Clue's Shelf Life 2023, Best Read by 12-31-23

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Clue's Shelf Life 2023, Best Read by 12-31-23

1clue
Edited: Dec 29, 2022, 10:29 am



A few years ago I started using the very simple process of just listing what I had read by genre and keeping a spreadsheet with planning several months in advance. As time has gone by I've ignored the plan more and more so this year I may make a few notes but I'm not doing a formal plan, I'll just scan the TBR and To Read lists a few weeks ahead. I like Cats and Kits and will continue to participate in them based on my TBR, and I'll also play BINGO. I want to read biographies of the earlier President's wives. I read one on Martha Washington in 2022 and have one on Abigail Adams in process. Other than that my plan is to pick books from my sumptuous TBR most of the time with little or no pressure to read anything in particular.

I think I'll have more reading time in 2023 and I look forward to that so much!

2clue
Edited: Dec 15, 2023, 12:07 pm

Bingo



A book about a topic you don’t usually read - Far Out Fairy Tales by Sean Tulien
A book rated above 4 on LT - Small Things Like These
A book that taught you something - The Stranger in the Woods
A memoir - Home Waters
A popular author’s first book - The Absent Author
Art or craft related - Oil and Marble
Author who shares your zodiac sign - The Devil's Cub
Bestseller from 20 years ago - The Cat Who Brought Down the House
Book by a local/regional author where you live/have lived - If These Walls Had Ears
Book is set on a plane, train or ship - Danger on the Atlantic
Features a cat (cats) or member of the cat family (leopard, lion, tiger, etc.) - The Cat Who Sang for the Birds
Inn or hotel - Murder at the Mena House
Involves an accident - A Dusty Way to Death by Alistair MacLean>
Journalist or journalism - Beany Malone
More than 1000 copies on LT - The Cat Who Went Up The Creek
Music or musician - The Music Store by Rachel Joyce
Read a CAT - Night Gardening
Small town or rural setting - The Scent of Water
STEM topic- DKfindout! Coding
Switched or stolen identities - A World of Curiosities
The next book in a series you started - Murder at Wedgefield Manor
Title contains a number or quantity - Table Two by Wilenski
With a book on the cover -Death of a Bookseller by Bernard J. Farmer
With a plant in the title or on the cover - Night Gardening
Written by an author under 30 - Cinder

7clue
Dec 27, 2022, 2:08 pm

Hold

8clue
Edited: Feb 20, 2023, 11:36 am

January:

Read from Shelf: 5
Read from Library: 2

Purchased: 1

1. Soldiers in the Army of Freedom by Ian Michael Spurgeon for Historical Site bookclub.

9thornton37814
Jan 1, 2023, 4:05 pm

Enjoy your 2023 reads!

10lowelibrary
Jan 1, 2023, 5:42 pm

Good luck with your 2023 reading

11majkia
Jan 1, 2023, 6:10 pm

Happy New Year and good luck with your reading.

12Tess_W
Jan 1, 2023, 9:34 pm

Good luck with your 2023 reading, Luanne!

13clue
Edited: Jan 1, 2023, 9:57 pm

>9 thornton37814:, >10 lowelibrary:, >11 majkia:, >12 Tess_W: Thanks to all. I'm looking forward to some good reading! I hope you have a good year too, I'll be checking out what you post.

14lkernagh
Jan 1, 2023, 10:34 pm

Stopping by to wish you a wonderful year of reading in 2023.

15clue
Edited: Jan 3, 2023, 8:52 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Series Cat
BINGO: Inn or Hotel
My Rating - 3.5

Murder at the Mena House by Erica Ruth Neubauer



Jane Wunderly, a young American widowed by WWI, was asked by her Aunt Millie to accompany her to Egypt in 1926. Upon arrival they checked in at the hotel Mena, a luxury hotel where all the best people stayed when in Cairo. It's not long before Jane has made the acquaintance of a handsome, though somewhat mysterious man, and a young socialite has made it clear all romantic conquests will be hers, and a few bodies turn up.

This is a light mystery that could be called cozy because there is no graphic sex, violence or language. The Egyptian setting is weak with the action primarily taking place in the hotel.There is a touch of romance, though Jane doesn't want one (wink, wink), and I didn't guess the murderer.

This won an Agatha Award in 2021 and there are three more in the series with a fourth being published in March. I'll put the second on my sometime list.

16clue
Edited: Jan 2, 2023, 8:54 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: Switched or Stolen Identities
My Rating - 4.0

A World of Curiosities by Louise Penny



Young adult siblings come back into the lives of Gamache and Jean Guy. As children their mother, a prostitute, was murdered. During the investigation Gamache realized the brother and sister had been routinely sexually abused by her customers. He remembers it as one of his worst cases. Although he has had a personal relationahip with the young woman, he has never been comfortable with her brother. There is something that causes him to want distance between them.

A second storyline revolves around a secret room found in Myrna's loft after a wall is knocked down. Surprisingly it isn't an empty room, it holds many unexplainable things including a very large painting that has a sinister quality. How long has it been there? Who painted it? What does it mean? Eventully the two storylines merge and all questions are answered.

