alsvidur's 2026 list

Talk75 Books Challenge for 2026

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alsvidur's 2026 list

1alsvidur
Edited: Dec 28, 2025, 5:19 pm

Hello and welcome back again! For the 17th year, I will be recording what I read - mostly so I can remember if I read it already or not. My reads are mostly contemporary romance, fantasy, non-fiction about horses, and non-fiction about other animal species. For you number lovers, it's DDC 813, 823, and 636; LoC PS, SF, PR, PZ, and QL. I read around 200 books a year. For the past few years, my statistics have remained fairly steady, so as much I would love to say I will explore new genres and write thorough reviews, it is unlikely to happen.

I am Emilie, a veterinary nurse in Michigan. I have a Rhodesian ridgeback, DSH, and mustang. I enjoy riding dressage, working equitation, and liberty work with my pony and teaching my dog English. (She communicates with sound-board buttons a la Bunny and Stella.) Aside from working in an emergency veterinary hospital, I am the secretary of a veterinary medical association.

2drneutron
Dec 29, 2025, 6:53 pm

Welcome back, Emilie!

3PaulCranswick
Dec 29, 2025, 9:31 pm

Welcome back, Emilie. Your obvious love of animals and the equine variety in particular is infectious.

4alsvidur
Dec 29, 2025, 10:57 pm

I already did the 2025 stats but miraculously read two books the last week of the year, so they are going here.



Book #: 1
Title: Farm Animals and Working and Sporting Breeds
Author: Dorothy Childs Hogner
Genre: Non-fiction, animals
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 1943
Acquisition: 11 years ago
Rating: 3.5

A summary of breeds of livestock (and half of it on dogs) that existed in the mid-1940s and some standards for each. Want to know how many gallons of milk a Jersey had to produce in 1942 to get a register of merit? How about how many pounds of piglets at weaning for a Duroc sow? The illustrations are unique. I wish it covered more livestock and less dogs, but it was still mildly interesting.



Book #: 2
Title: Scentwork for Horses
Author: Rachael Draaisma
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: 1 month ago
Rating: 2.5

A briefing on how to introduce tracking an owner's trail to a horse. Half on enrichment and general olfaction, half on introducing trailing. Many photos. Kind of disappointing - there could have been a much larger portion on enrichment for this.

5HorseNerd
Jan 1, 10:00 am

Hi Emilie!

I'm glad to see someone else who loves horse books so much! Looking forward to seeing what you read this year.

6alsvidur
Edited: Jan 2, 7:40 pm

After kidding a coworker about her lack of knowledge of rare dog breeds, she challenged me to learn more about identifying some zoo species. We're starting with aye-ayes, lesser primates, and some monkeys - but there are still hundreds. The first stop is the kids section at my local library.



Book #: 3
Title: Extremely Weird Animals: Aye-Aye
Author: Lisa Owings
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2014
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Supposedly for grades 3-7, I would stick this in an elementary school, not in a jr high library.

Aye-ayes are lesser primates in their own family - they were once tossed in the rodent family because they are the only primate whose teeth grow continuously throughout their life. This is because they chew through wood to eat grubs. They find the grubs by tapping their spooky looking middle fingers against wood. Using echolocation, they can hear bugs moving in the wood and hear the change in wood noises when they tap the bug tunnels/hollows in the wood. They also eat fruits and nuts and are pretty non-specific in their habitat on Madagascar - as long as there are trees, they are OK.



Book #: 4
Title: Animal Safari: Lemurs
Author: Kari Schuetz
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2013
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

An early-reader book for grades K-1.

Photos of lemurs accompany 1-2 short sentences on each page double.



Book #: 5
Title: Living in the Wild: Primates: Lemurs
Author: Claire Throp
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2011
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Classification, habits, behavior, and sustainability of lemurs are briefly explored. This book had a higher rating until I read another in the same series and found out they used a lot of the same text and simply swapped out species examples and photos. There are over 100 lemur species with huge variations in habitat, diet, and behaviors, so this doesn't go into great detail.



