced young feller gets caught stealing tomatoes in her garden, Ivorie's life begins to change in unusual, courageous ways.

I have loved reading all of VanLiere's Christmas books and was excited to see she had written a full length novel. This book is so uplifting and moving - you'll fall in love with the main characters.

One of favorite quotes from Ivorie: There comes a time when you don't know what you're capable of anymore. Looking back, say five or even two years ago, you can remember what you were capable of then - how you thought, what you did, who you loved, who people said you were. Then something happens and takes that away; the basket of good intentions you've been toting around, the trunk of dreams you've been pulling behind you - all of it is gone in an instant, and it's just you, naked, bare, exposed.


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Thursday, August 23, 2012

A Place in the Country

A Place in the CountryA Place in the Country by Elizabeth Adler
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Caroline Evans, along with her very unhappy fifteen year old daughter, Issy, have high-tailed it out of a very comfortable life in Singapore. Her once happy marriage had turned into shambles when she found her husband, James, cheating with another woman. Without a pre-nup and any money except for the little bit that James inconsistently sends for Issy, things are going downhill fast. Tired of their tiny rented London flat, Caroline and Issy head for the Cotswolds for the weekend, and stumble upon an old country barn along a lazy river for sale.

Rather predictable, cheating husband, grouchy teen, and men who swoop in to help, especially financially, A Place in the Country is still a fun read. Throw in a murder and you have the mystery....

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Summer Breeze

Summer BreezeSummer Breeze by Nancy Thayer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Three women, with common quandaries, move to beautiful Dragonfly Lake, surrounded by woodland in the Berkshires. For Bella, it's just a move back home - it's where she grew up surrounded by family. Her Mom unfortunately fell from a ladder, breaking her leg, so Bella gave up her teaching job in Texas and hurried home to run her Mom's shop. Natalie is house-sitting for her aunt and hoping the quiet summer will help her return to the passion of painting. Morgan, a hazardous materials expert, and married to a brilliant young man climbing the ladder at Bio-Green Industries , at first is happy to stay home and care for their young son, Petey, only a year old. As the families get to know each other and connect on deeper levels, the summer moves on, old romances grow deeper and new love begins around the lovely old lake.

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Monday, August 13, 2012

Summerland

Summerland: A NovelSummerland: A Novel by Elin Hilderbrand
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Nantucket, the lovely little island where people flock to for carefree vacations, is also the home to many year-round islanders - retirees, working class stiffs, and kids who attend the Nantucket school system. The 17 year old twins, Penny and Hobby Alistair, are juniors at Nantucket High, soon to be seniors when Fall rolls around. But Penny, the lovely girl with a gifted voice will never see her senior graduation and Hobby, the talented athlete, will never play football again after the horrible car accident following the senior party on graduation night. The island mourns the horrible loss of one of their own and looks for clues and causes.

One of our greatest fears is to lose a child in a car accident. Prom night and graduation parties roll around every year, and which one of us as parents doesn't worry until we know our teens are safe at home? The novel also looks into the secrets teens hide that we do not see or sometimes, don't want to see.

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Saturday, August 11, 2012

A Summer in Europe

A Summer In EuropeA Summer In Europe by Marilyn Brant
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Gwendolyn's aunt Beatrice, at 67, had more fun with her S& M Club (sudoku and mah-jongg)in one day than Gwen did in a year, and she was only 30. Gwen loves stability, reliability, and structure - in other words boring according to Aunt Beatrice. When Gwen's boyfriend of two years gifts her with earrings instead of the engagement ring she so desires, Auntie offers her a frolicking five week trip through Europe with her S&M friends and the fun begins. Although it takes awhile Gwen finally succumbs to the allure of the beauty around her - Rome, Capri, Budapest, and Marseilles and two handsome brothers named Emerson and Thoreau.

As I have never been to Europe, it really was enjoyable to immerse myself into the descriptions of the lovely sights, sounds, and taste of the cities and countryside visited by Gwen and her friends. Ok, I'm up to a trip, who's with me?