There are things I don't like about Penny's writing. For instance, though her plots are often called complex, I think they're just cluttered with unnecssary information and disjointed sentences. Still, I started reading the series when the first book was published and here I am, just having finished the 18th.

17dudes22
Jan 2, 2023, 6:04 am

>16 clue: - Skipped over everything you wrote as I'm not quite ready for this book yet. I think #16 is my next one, scheduled for some time this year. I'm so tempted to catch right up but also to take it slow. I'm thinking I might do a total reread once I catch up as this is one of my favorite series.

If I didn't already say - looking forward to your reading this year.

18thornton37814
Jan 2, 2023, 10:15 am

>15 clue: I think I liked that one slightly better than you did. It's a series I really enjoy.

>16 clue: That one will be read soon so I'm not reading your comments closely.

19clue
Jan 2, 2023, 10:55 am

>17 dudes22:, >18 thornton37814: I think I'm going to take the plunge and watch the TV series. One of my friends loves the book series and says the TV series is well done with good casting. It's on Amazon Prime.

20LibraryCin
Jan 2, 2023, 2:29 pm

Popping by to make it easier to follow along! Happy Reading!

21dudes22
Jan 3, 2023, 7:12 am

>19 clue: - I've seen them and I liked them although some of the characters were not as I pictured from reading the books.

22hailelib
Jan 3, 2023, 12:16 pm

>15 clue: I remember liking that book well enough to try another by the author.

Have a great reading year in 2023!

23MissBrangwen
Jan 3, 2023, 1:58 pm

Happy New Year! I am taking a BB for >15 clue: and also skipped your review of A World of Curiosities because I have just started that series...

I hope you have a good reading year!

24DeltaQueen50
Jan 4, 2023, 9:02 pm

Happy New Year! You are off to a good start with two books completed already!

25Jackie_K
Jan 5, 2023, 5:17 am

Happy new year! I hope your reading year is relaxed and fun!

26clue
Jan 24, 2023, 4:18 pm

>18 thornton37814:, >23 MissBrangwen: As it happens, I think I'm going to read the second in the Jane Wunderly series in February as it fits RandomKit. My library doesn't have it so I'll probably get it from ILL whenever it's available. And >22 hailelib:, I hope you like the first one.

The big snow storm has just hit us! It's really coming down, huge wet flakes and although it's 37 degrees it's probably gotten an inch deep within 30 minutes! This is supposed to continue for 11 more hours but will remain above freezing the whole time! If I can pull myself away from the window I might get a book finished!

27Jackie_K
Jan 24, 2023, 4:51 pm

>26 clue: Hope you're not snowed in! Stay safe!

28clue
Edited: Jan 24, 2023, 5:38 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Random CAT, Alpha S
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

Night Gardening by E. L. Swann



Maggie is sixty years old, the widow of a man who was a member of one of Boston's old and wealthy families. Unfortunately, in recent generations they had became a family of drinkers and spenders.

After her husband's death, Maggie suffered a major stroke from which she is still recovering. A talented gardener, she sits on her porch and laments the poor condition her once beautiful garden has fallen into, and the fact that she has neither the health or finances to restore it.

The large house next door has new owners and Maggie begins to occupy herself by watching work in their garden by peeking through holes in the wall between them. She delights in the unusual choice of plants and the amazing feats of heavy equipment. It's not long before she also delights in watching Tristan Mallory, the landscape architect making it happen.

After a through the wall meeting takes place, Tristan is delighted to learn Maggie calls plants by their Latin names. Ten years younger than Maggie and divorced, a friendship develops between them and Tristan begins to work at night restoring Maggie's garden.

I loved the unique story of this small, quiet book and the well done gardening angle was a delight to me. I didn't feel the same with the characters. Maggie I found beliveable but there wasn't much depth to Tristan and I'm disappointed their relationship which grew into a romance, didn't ever seem real to me.

29clue
Edited: Feb 3, 2023, 12:54 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - No, Book club
BINGO: Biography
My Rating - 4.0

Home Waters A Chroicle of Family and a River by John N Maclean



I have seen this book called a sequel to A River Runs Through It by Norman MacLean, this author's father. It isn't that, although this is about the same family and the same river. It is instead a memoir that recounts his family's Montana history and how a river gave them a place to be and a place to come back to.

As anyone familiar with A River Runs Through It might expect, there is a lot of trout fishing woven through the book. This is the activity the men through generations of MacLean's have bonded through, learned life's lessons through, and learned love and respect through. Although Maclean has spent much of his adult life in Chicago where he worked for the Chicago Tribune for more than twenty years, he has also spent part of every year at the cabin his family has owned for three generations in Montana. He is the author of five books on certain forest fires, the people who fought them, and those that died in them. National Geographic has called him the Bob Woodward of forest fires.

If you choose to read this book, I'll warn that it begins slowly with family genealogy. If that isn't your interest, hang in, it will help later on.

30clue
Edited: Jan 29, 2023, 5:43 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: Features a Cat
My Rating - 3.5

The Cat Who Sang for the Birds by Lilian Braun



This month's Cat read is the 20th in the series. The title refers to one of the two cats belonging to the protagonist who seemingy likes to sit in the screened in gazebo and attempt to "sing" back to the birds. The mystery this time revolves around fraud by someone in local politics and the death by fire of the oldest woman in town.