Book #: 6
Title: Living in the Wild: Primates: Monkeys
Author: Claire Throp
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2012
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

A bit scattered - there are SO many monkey species to choose from - but not a bad introduction to classification and habits of monkeys in general.



Book #: 7
Title: Fun Facts About Monkeys
Author: Julie Murray
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

The fastest, smallest, loudest, smelliest, etc, monkeys are profiled in a few sentences with large clear photos. Slightly more engaging that the level 1 Dash! book on lemurs.



Book #: 8
Title: EnDANGERed Monkeys
Author: Molly Aloian
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2007
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Covers the basics about monkeys but also quite a range in terminology (from folivore and forbs to backbone and capture). Most photos are labeled with the species names to help with ID. Big hints on identifying where a monkey is from (Old World has noses pointing down and forward, skin pads on their bums, and opposable thumbs while New World species had nostrils pointing sideways, no skin pads, and no opposable thumbs). I'm not entirely in agreement about the author's stances on people interacting with monkeys (not everyone who uses them in research, has them as pets, or uses them as working animals will 'hit the animals or yell at them') - I'd perhaps focus more on their loss of habitat.



Book #: 9
Title: Monkeys and Other Primates
Author: Rebecca Sjonger
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2005
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

With the same co-author and publisher as EnDANGERed Monkeys (above), a lot of the information and style is the same. This one is a bit more basic/broad in terms of what information is covered so it remains more basic for younger readers.

7alsvidur
Edited: Jan 4, 12:14 pm

I've read more in this week than I have the past month....



Book #: 10
Title: Children of Blood and Bone: Orisha #1
Author: Tomi Adeyemi
Genre: YA fantasy
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2018
Acquisition: reread
Rating: 4



Book #: 11
Title: Children of Virtue and Vengeance: Orisha #2
Author: Tomi Adeyemi
Genre: YA fantasy
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2019
Acquisition: 5 years ago
Rating: 4



Book #: 12
Title: Children of Anguish and Anarchy: Orisha #3
Author: Tomi Adeyemi
Genre: YA fantasy
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: 10 days ago
Rating: 3

I waited a very long time for this series to be completed - so long I almost forgot about it. I rated #1 a lot higher than now, but back in 2018 this type of fantasy was new - now the market is oversaturated. I guess that means it should keep it's original rating of 5 stars, but I'm going to leave it for now.

Zelie is on a quest to bring magic back to the kingdom of Orisha. She is aided by her brother Zaine, the escaped princess Amari, and the prince Inan (although he is not sure he wants to help and would really rather stop magic altogether.) Once she brings magic back, there are some large unintended consequences everyone must deal with. In the final book, she and her team are kidnapped by a foreign nation to grant more power to their leader.

The final book has things happen much more quickly than the rest. The author leaves a lot of questions unanswered but I can't fault her for it since life can be like that.



Book #: 13
Title: Second Chance Romance: Harlot's Bay #2
Author: Olivia Dade
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

Karl and Molly missed their chance in high school. When Molly sees an obituary for Karl 20 years later, she goes back to her home town. As Karl is not actually dead, he takes this opportunity to try to get Molly to stay with him.

I didn't read this on release day - I was a bit put off by the dud of ZomRomCom - but I am so glad I picked it up. I loved the town and characters of the first book and the second is more of the same: quirky and hilarious characters and moments, learning about being human, a bit of romance, funny monster smut comedy, and characters that are middle-aged. That being said, I am super interested in the author trying to write YA - the 20-page introduction was so emotionally spot-on that I kept having flashbacks to my own childhood. I knocked down a half star because the usual romance cardboard stereotypes of 'why won't they just have a conversation' cam into the plot (although they were defended by the author).



