The Personal Librarian
by Marie Benedict, Victoria Christopher Murray
The Personal Librarian (2/1/2021)
The fascinating story of Bella Da Costa Greene begins for the reader in 1905. She went from working at the library at Princeton University to becoming the personal librarian to Junius Morgan, better known as J.P. Morgan. Even though her father was the first African American man to graduate from Harvard University, she lived her whole life as a white woman. Working with Mr. Morgan opened a whole new world for her. We read how she gained the respect of the men behind the scenes art world in the United States and Europe. Under her tutelage the private collection became the public library it is today.
Greek to Me: Adventures of the Comma Queen
by Mary Norris
Greek to Me (2/13/2019)
After reading Greek to Me, I am ready to reread The Iliad and the Odyssey, and a few classic Greek plays. I marvel how Mary Morris learned the Greek alphabet, learned to speak Greek, and apply the Greek root word to the English counterpart. Her love of Greek and Greece is so strong, I want to hop a plane and explore Greece.
How the Light Gets In: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel, #9
by Louise Penny
How The Light Gets In (7/16/2013)
Although I would have had a clearer picture of the plot if I had read the previous books, I immediately became engulfed into the world of Armand Gamache. The description of the village Three Pines was so vivid I could picture it all. Interwoven in the main plot was the murder of one of the elderly Ouellet quintuplets which brought to mind the lives of the Dionne quints.
I look forward to reading both the earlier and the future books of Louise Penny.