31thornton37814
Jan 29, 2023, 4:15 pm

>30 clue: I'm considering a re-read of that series in the future. It probably won't start this year.

32VictoriaPL
Jan 31, 2023, 10:40 pm

Home Waters looks interesting. Been awhile since my lit class discussed A River Runs Through It.

Enjoyed catching up on your thread!

33clue
Feb 3, 2023, 12:52 pm

>31 thornton37814: I've really enjoyed reading these. I had read the first one or two years ago but for whatever reason didn't continue. I'll finish the series this year and I'm starting the search for another light series.

>32 VictoriaPL: I liked this once it got started. I'm learning that living in a fast world has made slow reading harder for me than it used to be. My family's river was the Ouachita (Wash a Tah) though the water is too warm for trout there are other fish that made our outdoor dinners a banquet.

34clue
Edited: Feb 6, 2023, 10:45 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: Art or Craft
My Rating - 4

Oil and Marble by Stephanie Storey



This is a novel about the great artists Leonardo and Michelangelo. The author tells her story using historical sources when they are available, and using her own imagination when they are not. The relationship between the artists, which isn't known, is the base of the story.

The period covered is 1501-1505 when both artists were living in Florence. During those years Leonardo created one of the world's greatest paintings, Mona Lisa, and Michelangelo created David, one of the world's greatest sculptures.

The author includes a coda that gives us basic facts about the artists after 1505 and includes notes that tell why she made the decisions she did when facts weren't available. In her notes she writes: Oil and Marble is based on twenty years of research and grounded in real history, but it is unapologetically a work of fiction.

I liked this, there isn't a lot of depth, but it's a good story, one that provokes thought and possibly inspires more reading on the artists. She gave us a little teaser at the end by introducing Raphael, the subject of her second novel, I already have it on my shelf.



35VictoriaPL
Feb 6, 2023, 7:43 am

>34 clue: interesting!

36clue
Edited: Feb 6, 2023, 12:34 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Random Cat
BINGO: No
My Rating - 2.5

Peril at the Exposition by Nev March



When I read the first in this series, I made note to read the second when it came out. Unfortunately, I like it much less than the first. The setting has changed from Bombay to Chicago and the protagonist has become Wonder Woman.

Jim, the husband of Diana, is an experienced investigator and has gone to work for a private agency in Boston where they are now living. He is sent to Chicago, it's 1893, to help an investigator who has already been sent there. When Diana goes weeks without hearing from Jim, she decides to go find him and of course, she does. My greatest problem with what follows is that it doesn't have even a slim thread of possibility to me.

37thornton37814
Feb 6, 2023, 4:53 pm

>36 clue: I only gave the first one 2.5 stars. Sounds like I can give the rest of the series a pass.

38Tess_W
Feb 7, 2023, 12:43 pm

>34 clue: BB's for my WL for sure!

39clue
Edited: Feb 26, 2023, 7:46 pm

>38 Tess_W: I hope you like them. I think I'll get to the Raphael in March.

40clue
Edited: Mar 14, 2023, 11:38 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Random Cat
BINGO: Title includes a number
My Rating - 4.0

Table Two by Marjorie Wilenski

Can't get the Touchstone to work correctly. It is in the LT database.



Table Two resides in the ministry of Foreign Intelligence in London as WWII begins. For a group of translators, all women, the table is their workplace. Most are mature women with years of work experience, but the youngest, Anne, has just come to London, determined to make her way after her family's wealth is lost. The reader observes the daily interaction of the translators and also follows Anne and a few others into their private lives.

The author has created authentic characters readers will recognize from their own experiences. It's amazing that this is the first and only novel Wilenski wrote. Some have speculated it is based on her own work experience during the war. I've given the book a rating of 4, although the ending seems abrupt and somewhat weak. It was still a very good read and a book I wouldn't have known about had LT not recommended it.

According to Amazon, Elizabeth Bowen said, ‘The most striking novel about women war workers this war has produced.’

41clue
Edited: Apr 7, 2023, 8:22 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Random Cat
BINGO: Small Town or Rural Setting
My Rating - 3.5

The Scent of Water by Elizabeth Goudge



Elizabeth Goudge (1900-1984) was English and a very popular novelist of both children's and adult books. In fact, J. K. Rowling has said that one of Goudge's books was her favorite book as a child.

Mary Lindsay had been a city dweller (London) all of her life. At fifty she was very surprised to learn she had inherited a home in a small town from her father's cousin. In turn, she surprised her friends by deciding to retire and move into the house even though she had only been in it once and that was when she was a child.

The book revolves around Mary's life in the village and her influence on the people who live there. Many of the same issues people and families deal with today are part of the lives of the villagers. Husbands/fathers damaged by the war, mental illness, grown children taking advantage of elderly parents, lack of money, etc. Goudge's father was a theologian (Anglican) and there is a gentle spiritual element woven through the book.

Some reviewers describe this book as being similar to Miss Read. I don't think so, to me it's more serious and not as light a read. I think I've become accustomed to too much drama though, I had to remind myself to slow down and let the book flow. There isn't much plot development really but the characters and setting are well done.