Book #: 14
Title: Unplug: How to Break Up with Your Phone and Reclaim Your Life
Author: Richard Simon
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 302 / PZ
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

In this long-form article, Simon discusses his choice to turn off his cell phone when not actively using it and interviews others that switched to flip phones, don't have cell phones, or otherwise simply turn off their phones when not in use. It was an easy, short read, and would make a decent introduction to someone interested in the concept, but has no new information for those that are actively in the process of ditching their phones. This was also built for those who wish to decrease their phone use only - not just social media, or tech in general, or any other iteration. It didn't have a lot of stats or medical knowledge or anything that would inspire one to decrease their time on their phone aside from constant reminders of missing out on your child's life. There was also a bit of self-promotion that I wasn't a fan of, but not enough to mar the rating in general.

8norabelle414
Jan 5, 1:51 pm

Happy New Year, Emilie!

9alsvidur
Jan 6, 12:38 pm

Thanks Nora!



Book #: 15
Title: My Horse of the North
Author: Bruce McMillan
Genre: Non-fiction, horses - picture book
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 1997
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

An introduction to life in Iceland by following Margret and her pony as they prepare for the yearly sheep roundup. I'm not sure Icelandic is the easiest language to pick up for this format though.



Book #: 16
Title: Decorated Horses
Author: Dorothy Hinshaw Patent
Genre: Non-fiction, horses - picture book
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2015
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

I really like the concept but the descriptions of each tack set let me down - it lacked details and seemed to just be words to go with the illustrations.

10PaulCranswick
Jan 6, 8:57 pm

Plenty of monkey business over here, Emilie! 15 books in 6 days is quite the start.

11alsvidur
Jan 7, 9:30 am

>10 PaulCranswick: Some are easy-readers and I debated even including them, but I do want to keep track of 'did I read this yet or not?', so I tossed them in. I have even more monkey books to log later this week!

12alsvidur
Jan 10, 12:56 pm



Book #: 17
Title: Divine Rivals
Author: Rebecca Ross
Genre: YA
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5



Book #: 18
Title: Ruthless Vows (Divine Rivals #2)
Author: Rebecca Ross
Genre: YA
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

This was a beautiful duology with loads of atmosphere - Victorian/steampunk/edge of WWI - and lovely writing.

Iris and Roman are rivals at a newspaper. Iris writes letters to her brother, off to war, but the letters are received by Roman. They start writing back through magical typewriters, but Iris has no idea that Roman is the one writing to her. When war breaks out between the gods, they head to the front as correspondents and try to bring awareness of the war back to their hometown.



Book #: 19
Title: Aye-Ayes: Nocturnal Animals
Author: Julie Murray
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2017
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

An easy-reader for children with lots of large photos. A fairly unsettling beginning: "It is dark. They aye-ayes are awake. Can you see them?" with one of the creepiest photos of an aye-aye I've seen (and I've been looking at a lot lately.)



Book #: 20
Title: Go Wild! Lemurs
Author: Alli Brydon
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Visually stimulating (you can take that as good OR bad) facts about lemurs. The phots are captioned well.



Book #: 21
Title: Monkey: Spotlight on Nature
Author: Melissa Gish
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Fairly disorganized, lots of white space, simple and clean



Book #: 22
Title: Black Sheep
Author: Georgette Heyer
Genre: Romance, historical
Classification: 823 / PR
Pub date: 1966
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Abigail is trying to keep her favorite niece and ward from attaching herself to someone Abigail thinks is simply a fortune-hunter. When the beau's uncle comes to town - and displays shocking lack of regard for good manners - Abigail can't determine if she can get the uncle to stop the youths, if she can have feelings for the uncle herself, or if this will all end in disaster.



Book #: 23
Title: Duke of Sin: Maiden Lane #10
Author: Elizabeth Hoyt
Genre: Romance, historical
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2016
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

The Duke of Montgomery is kinda evil. Bridget becomes his housekeeper to track down blackmail material he is holding over her birth mother.



