The Madwoman and the Roomba: My Year of Domestic Mayhem
by SandraTsing Loh
So So, not Funny (4/21/2020)
When I started reading this book I actually laughed out loud at the situations that she was describing ! My goodness these were things that happened to me and my friends, and here I though was an author who was capable of capturing these life moments. However that first impression changes about half way through the book. I started to read her stories of going through the year a month at a time not as humorous recollections but as rants and at times anger. The episode of the monks and the tax problem was where this became clear and I found that I really didn't see the humor in any of it ! I finished the book with the same feeling, it was more rant than humorous. I think that all women have a combination of anger and humor when they describe their lives and the events in them, but in this book the anger overcame the humor.
Golden Child
by Claire Adam
The Child (10/19/2018)
This story revolves around twins born to a family of Indian descent. One child is gifted and one is"slow" according to his description. The question is how do parents treat each child? Loving them is not the problem. They are loved, the problems arise as they are growing up. Do you keep them together no mater the cost to each or do you separate them, again no matter the cost? Are you strict with both or do make allowances for different behaviors that happen all the time? How do you know, as a parent what to do? This is the premise of the book and the questions are handled beautifully. Some choices will break your heart, others will make you laugh out loud, but you will never look at choices the same way again. The questions that the books brings up and explores have no set answers.
Interwoven in the story of the twins is the story of a family that doesn't always behave you expect them too. They sometimes border on the side of dysfunction proving that family dynamics are universal. Religion also plays a major role here also. I will not give any spoilers away here ! The book is well written and enjoyable. I recommend this for any Book Club, there is a lot to discuss here .
Fallen Land
by Taylor Brown
Fallen Land (12/28/2015)
This is a powerful book about the devastating effects of war. Not in a foreign land but in our own, that war being the Civil War. Most of us think of the American Civil War as something that happened on the battlefields, if we think about it at all. When we do, we think of the great battles, Gettysburg, Appomattox, Sherman's March to the sea, at least I did before this book. Taylor Brown drills the war down to its most intimate details. He strips away the glory of warfare and gives voice to the sufferings that were endured by soldiers, non-combatants and the land. This book also speaks to the undying human spirit.
It is a book that left me speechless and one that I will go back and re-read again. It is excellent.
Enduring Courage: Ace Pilot Eddie Rickenbacker and the Dawn of the Age of Speed
by John F. Ross
Enduring Courage (4/23/2014)
This is with a doubt one of the easiest books that I have ever read. Ross knows his subject very well and is shines through! The narrative flows and is never dull or flat. I learned a lot about Eddie Rickenbacker in a most enjoyable way. For instance, I did not know that before he became an Ace pilot, he was superstar on the early auto racing circuit. Ross brings American Life in the early 20th century to life in a way that informs without lecturing. My only complaint is that there was not enough photos included in the ARC, I hope that he corrects this, because those of early cars, race cars and airplanes are priceless. I found myself stopping time after time to look up what these things looked like! Overall a most enjoyable read, I recommend this to book clubs as well as history buffs!
Editor's Note: Jane was reading an advanced reader's edition of the book, produced some months ahead of the final book. Such copies very rarely have the finishing touches that the final book will do - including photos, maps, indexes or even a jacket cover.
Wayward Saints
by Suzzy Roche
Wayward Saints (11/18/2011)
When you get past the musical references and all of the anger associated with the genre that the author is referring to in the book, this is a really great read. At it's heart it is a love story about the most difficult relationship any woman will have in her life; that is the relationship with her mother. The story of Jean Saint, the mother, and Mary Saint, the daughter is a warm and well told and should touch you deeply. Mary is the epitome of a rebellious daughter who makes the big time in spite of herself. Her fame does nothing to solve her problems with the people in her life and her life in general. In fact, her fame accentuates the problems and the methods that Mary chooses to solve them only add to her destructive modus operandi. While Mary struggles with her own demons, her mother Jean, struggles with her own. Mother and daughter are very much alike. Mary is flamboyant while Jean is passive aggressive in dealing with the life that that share. Suzy does an excellent job of weaving the two stories together. The supporting characters that Roche has created to flesh the story out are also amazing and the sub plot that she created is worth a book of its own. Thaddeus is so real and adds so much to the story that I hope he appears in Roche’s future works. This book will be enjoyed for a long time. I know that I will recommend it to my friends and my book club.
A Bitter Truth: A Bess Crawford Mystery
by Charles Todd
Bitter Truth (8/16/2011)
From the first page readers will be hooked. I enjoyed the historical perspective of the book, WW1 and how Charles Todd wove all of those details into a really good mystery. From page one when Bess finds a desperate woman on her doorstep to the very end, the story holds your interest, and builds as it moves forward. Book clubs should really enjoy this because there is so much to digest and discuss here. A really good read and a fine story
The Dangerous Edge of Things: A Tai Randolph Mystery
by Tina Whittle
The Dangerous Edge of THings (3/20/2011)
Wow, another strong female crime character!! There is more mystery than meets the eye in this book. First off we have a dead body in the opening scene and the fun begins. Tai Randolph has just inherited a gun shop in Alabama form her dead redneck uncle. Her brother is a mysterious character involver with a high end security firm called Phoenix. Her partner in this book turns out to be Phoenix employee who is an ex-cop with serious neurological issues. His name is Trey Severs and he is one dangerous and loyal character. There are plenty of other characters to like and dislike in this book. Garrity, Trey’s old partner is one top like. Landon and Marissa and the Senator and his wife inspire more dislike than like although at times the line between the two is extremely fine.
While trying to figure out why someone ends up dead in front of her brother’s quiet house, Tai soon finds herself in over her head. This is Atlanta after all full of ghosts both old and new. Tai’s occupation, before the gun shop, seems to have been that of as tourist guide. She will use that information and other friends to help her get to the bottom of this. She believes that her brother Eric is somehow involved in the actual murder, she is wrong !
Tai solves the murder with the help of Trey and along the way questions her feelings for him. The two of them start out on a bad footing but the soon they are trusting each other, him more than her. They need to trust each other because a wild ride starts that leads to the solution.
The plot is well developed and believable. Overall a good murder mystery that will hold your interest from start to finish.
The Brutal Telling: Chief Inspector Gamache Novel, #5
by Louise Penny
Brutal Telling (1/19/2011)
Louise Penny has once again created an old fashioned "who done it". Three Pines is a village that I would love to exist in real life. The characters are so real that I felt that I knew them when I finished the book. The inn keepers, both old and new,Clara and Peter and all the rest. Ms. Penny weaves the history of Canada with the history of her characters in a way that entertains and teaches. I have read all of her books and this one by far, I felt was her best. The end was a shocker and I am waiting to read her next one !