42clue
Edited: Apr 7, 2023, 8:24 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Random Cat
BINGO: The Cat Who Went Up the Creek by Lillian Braun
My Rating - 3.5

The Cat Who Went Up the Creek by Lilian Jackson Braun



Jim Quilleran, former investigative reporter, decides to spend a couple of weeks at the Black Creek in the newley restored Nutcracker Inn. The cats, Koko and Yum Yum go along because he gave them no choice. It isn't long before he finds Koko enjoying watching a body float down the creek. It turns out the deceased had been staying in the hotel and Qwilleran (and Koko) jump into the investigation of his suspicious death.

43clue
Edited: Apr 7, 2023, 8:29 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

The Cat Who Robbed a Bank by Lilian Jackson Braun



So here's another Cat book this month. I've had two visits from the plumber and no washing machine for a week, one from the handyman to fix an unrelated water problem in the kitchen, gutter damage from a hail storm, and a cancellation of my insurance for home and cars because the insurance company is no longer selling insurance in my state, in addition to the caretaking of my sweet sister who has dementia, I've had a greater need for easy reading the last 3 weeks!

This time a jeweler comes to town to buy and sell estate jewelery. Qwilleran becomes suspicious when he learns the jeweler accepts only cash. When the jeweler is murdered and his assistant, said to be his relative, disappears the investigation is on.

There are always acivities taking place in Pickax and in this book it's a first ever Highland games weekend. Many of the small town's residents have Scottish ancestry including Qwilleran whose mother was a Mackintosh. No competition for my family, I have an uncle whose first and middle names are Bonnie Brun! And, quite the drinker!

44clue
Edited: Mar 12, 2023, 10:24 pm

This message has been deleted by its author.

45Tess_W
Mar 14, 2023, 9:06 am

>40 clue: A BB for me!

46clue
Edited: Mar 19, 2023, 7:45 pm

I'll be interested in what you think of it. She does a good job of mixing the different personalities and contrasting young and old thinking. It also gave a good descrption of how people became used to the horror of the Blitz. They started out saying the middle of London couldn't be attacked but soon were orgainizing their daily routine around the chaos.

47clue
Edited: Mar 24, 2023, 2:20 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - No
BINGO: Ship
My Rating - 3.0

48clue
Edited: Mar 24, 2023, 2:23 pm

I don't know what I've done but the message above will not post comments. However they show if I look at edit or preview. I've copied and moved them here and hope they don't show twice later. I remember this happening a few years ago. Maybe the raging thunderstom is causing some trouble interferred with the transit. Here they are:

The third in this series could be a standalone. It takes place on a ship and the male protagonist works undercover for the U.S., the female assists. The two became a couple in the previous book. Working undercover, the purpose of their voyage is to identify a spy that could be a passenger.

While I like the characters and the plot, there are weaknesses in the writing that were irritating. The time period is supposed to be between WWI and WWII but it isn't evident, and the author used some descriptions over and over. For instance, most characters at one time or another had "a sparkle in their eye" or "sparkling" eyes. Editor please!

49clue
Edited: Apr 7, 2023, 8:28 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: Rating of 4 plus
My Rating - 4.5

Hamnet by Maggie O'Farrell



There isn't much I can say about this that hasn't been said. The writing is so beautiful, the characters, particularly the child who will die, are so real you think you can reach out and touch them. This is one book that deserves the hype it's received, the development of Anne Hathaway alone makes it a worthy read.

50clue
Edited: Apr 8, 2023, 9:32 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4



Painting Title: Lady With An Ermine

Book Title: The Night Portrait

The author is the American art historian Laura Morelli, a Harvard graduate who also taught there ten years. This is an historical novel telling the story behind the painting Lady With An Ermine. The subject is thought to be Ceccilia Gallerani, about 16, and mistress to the Duke of Milan. DaVinci served as painter to the Duke's court during the 1490s and it is accepted that he did the painting during that time.

The plot covers DaVinci's decision to leave Florence and journey to Milan, the painting of the portrait, Gallerani's life once she left the court, and what happened to the painting during WWII. The WWII period included following a German conservator (a woman character, not an actual person), and a young American soldier (not an actual person) who was assigned to the Mouments Men.

The book has several time lines which I normally complain about, but this is a good example of how those can be handled. When a new chapter begins there is a banner with the chapter number, name of the character we will be following, the location, and the date. No where am I now?

The painting was returned to the Czartoryski family in Poland after the war, and it can be seen at the Czartoryski Museum in Krakow. Morelli includes some of her resources in the book, but because there are many so a complete list is available on her website. This is the first book I've read by her but I have more on my TBR and look forward to them.



51dudes22
Apr 7, 2023, 8:07 am

>49 clue: - We just read this for book club and had an interesting discussion about it. The person who picked the book did a lot of research which was very interesting too. She said there are a lot of video interviews available with the author available because the book came out during covid so that was the only way.

52clue
Apr 7, 2023, 10:31 am

I read it for book club too. Most liked it as much as I did but there were a couple who chose not to read it due to the child's death. Our club leader reads about 15 to 20 books a month and wants us to have two choices. Most of us just read one and it hurts our discussion because we have 7 members and when they're split between books there isn't much time for discussion of both books.

53dudes22
Apr 7, 2023, 1:08 pm

I'm kind-of the organizer of our book club and I can't imagine having more than one book a month.