Book #: 24
Title: Living Wild: Lemurs
Author: Melissa Gish
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Clear, with interesting sidebars, easy to follow, lots of mentions of moves/docs/books to check out for more information



Book #: 25
Title: Living Wild: Monkeys
Author: Melissa Gish
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

While much more broad than the lemur book (and is being so, losing some of the engagingness), still good enough that I would probably recommend this series to someone looking for animal books for upper elementary school kids.

13alsvidur
Jan 11, 2:29 pm



Book #: 26
Title: Death of a Racehorse: An American Story
Author: Katie Bo Lillis
Genre: Non-fiction horses
Classification: 798 / SF
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 5

Was the 5 star rating due to evocative language, unique plot, etc? No. It was for the incredibly hard job of critiquing an industry without completely turning off those involved within the industry. It managed to convey both that they are issues with horse racing and also to say that there are no easy answers - no one thing that can fix it all, not even abolishing the concept entirely. She managed to report the greyness, not just picking black or white.

Through following Baffert's (a famous trainer) frequent drug overages and the FBI operation that got a few horse trainers and unscrupulous vets into jail on technicalities, she covers the wider picture of racing's ills without losing focus of the horse nor jumping into PETA territory. In at least two instances, she called me out: one, for guessing who her sources might be, and two, for disregarding the purpose/feelings of those who have complaints about racing (horse sports, animals in general, etc etc) but who are 'outsiders' who use incorrect terminology (pet peeve of mine in writing) and have no direct experience. There are some thoughts to chew on in here.

14alsvidur
Jan 11, 3:39 pm



Book #: 27
Title: Aye-Ayes (Weird and Wonderful Animals)
Author: Emma Bassier
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

An introduction to non-fiction for young readers. The 'draw' for this series is apparently there are QR codes in each chapter that will take you to videos or activities.



Book #: 28
Title: Aye-Ayes (Curious Creatures)
Author: Gail Terp
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Elementary level non-fiction. Females reproduce only 1 infant every 2-3 years and it takes 2 years to fully raise one and send it 'out the door'. While adult eyes are a yellow-orange, the iris of a young is green. They weight 5 lb when fully grown.



Book #: 29
Title: Aye-Ayes (Nocturnal Animals)
Author: Kristin Petrie
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2010
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Middle grades/jr high. The aye-aye has so much flexibility in its middle finger because it has a ball and socket joint instead of a hinge joint. Their long tails (half of their 2-3 foot length) can have hairs that are as long as 9 inches long. They have a third eyelid (unique in the primates, not so much in other orders). Their nests are 60 feet up in thee trees. The is no mating season - year-round breeders. After a 6 month pregnancy, a newborn will weigh 100g. Aye-ayes live 20 years. While other kids books mention interactions between the aye-ayes and people, this one specifically calls out how much damage aye-ayes can to do crops like coconuts. this is also one of the few books on aye-ayes that had more than a sentence per page and had some more meaty information (but still manageable for older kids).

FYI, this publisher has two books called Aye-ayes, both in a series called Nocturnal Animals, but by different authors and for very different reading levels, so be careful which edition you grab.



Book #: 30
Title: Aye-Aye (Library of Awesome Animals)
Author: Colleen Sexton
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

At this point, most of these books are the exact same as each other and are fairly interchangeable.



Book #: 31
Title: Aye-aye: An Evil Omen
Author: Miriam Aronin
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2009
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Here's one that is narrative non-fiction about aye-ayes and a scientist who studied them in the 1980s. Declared extinct in 1935, it wasn't until the 50s that more aye-ayes were found. In the 1960s, an island reserve was formed and 9 aye-ayes were placed there for 'safe keeping.' They have claws instead of nails like other primates. They travel 3 miles a night. There was a photo of the damage they can do to a tree while looking for grubs - it was pretty intense looking. The first aye-aye wasn't bred in captivity until 1992 at the Duke Lemur Lab. Even though aye-ayes are nocturnal, they can still see in color (something a lot of nocturnal animals can't do due to the proportion of rods and cones in their eyes).