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Thursday, August 9, 2012

This Bright River

This Bright River: A NovelThis Bright River: A Novel by Patrick Somerville
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Ben Hanson has made a few mistakes - well maybe more than a few - so he hesitantly takes the offer to head home to St. Helens, Wisconsin (where everyone has come up with their own story of why Ben went to jail)and clean up his favorite uncle Denny and cousin, Wayne's house, recently vandalized, to put on the market. Lauren Shehan, an classmate of Ben's, has headed home to St. Helens as well - hiding from the many tragic events in her past. When the two finally meet up again, Ben is trying to solve the mystery surrounding his cousin, Wayne's death - they are slowly, awkwardly, drawn to each other in their loneliness and need for love and understanding.

Right of the start the prologue pulled me in - there are places where the author rambles and weaves a bit before getting back on track and a few bogs, but overall you'll find yourself rooting for the two protagonists, hoping they work through their own private misery and move toward each other. A deep, moving story with many layers..

Favorite quote: "I hadn't seen her in almost five years. Such an extremely sad number, thinking it, and there was a time when such gaps within the family would have been impossible. Yet it happened, and I imagine it happens to a lot of families. You look up and half a decade is gone. The people you loved - not just that, but the people who were the first objects of your love, the people through whom you learned love - are no longer a part of your life."

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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Porch Lights

Ms. Frank never fails to amuse and entertain me. Her characters always touch my funny bone and in this novel Annie Britt, matriarch and owner of her home, The Salty Dog down on Sullivans Island, makes me giggle out loud with her thoughts and words. Things like: “I had two hormones left. Benedict and Arnold” and “I still believed I could handle Dr. Love. That’s why the Lord invented dimmer switches. There comes a time when we’re all better off in the dark.” Annie’s daughter Jackie and her sweet ten year old son, Charlie, have come to spend the summer with her. Jackie’s husband, a New York City fireman, recently lost his life doing the job he loved and both Jackie and Charlie were still distraught – so back to the island they came. Can the lovely Low Country and Annie’s love heal their hearts? This novel is a great summertime read or anytime read… Another line by Annie and wholeheartedly agreed with is: “…because a book lets your imagination soar and a movie makes all the decisions for you.”

Monday, July 23, 2012

Objects of My Affection: A Novel

Objects of My Affection: A NovelObjects of My Affection: A Novel by Jill Smolinski

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


A humorous look at a down-on-her-luck organizer, Lucy Bloom, who takes on the daunting challenge of defusing the "professional hoarder" and eccentric artist Marva Meier Rios' Craftman's style home of excess clutter - some useless and some worth a great deal of cash. Lucy, who just wrote a book, that bombed in sales, on organizing your home not only has to be more than good at her job but also be discreet. Heaven forbid if a newspaper reporter would get a juicy story out of Marva's mess! Lucy's carrot at the end of the stick is an added bonus, that hopefully, will pay for Ash's, her drug addicted son, expensive stay at a rehab clinic. But extracting Marva's precious articles from her clenched fingers is not only time-consuming but exhausting and the due date is unfortunately approaching soon.

With "hoarding" now being a household name and object of many a TV show, this is a timely funny, fictional story and repeats what we now know - we emotionally hang onto our "things" to replace relationships and brings us memories of good times & good places.



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Friday, July 20, 2012

The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels

The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor WheelsThe Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels by Ree Drummond
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The Pioneer Woman – Black Heels to Tractor Wheels
The Pioneer Woman Cooks
The Pioneer Woman Cooks – Food from my Frontier

All by Ree Drummond

Two delicious cookbooks and a delicious, story about how Ree met her cowboy and married him – the Marlborough Man. All three books will make you giggle out loud as she describes her life before Marlborough Man, during the courtship and marriage, and through the birth of her first child. Ree, brought up in a upper-class neighborhood beside a golf course, also tells of hilarious differences in their lives. Recipes like: homemade Pico De Gallo, Maple Pecan Scones, Spicy Pulled Pork, Olive Cheese Bread, and Chicken Pot Pie will make your mouth water. One favorite: Knock You Naked Brownies, (yes, naked, page 260 of Food from my Frontier) Ree says for the record that she has no clue as to the origin of the recipe name – but that’s probably just as well!