54Tess_W
Apr 7, 2023, 2:32 pm

>49 clue: I tried to read it last year, not successful. Still on my shelf for a re-read. Maybe now is the time!

>50 clue: What a great cover. I love books about paintings! Off I go to secure!

Your challenge is a dangerous place to visit if I want to keep a lid on new books!

55clue
Apr 7, 2023, 8:01 pm

>54 Tess_W: Well, it's not the cover, I didn't like it, it's the painting and why it wasn't on the cover I can't imagine. A large part of the book is about WWII and the scramble on both sides to grab the great art pieces and collections.

56clue
Edited: Apr 7, 2023, 8:32 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

Galatea by Madeline Miller



A short story published in book form, this is Madeline Miller's rewrite of Pygmalian. This time the woman is a sculpture brought to life. Interesting that the she becomes the one in control.

57clue
Edited: Apr 9, 2023, 8:53 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

Message From Absalom by Anne Armstrong Thompson



Published in 1975, this is a good example of the romantic suspense genre that was so popular at that time. Susannah, formerly with the CIA, is the owner of an antique store. While on a vacation trip with a group that is currently in Bulgaria she sees a former CIA colleague dressed in workmen's clothes. He sees her too, but immediately turns and quickly walks away. Later he comes to her hotel pleading for help in making sure a message gets to the President, no one else can be trusted. And so the story begins.

I liked this and will read her other 3 books if I run across them. Be aware this was written almost 50 years ago and the same story would be written differently now. When it comes to romance this smart former spy is pretty darn niave, and the book would be more graphic and gritty. The cover above is on Amazon but the original cover shows a stylishly dressed woman sitting alone at a sidewalk cafe and being watched by a man in uniform and a man in a suit in the background. The original cover describes the book better even though Susannah has difficult challenges. Notice on that cover the book is called a thriller, certainly not romantic suspense. But, all said, it's still available today, republished in 2017.

58clue
Edited: Apr 20, 2023, 8:54 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

The Last Garden in England by Julia Kelly



In the early 1900s a wealthy couple hire Venetia Smith, a well known landscape designer, to create a large formal garden at their country manor house. To Mr. Melcourt the garden is primarily a matter of prestige.

In 1944 Beth Pedley, a Land Girl, comes to work on a neighboring farm and delivers produce to the estate, becoming friends with the cook. Part of Highbury House has become a convalescent hospital for soldiers and is being managed by the widow of a decendent of the earlier owners. Smith's garden has been neglected.

In 2021 Emma Lovell, a landscape designer is hired to restore the massive garden to Smith's original design. The current owner, Sydney Wilcox, digs through the house's archives and attic eventually finding among other things Venetia Smith's original map.

Though I could be caught up in the lives of these characters, it was the garden segments I most enjoyed. As the garden changed, the lives of the women changed too, though usually in predictable ways. The chapters jump from one time period to another and I found it difficult to remember who the minor characters were since each time period had several. Still, I found it an enjoyable read for a couple of stormy days.

59clue
Edited: Apr 23, 2023, 7:10 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Alpha D
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

The Last Thing He Told Me by Laura Dave



Owen and Hannah have been married a year. His 16 year old daughter from a previous marriage lives with them, the marriage ended when his wife died after being struck by a car.

When Owen becomes unusally stressed and distant he tells Hannah there are problems with new software development at work. There definately were problems at work, big ones, but there was also a lot more to know about Owen than Hannah knew.

I found the first half of the book suspenseful and hard to put down. In the last half the pace slowed. The ending itself was okay, but rather lackluster.

60clue
Edited: May 27, 2023, 11:15 am

Origin - Library
CAT - Kiddie Cat
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4



Aesop's Fables by Charles Santore

A picture book of 24 Aesop's fables with beautiful full page illustrations by Santore. Santore's first job was with TV Guide where he illustrated the magazine's covers. Later he began illustrating new versions of children's classics for which he became famous.

61clue
Edited: May 27, 2023, 1:37 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Random CAT
BINGO: No
My Rating - DNF



A Suitable Vengeance by Elizabeth George

After I started this I realized I had tried it before. I was pretty determined to stick with it but couldn't figure out where the plot was going. About halfway through I looked at reviews on LT and discovered it was a prequel! The edition I had did not show anywhere it was a prequel and neither did the series list I had looked at. Since that irritated me, and I don't like prequels, I gave it up!

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Random CAT
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



Next in the series was much better! Lynley investigates the death of a college student at Cambridge where her father is on the faculty. She doesn't know her father or his wife very well because she has been living with her mother in another city. Elena is smart, engaging and deaf. When her body is found in a wooded area near her dorm, it sends shockwaves throughout the community. I liked the Cambridge setting though it may have supplied more suspects than needed.

62clue
Edited: May 27, 2023, 1:31 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Alpha C
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice

This is a short post-apocalyptic novel that takes place in Northern Canada. The setting is in a small Annishinaabe community and Rice has created very likeable and realistic characters. As with other novels of this genre, it all begins when mechanical devices begin to fail and comes to the apex when the first, expected, and dreaded outsider shows up. It ends with a violent death and a decision that I think could lead to a good sequel though at this point, it was first published five years ago, there isn't even talk of one.