15alsvidur
Jan 11, 10:35 pm



Book #: 32
Title: The Mating Game
Author: Lana Ferguson
Genre: Romance, paranormal
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

While lacking a plot, this was a fast and easy read about a contractor shifter and the lumberjack-ish shifter who unknowingly hired her. I do enjoy the silliness of Ferguson's works, even if I am not as interested in werewolf romance as others.

16norabelle414
Jan 12, 3:34 pm

Wow, I wonder what kind of animals your kids are into right now 😂

The zoo where I volunteer just had some baby pygmy slow lorises, which look like aye-ayes (big eyes, long fingers, love to climb) but are not super closely related (they're in the same order but not the same family) and they were soooo cute.

17alsvidur
Jan 12, 7:36 pm

>16 norabelle414: Nora, it's not the kids - it's me! :) My coworker is a vet tech at a zoo and we were comparing our prowess at IDing different breeds of domestic animals vs species of wild animals, so I was challenged to learn about animals related to aye-ayes. (She had spaniels, esp the Boykin, as her task.) Well, aye-ayes are the only one in their genus, and their family is the lemur family. There is a debated number of lemur species - 60-some to over 120 - and apparently the only way to know which species for some is to know where in Madagascar they are hanging out or DNA testing. It makes it hard to make picture ID flash cards, but I'm trying the best I can. I'm getting my next species 'assignment' tonight. I'm hoping it's something other than birds or primates; I know I have no interest in working with either of those. (Caveat: We do see birds at my hospital. I'm good with the cockatiels and smaller and will grudgingly do moderately sized parrots, but I pretty much refuse to work with the macaws and cockatoos.)

Did the slow lorises get disbursed to other zoos or are they still there?

18norabelle414
Jan 13, 5:39 pm

>17 alsvidur: Wow, my mistake! Yes, the slow loris babies (probably adults now!) have their own exhibit in a special nocturnal section. Madagascar has some of the weirdest most unique animals...so fascinating. Excited to find out what your next "assignment" is! I'm still volunteering at the zoo but our education and training support has really degraded over the last 6 years so I feel like I'm not as knowledgeable as I used to be...maybe I should give myself assignments too.

19alsvidur
Jan 15, 10:18 am



Book #: 33
Title: That Librarian: The Fight Against Book Banning in America
Author: Amanda Jones
Genre: Non-fiction, memoir
Classification: 303 / Z
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

Jones has been one of the many librarians that have been targeted by censorship advocates. Their MO is to attack the librarians as 'groomers' and harass them online and in-person.

The low-ish rating is mostly my mistake - I was expecting more non-fiction about censorship efforts recently and not as much memoir. (The final chapter had some tips for fighting censorship.) I would think this book would hit well with those who need support while fighting back against adult bullies. There was a lot of emotion written - a bit too dramatic for me at times, but I can't say I wouldn't feel the same in the same situation.

20alsvidur
Jan 16, 12:35 pm



Book #: 34
Title: A Curse of Shadows and Ice
Author: Catharina Maura
Genre: Romance, fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

I was taken in by the cover and the blurb by Julie Soto. This is another Beauty and the Beast re-telling, but disappointingly referenced the cartoon movie too often. Arabella is taken as bride to the shadow emperor back to his cursed kingdom. She tries to break the curse to save the citizens, but she isn't sure how the curse will be broken (and neither is the emperor). I couldn't get into this at all. I didn't like how unlikable the main character was at the beginning. I'm not sure if the story just was at a lower reading level or what, but it seemed plain. Most reviews gave it higher ratings than I, so it may just be a 'me' thing.

21alsvidur
Jan 16, 8:42 pm

For the horse girls, a lot of Trafalgar Square Publishing books are on sale for the Nook at only $2.99 each - not sure if they are on sale elsewhere, but might be worth it to look.

