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Showing posts from January, 2024

Book Review: Pocketful of Poseys by Thomas Reed

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Rating: 4.25⭐ After their mother, Lucinda “Cinny” Maynard Posey, passes away in an assisted living facility in Hanover, New Hampshire, twin siblings Grace Tingley and Brian Posey, now both in their forties, embark on a “funereal odyssey” in keeping with her final wishes. As per Cinny’s wishes, they are to spread her ashes along with their father Frank’s in several locations across the globe – places that hold a special meaning for them. Each location comes with specific instructions and letters in which Cinny shares stories about these places and what makes them special for her. The novel follows Grace and Brian and their respective spouses, Jack and Ella, and children, Grace and Jack’s daughter Chelsea (in her twenties) and Ella’s sixteen-year-old daughter from a previous relationship Sage over their three-week trip across New Zealand, Thailand, Rome, Grindelwald and Oxford with a final stop in New Jersey. In the course of their trip, Cinny’s children and their families work past thei

Book Review: No One Can Know by Kate Alice Marshall

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Rating:  3.75⭐️ When her husband Nathan loses his job, pregnant Emma Palmer returns to her childhood home – the same home where her parents were brutally murdered fourteen years ago. Emma and her sisters Juliette and Daphne were separated after the tragedy and have each gone their own way. Though they have drifted apart, together they share ownership of the family home. Emma’s return is accompanied by whispers and speculation, visits from the investigators who believe that Emma is the key to solving the cold case from fourteen years ago and the return of significant people from Emma’s past including her estranged sisters. Everyone has secrets and no one is above suspicion. Emma has never forgotten that fateful night but continues to maintain silence on what transpired on the night of the murders, not even sharing the story of her family tragedy with her husband before she returned to Arden Hills. After all,  “No one can know..”  and the sisters haven't yet broken the pact they made

Book Review: Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham

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Rating:  2.5⭐️ Margot and her best friend Eliza had big plans to embark on their college experience together, but Eliza’s tragic death after her high school graduation changed everything for Margot. After spending the first year of college in her shell, Margot meets the charismatic Lucy who convinces her to become her housemate with two other girls. The house was being rented out by one of the college fraternities and Margot is excited to be part of a more active social scene. But when a new student who has ties to Margot’s hometown and to Eliza enters the scene , Margot’s past trauma resurfaces, and she shares her story with Lucy and her housemates. Lucy expresses her concern for Margot and her intense interest in the events from Margot’s past. Lucy claims she wants to help her friend, but her weird mind games and somewhat obsessive behavior gradually reveal her dark streak which makes Margot more than a tad uncomfortable. As the narrative continues Margot, Lucy and their friends find

Book Review: Northwoods by Amy Pease

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Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Set in the small vacation town of Shaky Lake - a vacationer’s paradise for the wealthy with its posh country club and vacation homes - in Wisconsin’s Northwoods, the story begins with the discovery of a teenager’s body in a fishing boat docked in the lake behind a cabin in a resort. The dead teenager, Ben Sharpe was supposed to be meeting his friend sixteen-year-old Caitlin Wallace, who is missing. Sherman County Sheriff Marge North heads local law enforcement, an understaffed and underfunded institution in a town dealing with the fallout of the opioid epidemic, with bare minimum resources. Her son Eli, who works as a deputy, was the one who found Ben’s body. FBI Agent Alyssa Mason joins Eli and Marge in their search for Caitlin for Caitlin, though she might know more about the case than she initially reveals. Caitlin’s father, a pharmaceutical sales professional, was supposed to join his family in Shaky Lake but stayed back in Chicago and is also proving difficult to trac

Old Crimes: and Other Stories by Jill McCorkle

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Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Written with wisdom, much emotional depth and insight, the stories in  Old Crimes: and Other Stories  by  Jill McCorkle  depict how secrets, mistakes, and regrets can leave an indelible impact on the human psyche and relationships. Despite the short length of each of these stories, they are emotionally heavy reads that inspire pause and reflection. In the first story,  ” Old Crimes”  (4.5/5), we meet a high school teacher who ruminates on her memories of a trip to New Hampshire from decades ago when she was a college student. Her encounter with a six-year-old girl in the run-down inn where she was staying prompted her to think about her own expectations from life and influenced her perception of cruelty and evil in the world -thoughts that have remained with her through the years. “The Lineman”(4.5/5) revolves around a telephone lineman who tries to come to terms with how human connections and relationships have been impacted by dependence on technology and digitization. H