63rabbitprincess
May 27, 2023, 5:01 pm

>62 clue: Good news! There is a sequel coming out this year: Moon of the Turning Leaves

64clue
May 27, 2023, 6:49 pm

>63 rabbitprincess: Oh, that's fantastic. Thanks, another book to look forward to!

65clue
Edited: Jun 3, 2023, 6:31 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Kiddie Cat, Alpha Cat, K
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0



Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo

I've finished Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo, a chapter book for 4th and 5th grade readers. Opal has had a rough time for a little girl. Her mother abandoned Opal and her dad, and then her dad, a preacher, uprooted Opal and moved to Florida. Opal misses her old friends and has a hard time making new ones. That begins to change when she brings a rather ugly stray dog home from a shopping trip to the Winn-Dixie.

66beebeereads
Jun 4, 2023, 5:21 pm

>62 clue: >63 rabbitprincess: So glad to hear about the upcoming sequel! I listened Moon of the Crusted Snow which added immensely to the atmospheric writing. I'll likely do the same with the new work.
Thanks for the info!

67VivienneR
Jun 6, 2023, 12:49 am

>62 clue: & >63 rabbitprincess: Wonderful to hear there is going to be another book from Waubgeshig Rice. I really enjoyed Moon of the Crusted Snow.

Next time I read it I'll listen to audio like >66 beebeereads: recommends.

68clue
Edited: Jun 20, 2023, 11:48 am

Origin - Library
CAT - Book Club, Alpha B
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



Better Luck Next Time by Julia Claiborne Johnson

In 1938 Wade dropped out of Yale when the family money was lost in the Depression, and went West to work. Handsome and friendly, he ended up on the Flying Leap dude ranch in Reno, Nevada. The ranch catered to wealthy women needing to establish the six weeks residency requirements for divorce.

All went well for Wade until Nina, an heiress who pilots her own plane and has come for her third divorce, and childlike and spoiled Emily who is trying to make it through her first, arrive and become friends. Wade takes them on trail rides, chauffers them to town, and breaks the hardfast rule not to become personally involved with a guest.

I had trouble settling into this and thought it boring for awhile. The description of it claims it is hilarious but I didn't think so. There are amusing moments, but it isn't comedy. It was the ending that made me glad I stuck with it. Wade returned to Tennessee and a lifetime later gives a poignant summation of what happened to the three and to the beloved owners of the ranch once they were seperated.

69clue
Edited: Jul 16, 2023, 2:38 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Random Cat (Walls)
BINGO: Regional Author
My Rating - 4.0



If These Walls Had Walls by James Morgan

In 1989 James Morgan bought a house in the Hillcrest neighborhood in Little Rock. His home at 501 Holly was a 1920s era home and soon after he and his family moved in he became interested in learning about the previous seven owners. As a journalist he was prepared to uncover their stories and it amazes me how successful he was. There is much more here than just names and numbers. As he relates the family stories, a record of the social and cultural changes the families experienced through a century of living is related in a heartfelt way.

70thornton37814
Jul 4, 2023, 9:42 am

Just saying "hello" as I make my catch-up rounds.

71clue
Edited: Jul 17, 2023, 8:56 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Alpha B
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



The Windsor Knot by S.J. Bennet

This is the first book in Her Majesty the Queen Investigates series. Queen Elizabeth is 91 and as sharp as ever. The morning after she had dinner with a small number of guests she is horrified to learn one of them, a young professional muscian she had danced with, died during the night and may have been murdered.

Once the law enforcement investigation begins, she becomes more and more bothered with the track the investigators are taking. The interplay between the Queen and the investigators is so much fun! When she asks a question their response is always of the don't bother your pretty little head with such things type. And she doesn't, she just quietly begins her own investigation by sending out her assistant, a young woman with a military background, to do the legwork.

All of the characters are well done. I like how Bennett portrayed the Queen and her relationship with Prince Phillip as well as her relationship with her employees. The opening gives us insight into her private thoughts about being at her beloved Windsor and her reluctance to return to Buckingham Palace making her a far more realistic character than we usually see. I didn't think the mystery was particulary interesting but I didn't care, it's the characters and the interplay among them that I liked. I have the second in the series on my Kindle and look forward to seeing what the Queen has to get involved in the next time.

72clue
Edited: Jul 17, 2023, 10:30 pm

I'm showing I only posted 1 book for February although I read 6 and posted them everywhere else! Since I started taking care of my sister with dementia, I've had a hard time keeping my thread up to date (obviously!).

Origin - Library
CAT - Historical Fiction, Random CAT
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5

Read in February



Murder at Wedgefield Manor by Ruth Neubauer

I enjoyed this, the second book in the Jane Wunderley series, more than the first. It takes place in 1926 England at a country manor house where murder, intrigue and romance abound! My only criticism is the ending was too dramatic. There were a few loose ends and I suspect they will be closed in the following book in the series.

73thornton37814
Jul 19, 2023, 8:51 am

>72 clue: I enjoy that series. I will be reading Intrigue in Istanbul soon as it is checked out from the university library.