Warning - Be prepared to copy oodles of recipes and giggle like a schoolgirl.


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The Clothes on Their Backs

The Clothes On Their BacksThe Clothes On Their Backs by Linda Grant
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An unusual story of love and loss in many ways, The Clothes On Their Backs is a novel of great depth - Vivien Kovacs is the only child of Hungarian refugees. Timid and mousey, her parents had fortunately escaped their home country only months before the war. They only want to assimilate themselves into the quiet London neighborhood where lonely Vivien grows up - the only child on the block. When a neighboring spinster passes away, Vivien and her mother scoop up the clothing that has been left behind and Vivien begins to identify herself through the material worn on her skin. To her surprise, she also finds a scandalous uncle that her parents never told her about - but then, they never told her anything about their younger days in Hungary or even of other family members. Questioning the boring, quiet lifestyle of her parents, Vivien searches for this outlaw of an uncle that has been labeled a monster of a slumlord - a criminal that has spent many years behind bars, and begins to write his life story - and Vivien finds truth - the reasons for her parents mousiness and her uncle's greediness.

Vivien says, "The clothes you wear are a metamorphosis. They change you from the outside in. We are trapped with these thick calves or pendulous breasts, our sunken chests, our dropping jowls. A million imperfections mar us. There are deep flaws we are not at liberty to do anything about except under the surgeon's knife. So the most you can do is put on a new dress, a different tie. We are forever turning into someone else, and should never forget that someone else is always looking."

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Thursday, July 19, 2012

Left Neglected

Left NeglectedLeft Neglected by Lisa Genova
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Three beautiful children involved in everything, one handsome, career minded husband, a busy, satisfying career for herself, a home in a prestigious neighborhood of Boston and a vacation home in Vermont’s ski country – Sarah Nickerson’s life is on full throttle. Sarah prides herself on her ability to multi-task to the nth degree, but everything comes to a full stop when she finds herself spinning out of control on wet pavement headed into work. When Sarah wakes up in the hospital, she doesn’t realize that she can’t see anything on her left – a real, neurological syndrome that occurs due to damage to the right hemisphere of the brain called Left Neglect. Sarah, revved to go back to work, doesn’t realize the long term therapy that may never get her back to the pre-accident Sarah. Slowly, she comes to understand that it may not be such a bad thing….

A book full of determination and tears, laughter and despair, definitely a fantastic read that I really enjoyed and couldn’t put down…


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Another Piece of My HeartAnother Piece of My Heart by Jane Green
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Andi always wanted to be a mom – even when she was little, she wanted to fill her home with children. By the time Andi was in her late 30s and finally met the right man, Ethan, she was thrilled he had two beautiful daughters, Emily and Sophia – products of an alcoholic mother, but she still desperately wants one of her own. At the same time, Emily, the older of the two sisters, wanted nothing to do with Andi and went out of her way to make her life miserable. Only once in a while could Andi see through the crack in the veneer Emily kept snug around her. When Emily finally gets caught with alcohol and a secret that will affect them all - things in Andi and Ethan’s home come to a head.

A family knows best how to bring us to our knees in tears. Told through the eyes of each of the main characters, Another Piece of My Heart, will make you laugh, cry and despair over such a thing called a “normal family.”


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Thursday, July 12, 2012

Someone like....Adele

Someone Like AdeleSomeone Like Adele by Caroline Sanderson
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Someone like... Adele covers the young star's rise to fame, where she grew up, how close her and her Mum are, the shyness/stagefright that comes out by wisecracking and gabbing on stage, and the relationships that emotionally rent her, giving her fuel for her lyrics. The book also tells of the singers and bands that influenced Adele when she was young and the songwriters/producers that are contributing factors to her success.