22alsvidur
Jan 22, 5:40 pm



Book #: 35
Title: Unnatural Ability: the History of Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Thoroughbred Racing
Author: Milton Toby
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 798 / SF
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Toby was a lawyer before he became an author of horse racing history books, and his books reflect his interest. They are focused on the legal aspects and tend to be pretty dry. Toby picked a few seminal moments in horse racing to do a deep dive into the regulation of drug-use. He doesn't go into depth about the ethics or salaciousness or anything except the history. Half of the book is appendices with court documents. While Toby's books are always good for information, I might recommend something a little less soporific - unless you have an abiding interest in the topic or are doing research, in which case his books are spot-on and highly recommended.

23alsvidur
Jan 22, 5:59 pm

So my horse got sick in the middle of all of these; I don't remember too much and already returned some, so I won't be making notes unless something stuck out to me.



Book #: 36
Title: Elephants (Nature's Children)
Author: Anna Prokos
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2018
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 37
Title: Endangered Elephants
Author: Bobbie Kalman
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2005
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 38
Title: Elefantes/Elephants at the Zoo
Author: Finn Ward
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2016
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

This concept is terrific for kids (and adults) learning a new language. I will be looking out for more in this series. One one page, there is a clear picture, and the facing page has a few sentences in English and those same sentences translated into Spanish, so each photo is captioned in both English and Spanish.



Book #: 39
Title: Elephants (Giant Animals)
Author: Marianne Johnston
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 1996
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 40
Title: Elephant: Habitat, Life Cycles, Food Chains, Threats
Author: Will Travers
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 1999
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 41
Title: Tembo Takes Charge
Author: Thea Feldman
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 42
Title: Working Elephants (Nature's Children)
Author: Maggie da Silva
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 1997
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 43
Title: Baby Elephant Joins the Herd
Author: ? American Museum of Natural History is credited on LT
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2019
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 44
Title: Just for Elephants
Author: Carol Buckley
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 45
Title: The Elephant's New Shoe
Author: Laurel Neme
Genre: Picture book
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

A young elephant with a deformed foot struggles until students at a local college build him new shoes. This was very cute.



Book #: 46
Title: Mammals: Large Herbivores (World of Animals)
Author: Pat Morris
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2003
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

While this series does a terrific job explaining relationships between species, genera, etc, it is a bit outdated and excludes a lot of updated research on taxonomy.

24alsvidur
Jan 23, 11:54 am



Book #: 47
Title: Overdue
Author: Stephanie Perkins
Genre: Fiction - romance
Classification: 613 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Ingrid and her boyfriend of 11 years decide to take a month-long break to explore other options before marriage. Ingrid knows just who she wants - her coworker and friend Macon. When Macon rejects Ingrid, she spends the next year reorganizing her life and deciding what she actually wants.

While yes, technically this is a romance, I would put it in the drama/novel section. There is much more focus on dealing with an imploded life than the romance. I loved the settings; when Ingrid repaints, it made me want to go crazy with my walls as well.

25alsvidur
Edited: Jan 23, 1:16 pm



Book #: 48
Title: Asian Elephant: Animals Under Threat
Author: Matt Turner
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2004
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Focuses on conservation in southern Asia



Book #: 49
Title: Elephants! Strange and Wonderful
Author: Laurence Pringle
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Pretty drawings illustrate information about elephants - nicely phrased and well-detailed

26thornton37814
Jan 24, 6:57 pm

>23 alsvidur: It looks like you checked out the entire elephant section in the library!

27PaulCranswick
Jan 25, 9:32 pm

>26 thornton37814: Did you reserve them all by trunk call?

28alsvidur
Jan 26, 9:25 pm

>26 thornton37814: >27 PaulCranswick: I pretty much did! There's the ILL I haven't gone to yet, so that might come later.



Book #: 50
Title: King Bidgood's in the Bathtub
Author: Audrey Wood
Genre: Picture book
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 1985
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Picture book. The king refuses to come out of the bathtub, courtiers try to get him out.