74clue
Edited: Jul 23, 2023, 3:56 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



The Librarian Spy by Madeline Martin

In 1943 Ava is working at the Library of Congress in the Rare Book Room, a job she loves. Unexpectedly she is offered a job with the OSS (Office of Strategic Services). If she accepts, and she does, she will be assigned to information gathering, a covert operation. Ava was recruited based on her fluency in German and French and her ability to run a mimeograph machine. She will live through the war in Lisbon.

Helene, later to be called Ellen, lives in Lyon, France. Lyon has been occupied territory for six months. She and her husband Joseph recently argued and he left their apartment angry. Previously unknown to her, Joseph is a member of the Resistance and has been arrested. Helene is driven to become part of the Resistance too and will be placed in an apprenticeship at a printing press helping print and distribute their newspaper.

The story follows Ava, Helene and others they knew, mostly women, through 1945. This is Martin's second book, I read the first last year and enjoyed it as well. I decided to give this 3.5* primarily because I would like for Ava and Helene to have more depth and for the writing to be less cluttered. It's a good read though and I'll read her next book when it comes out.

75clue
Edited: Jul 25, 2023, 12:01 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



Orhan's Inheritance by Aline Ohanesian

Kemal, who founded a successful family rug making business leaves behind a confusing will. He skips over his son and leaves the business to his grandson Orhan and his house to a woman no one in the family has heard of. Stranger still is that the woman lives in Los Angeles where to their knowledge Kemal had never been.

It's important to Orhan that the home go to his father. He decides the only way to get to the bottom of the mystery is to go to Los Angeles and find out who this woman is. When he finds her, she's reluctant to talk until several days have passed. Although she had known Kemal as a child, it's when they were young adults that the story begins. It takes place at the beginning of WWI during the Christian Armenian genocide and her story will have a more devastating effect on Orhan's family than he could ever have imagined.

I appreciate that the book places a focus on a part of history that I was only vaguely aware of. It isn't a book I expect to reread, but I'm glad to have read it once.

76Tess_W
Jul 26, 2023, 11:03 pm

>75 clue: Sounds like a good one to me! Going on my WL. I teach a small unit of that time period so it will be nice to read some fiction focusing on that time period.

77clue
Jul 29, 2023, 1:16 pm

>76 Tess_W: I read it for book club and I don't think I would have known about it otherwise. There are some sad scenes during the war years but you're used to reading those, I'll be interested to see how you like it.

78clue
Edited: Aug 4, 2023, 1:03 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - No
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



The Dover Cafe at War by GinnyBell

The Castle family lives in Dover, just across the English Channel from France when WWII begins. The family consists of mom Nellie and her six adult or almost adult children. She is widowed and the family makes their livelihood by owning a small, but busy cafe where Nellie's daughter Marianne is the chief cook.

Marianne lives with a great deal of strife because as a teen she had a child out of wedlock. She was and still is badly treated by some and even worse, her innocent 10 year old son is as well. She did not tell the truth about who the father was and this secret is about to unravel. Not only will Marianne be affected by the exposed lie, so will others in her family.

The story of the family is written against the backdrop of the war. As a port city Dover was often under assault. The primary characters are well written, especially Nellie. She's a brash and forceful personality but has become that way having full responsibility for providing for her family. Her husband, who died before the book begins, suffered from mental injury during the previous war and wasn't able to provide much support.

Thanks to JayneCM for pushing this off my shelf where it had been since early in the year after a purchase at my favorite used book store. Her review of it caused me to read it and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Although it could be a standalone, I'll continue with the series.

79clue
Edited: Aug 4, 2023, 2:28 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT - Alpha M
BINGO: No
My Rating - 4.0



Murder in Chianti by Camilla Trinchieri

When the beloved wife of former NYPD detective Nico Doyle dies, he honors her wishes to be buried in her small hometown of Gravigna in Tuscany. During their years together Nico and Rita visited Italy regularly and with her death her family is the only family he has. With no reason to stay in New York, Nico moves near Rita's sister and brother-in-law.

One morning after settling into his small home Nico hears a gunshot and discovers a man's body in the woods nearby. The local maresciallo has only worked one murder investigation and when he learns of Nico's background he asks him to help. Reluctantly, Nico agrees.

Trinchieri has written a good character in Nico, a kind and decent man who has become a bit lost with the death of his wife and the sudden ending of his career. The setting is a place where all things revolve around grapes and wine. The murder itself carries plenty of surprises. I'm requesting the next in the series from ILL today!

80Tess_W
Aug 5, 2023, 7:26 pm

>79 clue: My friend bought me this at the airport when she traveled to Italy---it's still on my TBR!

81beebeereads
Aug 6, 2023, 10:44 am

>79 clue: On my list it goes...next time in the mood for an Italian setting. Could be today! If only I didn't have so many to finish before their due dates. ahhh, a good problem to have.

82thornton37814
Aug 6, 2023, 3:18 pm

>79 clue: We've mostly been getting that series at work so I've read them. I only need to read the current one.

83JayneCM
Aug 11, 2023, 8:08 am

>78 clue: Glad you enjoyed it. Although there are so many of these type of homefront WWII books, I really enjoyed the family dynamic in this one.