Book Review: They are the Hunters by Faith Gardner

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Rating: 4.5⭐ When newcomer Olivia West befriends her classmate, sixteen-year-old Eliza Hunter, they quickly become inseparable, and Olivia becomes a frequent guest in Eliza’s home. Olivia’s family situation is in stark contrast to the close-knit, well-to-do Hunters – Eliza’s parents Angela, a psychiatrist, and Carson a true crime writer, and her older brother seventeen-year-old Ezra – and enjoys spending time in their home. However, Eliza begins to distance herself after Olivia reveals her darker side, leaving Eliza feeling unsettled and suspicious of her intentions. But Olivia is quick to become romantically involved with Ezra, with whom she is pleasantly surprised to find she has much in common and is easy to manipulate. After a shocking series of events, Olivia finds herself living in Eliza’s home, but there is much more to this seemingly perfect family than meets the eye – secrets they would do anything to protect. Similarly, the Hunters have no idea of how far Olivia could go to g

Book Reviews: The Heiress by Rachel Hawkins

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Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ After the demise of a family member, Camden McTavish reluctantly returns to Ashby House, the family mansion in the Blue Ridge Mountains he had left over a decade ago to tend to certain family matters. Adopted by the late Ruby McTavish, Camden never quite felt a part of the McTavish family, though Ruby doted over him. Kidnapped as a child, found after eight months and returned to her family, married and widowed multiple times, Ruby led an eventful life but her secrets and her manipulativeness drove a wedge between her and her adopted son. Though Camden left North Carolina after Ruby’s demise over a decade ago, Ruby’s sister Nelle and her grandchildren stayed on to live in Ashby House and resent the fact that Camden inherited the home and the family fortune. While Camden isn’t too thrilled to be back, Jules is more than impressed with the family mansion, the grandeur, and the promise of a life very different from the one they share in Colorado and wouldn’t mind making Ashby

Book Review: The Book of Fire by Christy Lefteri

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  Rating:  4.5⭐️ A forest fire wreaks havoc in the lives of the residents of a Greek village located in the foothills of a mountain, close to the sea, wiping out homes and leaving a trail of death and devastation in its wake. Irina, a music teacher, her painter husband Tasso, and young daughter Clara, along with their dog, are among those who survive the fire. Irina decides to write about her experiences to help her cope with the trauma, her own “Book of Fire.” “There is something about stories that allows us to process the present. We listen to tales of tribulations overcome so that we might imagine we can survive ours. Children listen to the same fairy tale time and time again because there is a puzzle in their hearts that they unknowingly need to solve.” The Book of Fire   by Christy Lefteri is a deeply emotional read that revolves around family, home and community, human resilience, and survival. The narrative moves between past and present with chapters from Irina’s “book” inters

Book Review: Mercury by Amy Jo Burns

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  Rating:  4.25⭐ “There’s more to this life than just trying to survive it… ” Set in 1999 in the small town of Mercury, Pennsylvania, the story revolves around the Joespeh family who own and operate their own roofing business headed by patriarch Mick Joseph with his sons. In 1990, then a newcomer to the town teenage Marley West meets the Joseph brothers, and though initially involved the Baylor, the eldest son eventually falls in love with and marries Waylon his younger brother and the middle son of the Joseph family. Marley, the daughter of a nurse who moves wherever work takes them, is happy to finally be a part of a family unit with roots. But families can be complicated and as Marley evolves from a lovestruck teenager to a young mother who eventually pushes her way into playing a significant role in the family business over the years she learns how to navigate the complex dynamics between the members, the tragedies and the sacrifices, the financial struggles and the secrets and the

Boo Review: Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth

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Rating: 4.5⭐️ “Not only did the ancient Greeks seem to have modelled gods in their mortal image, but they apparently chose their worst selves as the template.” Having read and loved  Pandora’s Jar: Women in the Greek Myths  by  Natalie Haynes , I was eager to read the author’s latest work of non-fiction and I was not disappointed! Meticulously researched, factual, informative, and laced with the author’s insightful observations and trademark wit,  Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth  is an immersive read. While most existing texts (and much of the inspired art) depict female characters from the Greek myths predominantly from the male perspective which, though interesting, can certainly feel (on occasion) unidimensional, the author allows us to explore each of the goddesses and their myth with a fresh interpretation of their gifts and motivations, vices, and their lasting impact on the modern world. As the author states in her brilliant introduction,   ” Women can now make art, and we