Adele falls into one of my top ten songwriters/singers - what an amazing sultry voice. I actually hadn't heard of her until Rolling in the Deep hit me like a pile-driver! Wow - I cranked it up, irritating my daughter who had already heard it probably 100 times on the top ten, and then raced to YouTube to absorb the video. Did I tell you another of my top ten singers - Etta James, also one of Adele's influences.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

falling together

Falling TogetherFalling Together by Marisa de los Santos
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The first day of college is always a wee bit traumatic. Finding and connecting with a new friend is great and bonding with two is even better! So when fate brought Pen, Cat, and Will together in a small bathroom, their friendship was obviously meant to be and the threesome stays rock strong until adult reality hits - Cat gets married and Pen and Will are just an uncomfortable twosome. Vowing never to contact each other again, the three stay apart until many years later - Cat summons them both with an out-of-the-blue email. Suddenly Pen and Will are jetting across the country and heading to the Philippines in search of the elusive, tiny Cat.

A wonderful, anytime read, I have only read two books by this author and loved them both! Her characters, who talk hilariously to themselves, are so interesting and deep that you would want to friend them for life! This is a story of loss, love and deep friendship that turns into love...

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Loving

Loving (Bailey Flanigan #4)Loving by Karen Kingsbury
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The fourth and final book in the Bailey Flanagan Series ties up loose ends, reports the power of prayer, ending on a happy note. After a short stint in Los Angles, Bailey is too uncomfortable and hates dealing with the constant daily interruption of paparazzi. When Katy presents her with an offer to take over the Christian Kids Theater, Bailey accepts, but uncertain with her decision. Broken-hearted about leaving Brandon, she flies back home to Bloomington, Indiana and prays for a way for them to somehow stay together. Back in LA, Brandon is coming to the realization that his contract has been altered and the results will compromise his beliefs and values. But, holding out for integrity could doom his professional career. How can he still have Bailey and his career?

Karen Kingsbury is one of my favorite authors, but with this particular series I believe it was strung out for too long - it could have been wrapped up easily in two to three novels. Unfortunately, I found myself losing interest, but I do look forward to her next release.


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True Sisters

True SistersTrue Sisters by Sandra Dallas
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

True Sisters is a piece of historical fiction – building on the true arduous journey of Mormon converts who immigrated to America and pushed their handcarts from Utah City to Salt Lake City, some 1300 miles. Why handcarts? Smaller and easier than large, cumbersome wagons, it was thought by Mormon leaders that the walk would also strengthen the LDS convert’s bodies and faith by the time they reached the celestial city. The Martin Company left late in the year with unstable carts made of green wood and were warned of the snows and freezing rains that could affect their travel. Unfortunately the Mormon leaders of the small group turned a deaf ear to the predictions, telling their people that they were weak in the faith if they considered staying behind until spring. The loss of people along the route was staggering, much worse than the well-told story of the Donner party. True Sisters focuses on four women that find friendship in the trek, prove their character and strength, and rise above their horrible losses to push on. An incredible story…..

Note: The author has chosen to call the converts emigrants, as they were known in the nineteenth century. Emigrant is preferred by virtually all Utah historians.


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Friday, June 22, 2012

Below Stairs: The Classic Kitchen Maid's Memoir That Inspired "Upstairs, Downstairs" and "Downton Abbey

Below Stairs: The Classic Kitchen Maid's Memoir That Inspired Below Stairs: The Classic Kitchen Maid's Memoir That Inspired "Upstairs, Downstairs" and "Downton Abbey" by Margaret Powell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

If you love the movie Downton Abbey or Upstairs, Downstairs - this is the perfect read for you. Growing up in Hove, England, Margaret Powell, came from a very loving, but poor family. At age seven she was preparing breakfast for her siblings and ushering them to school. Even though Margaret was extremely bright and was given a scholarship, she began work at the tender age of 13 to help her family. Big for her age, she could pass for several years older and was, unfortunately, asked to do even more. At age 15, Margaret was working in a laundry and then moved up in the world when she was hired on as a kitchen maid - the lowest rung of the servant ladder, but Margaret had her eye on being a cook one day. The cook was usually treated better than other staff, given more free time, and could go out any afternoon - as long as she was back in time to cook dinner.