84clue
Edited: Sep 2, 2023, 5:48 pm

Origin - Library
CAT -
BINGO: No
My Rating - 3.5



The Bitter Taste of Murder by Camilla Trinchieri

Once again former NYPD detective Nico Doyle assists the local carabinieri investigate murder. In this case it's actually two related murders. The first is of a wealthy wine critic and the second his mistress. He was murdered before she was.

The lower ranking and younger carabinieri plays an essential role solving the murder. He is very good at digital research and finds information online, including financial, that helped solve the murder. His superior, about thirty years older, would never have thought of doing digital research. Now that I've thought it over, I think it's unusual for me to see digital sources used in mysteries. Maybe it's just a matter of reading more mysteries that are set in historic time periods.

Although I didn't like this book quite as much as the first, I enjoyed it and will continue with the third book, Murder on the Vine.

85clue
Edited: Sep 11, 2023, 3:14 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - KiddieCat
BINGO: STEM
My Rating - 4.0



DKfindout! Coding by James Floyd Kelly

Although this is a children's book I think most adults could learn something from it. There are two timelines that give the history of coding, beginning with the binary system in 1679, and the history of computers, beginning in 500 BCE with the abacus.

Each topic is covered on seperate pages in short pieces with colorful illustrations, making it very easy to read. I was glad to see the contributions of many women to digital progress beginning with Ada Lovelace in 1842. There is also a helpful glossary.

I recommend this to anyone of any age who would like to have a simple explanation of how the digital age got here. This is so well done I'm going to take a look at the other books my library has in the DKfindout! series.

By the way, if you were working in the eighties, you'll see important but forgotten words you knew then. Remember Fortran?

86Tess_W
Sep 12, 2023, 4:33 pm

>85 clue: I will look for this!

87clue
Dec 3, 2023, 3:14 pm

Origin - Library
CAT - Random Cat
BINGO:
My Rating - 3.5



Westering Women by Sandra Dallas

In 1852 eligible women are needed as wives to men who are working the gold mines in the West. Maggie is in danger in Chicago, secretly applies, and days later she and her small daughter begin the journey with 43 others. Within days some decide the 2000 mile journey will be beyond their capability. Along the way others will drop out, some will be injured, become sick, and even die. A fraction of those that began will finish the journey.

88clue
Edited: Dec 6, 2023, 8:25 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT :
BINGO:
My Rating - 4.0



Turning Pages by John Sargent

John Sargent grew up in Montana, an unlikely beginning for a man that would spend 40 years of adult life in the publishing business in the East. The stories he tells are interesting and entertaining and include what his daily work in both large and small companies was like. He tells about his experiences with well-known authors, celebrities and Donald Trump. Sargent came across to me as a likeable person with his own point of view of what a publishing company should be. By the way, he was fired from his last job over supporting the company’s employees for benefits, including pay, during and after Covid.

89clue
Edited: Jan 1, 2024, 10:51 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT : No
BINGO: Journalist
My Rating - 4.0

Did not post, read in February



Big Russ and Me by Tim Russert

This book was published two years before the authors death in 2004. At the time Russert was one of the most respected people working in television journalism. In this memoir he returns to his childhood in Buffalo, New York in the 1950s and recalls life with his father, Big Russ. He tells how his dad worked two jobs for 30 years with no complaint (one of those jobs being sanitation work), and how he taught his son respect, loyalty, and responsibility. It' a beautiful tribute to a common, hardworking man.

90clue
Edited: Dec 31, 2023, 11:18 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT :
BINGO:
My Rating

Did not post, read in February



The Stranger in the Woods by Michael Finkel

Christopher Knight left the home where he grew up, got into his old car and drove to woods where he would live unknown for 27 years. It's a true and incredible story. He lived by his wits which included breaking into vacation homes, finding food and "parts" to make various types of "equipment" for his tent, he took nothing with him. Staying alive, not speaking to anyone, but living through two decades of Maine winters would have previously seemed not just unlikely but impossible.

91clue
Dec 31, 2023, 11:31 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT : No
BINGO: No
My Rating 3.5

Did not post, read in October



James Patterson: The Stories of My Life by James Patterson

Patterson tells his life story in small pieces, most 2 or 3 pages long. Includes consideration of becoming a priest, his almost accidental but very successful career in publishing, two marriages (his first wife died young), being a father, the surprise of becoming a mega selling writer, and the controversy of using co-authors. He comes across to me as a kind person dedicated to his family.

92clue
Edited: Dec 31, 2023, 12:01 pm

Origin - Shelf
CAT :
BINGO:
My Rating 4.0

Did not post, read in November



The Yellow-Lighted Bookshop by Lewis Buzbee

A memoir by a bookseller, book rep and book lover.

93clue
Edited: Jan 1, 2024, 10:50 am

Origin - Shelf
CAT :
BINGO:
My Rating 3.0

Read in February 2023



What A Picture's Worth by Susan Page Davis

A cozy mystery, part of the Creative Woman Mysteries Series. The protagonist owns an arts and crafts supply store. The upstairs rooms in the store are rented to artists for use as their studio. The mystery revolves around the murder of one of the artists.

95clue
Jan 1, 2024, 12:47 pm

Finally caught up! I'm hoping posting here goes better next year. I keep an Excel spreadsheet that is my primary record and gets posted first. On LT it depends on my time.