Book #: 51
Title: Throne in the Dark (Villains and Virtues #1)
Author: AK Caggiano
Genre: Fantasy, humor
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Evil Damien is off to release his demon father from entrapment but accidentally has to tote around sunshiney thief Amma. It took a few pages to realize that this is a humorous parody and not a straight fantasy novel. While it was not what I was expecting, it was well done. I may not continue this series even though I would want to: it's too bad you can only read the rest of the books in the series if you have The Bad Place's Unlimited service.



Book #: 52
Title: The Hoof Book: A horse owner's guide to demystifying hoof care
Author: Heather Beauchemin
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

There are very few hoof books for horse owners written by farriers - there are some books for pros by other pros and some for owners, but they are mostly written by journalists. This was a nice introduction that covers not just the usual hoof ailments but how to be a good client, what to keep on hand, how to decipher farrier credentials, etc. This fills the niche nicely.

29alsvidur
Jan 28, 11:13 am



Book #: 53
Title: Love Walked In
Author: Sarah Chamberlain
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Mari goes around to failing bookstores to revive them. She gets sent to a huge old bookstore in London. The current owner/manager is a dude who is mourning the loss of his family and his marriage.

The book and store portion is better than the romance portion, but it was still a decent read. It was a nice change of pace to have the hero not be a magically proficient and intuitive wizard in the sack.



Book #: 54
Title: Saving the Tasmanian Devil: How science is helping the world's largest marsupial carnivore
Author: Dorothy Hinshaw Patent
Genre: Non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2019
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

30 years ago, a contagious tumor was decimating the Tasmanian devil population. This book explains how scientists were working together in different disciples to study and save them. There is detailed information (suitable for kids) about chromosomes and genetics with easy brushes on cancers and conservation.

The Scientists in the Field series is terrific.

30alsvidur
Edited: Jan 30, 6:37 pm



Book #: 55
Title: Tasmanian Devils (Big Buddy Australian Animals)
Author: Julie Murray
Genre: Non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2011
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Beginning non-fiction book.



Book #: 56
Title: Who Would Win? Wolverine vs Tasmanian Devil
Author: Jerry Pallotta
Genre: Non-fiction, animals
Classification: 599 / QL
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

I expected a reality-TV-like book (trashy), but this was a nice surprise. Sure, there are a couple pages at the end that depict an imaginary fight between the species, but the rest of the book compares and contrasts their lifestyles - what they eat, their predators, where they live, their size, their skull and teeth, and a few other things that have little to do with a pretend battle.

31PaulCranswick
Feb 3, 8:31 pm

>30 alsvidur: Interesting, Emilie. I know nothing about either animal to be quite honest.

32norabelle414
Feb 5, 11:10 am

>30 alsvidur: Are you familiar with March Mammal Madness? It's a contest run by biologists every year where they describe what would happen if various mammals (or sometimes non-mammals) had a battle. It's very fun but also very educational because everything is based on real scientific research. I learn sooo much about animals I've never even heard of before.

33alsvidur
Feb 10, 9:56 am

>31 PaulCranswick: Either do I. There wasn't a lot of info on marsupials for little girls in the Midwest to read in the 1980s, so I'm trying to catch up a bit. Wolverines are a different story since they are the mascot of one of the local state universities.

>32 norabelle414: I am; because I lurk on your thread, lol! I didn't follow it last year, but I did the year (two?) before.

I've been having a rough few weeks and haven't felt like reading anything at all, but I have been watching reruns of a TV show and being slightly productive around the home. The only book I've read in the last 2 weeks was an interlibrary loan, so I felt like I had to read it.