So honest, sad, and hilarious in parts, Margaret Powell wrote her novel in 1968 and opened the door on what went on behind the closed doors and basements of the wealthier class.


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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Like a Watered Garden

Like a Watered GardenLike a Watered Garden by Patti Hill
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Mibby Garrett, a garden designer, is trying to crawl back from the brink of depression - her beloved husband recently passed away in a bicycle accident. She can't even help her thirteen year old son, Ky, deal with his own grief or feed the poor child, much to her shame. Each day holds "whammies of grief" or terrible reminders of the way life used to be. Thanks to her neighbor, Louise - a well dressed debutante some thirty-something years past, Mibby is kept in home baked sweets and prayers. As page 16 says: "Louise came to make sure my boat was still tied to the dock, that the knot hadn't loosened and set me adrift. She tightened the knot with love, southern style - indulgent and usually fattening." Then there is Blink, the family's black Lab, who appears to read Mibby's mind and comforts her every day. Much to Mibby's surprise and outrage, a young woman appears on her doorstep claiming to be related through Mibby's late husband - will this be the final straw to send her over the edge?

One of the best fictional, humorous books on the slow, painful process and recovery from grief that I've read in a long time - the author's writings remind me a wee bit of Erma Bombeck - a real, feel-good read.

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The Guide to American Money FoldsThe Guide to American Money Folds by Jodi Fukumoto
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A great book to learn the trick of folding paper currency into all kinds of cool things - starting off with the easier, well-known crane on page 10-11 to plumeria, cats, lucky frogs, flowers, and ending with the very difficult Statue of Liberty. Full color pictures throughout plus step-by-step directions, this book is great for making gifts or gift holders!

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Thursday, June 14, 2012

The Last Boyfriend (Inn BoonsBoro, #2)The Last Boyfriend by Nora Roberts
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Book 2 in the Inn BoonsBoro series picks up on the friendly relationship between detail-oriented, list making Owen, one of the three Montgomery brothers and impulsive, pizza shop owner Avery - who loves to dye her hair a different color every several weeks. Although it seems like the two are opposites, both are quite driven, full of energy, and they even share a past - their dads were best friends and Owen was Avery's first boyfriend - at age five. Now grown up and with a little help from the inn's resident ghost, Lizzy, the two are literally pushed together and sparks fly.

Although the book is predictable and seems to be more focused on the details of getting the inn up and running, I think the author, because of Owen being the detail man, considered this in her writing. I like that Lizzy the ghost is becoming more "fleshed" out - in the next book we're sure to find how she died and more about Billy. Not as exciting or as funny as the first book, The Next Always, a few of the livelier lines are about Avery's dad, Willy B and Owen's mom.

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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Clay's Quilt

Clay's QuiltClay's Quilt by Silas House

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Such a gritty, beautiful novel of tragedy and the sweet, uplifting love of family and friends, set in the coal mining towns and deep, lovely hollows of Kentucky. Brought up in a coal mining town in Western Maryland - I'm always eager to read of books that share my own area's geological features. This book has been on my "want to read" list for many months.

Young coal-miner Clay Sizemore is surrounded by family - there's the indomitable, faith filled Aunt Easter who raised him, Great-Uncle Paul the quilt-maker and his tiny wife Sophie, and his cousin Dreama who lives right next door with her daddy, Uncle Gabe. But it's his own mother that Clay yearns for - the ethereal, full of life Anneth, shot right in front of Clay when he was only four years old. Clay wishes he could piece together the story of his mother's life - like his Uncle Paul pieced his quilts together and when Aunt Easter finds a box on her back porch, some of those pieces start stitching themselves together.


Complete with a conversation with Silas House, the author, and a Reader's Guide at the end.



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