Book #: 57
Title: Enshittification: why everything suddenly got worse and what to do about it
Author: Cory Doctorow
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 303 / QA
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

If by 'everything' you mean 'technology, especially the internet', then, sure, the title makes sense. And I'm sure you'll be shocked to learn that the main drivers are monopoly and greed, along with a few clauses in good intentioned laws that have been twisted to accommodate the monopolies. Is any of this shocking? No. But it was still an entertaining read and I did learn that it was the law that was made to protect musicians from the internet pirating that has been twisted to protect anything that is made to work with something else.

34PaulCranswick
Feb 12, 12:12 am

>33 alsvidur: Not sure about the title and I take it that the cover image is not chocolate fudge sundae?!

35alsvidur
Feb 16, 7:26 pm

>34 PaulCranswick: Apparently, it's a term that has taken off with the young crowd. At least according to the author.

36alsvidur
Feb 18, 9:31 am



Book #: 58
Title: Catch Her If You Can
Author: Tessa Bailey
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Eve has had the bad luck of growing up the daughter of the local strip club owner. When she inherits it, she tries to class it up by turning it into a burlesque club and bar, but the nasty little town won't stop looking down on her. When her sister suddenly leaves her with two kids, her old friend Madden steps up to help. Madden just got a job as a pro baseball player and offers a marriage of convenience so the kids can have health insurance. Both Madden and Eve has always had a crush on each other though, so Madden tries to make the marriage for real.



Book #: 59
Title: Chokepoint Capitalism: how big tech and big content captured creative labor markets and how we'll win them back
Author: Rebecca Giblin and Cory Doctorow
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 338 / HD
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

The subtitle really summarizes the book. I don't think I agree that the authors' ideas of monopoly/monopsony busting will work, but I am certainly not a lawyer or economist. The biggest drawback is that this is written in lawyer speak. It made it painfully dry and it took a long time for me to get through this. The focus of this one is copyright/patent law and American economics as a whole with an emphasis on music.



Book #: 60
Title: A Killer Kind of Romance
Author: Letizia Lorini
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813? / PS? (Italian writing in English)
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5/4

Scarlett runs a podcast reviewing crime fiction. A murderer starts killing people in ways based on her reviews. One of the suspects is her new boyfriend, a former bad-boy who came back to town when the murders started. He is thankfully not truly suspected by her so the romance isn't made weird, but nor is it made into a 'catch the killer to clear his name' thing. The character's love for reading and books plays a large part and each chapter is headed by a romance trope and definition that somehow plays into the plot. I grabbed this on a whim at the library, not thinking it would turn out to be great, but it was decently good - I would read something else by the author.

37alsvidur
Feb 25, 10:33 pm



Book #: 61
Title: Two Can Play
Author: Ali Hazelwood
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Gamer Girl and Gamer Boy don't get along for some reason. They are forced to work together to win a contract to design their favorite book series into a video game.



Book #: 62
Title: Information Doesn't Want to Be Free: Laws for the Internet Age
Author: Cory Doctorow
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 301 / KF
Pub date: 2014
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

How to navigate the internet, marketing yourself online, and law regarding such made for artists and creative types. Eh.



Book #: 63
Title: The Fallen and the Kiss of Dusk #2
Author: Clarissa Broadbent
Genre: Fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3



Book #: 64
Title: The Songbird and the Heart of Stone #1
Author: Clarissa Broadbent
Genre: Fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Mishe goes down into the realm of death to resurrect the god of death - but her secret mission by the god of light is to sabotage the warden of the underworld. Mishe obviously falls for the Warden.



Book #: 65
Title: If It Makes You Happy
Author: Julie Olivia
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Michelle takes a break from her real life to manage her dead mother's B&B in a town much like Stars Hollow. Her new neighbor is helpful. This novel was starting to get more hype, but I don't see it. The 90s vibe was getting more attention, but aside from a few overt mentions of 90s items and the lack of cell phones, I didn't feel the era. It was cute but average for me.



Book #: 66
Title: Farriery: Foal to Racehorse
Author: Simon Curtis
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 1999
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

A nice book on farriery focused on racehorses but applicable to all - following a horse from birth (and ALDs) to racing (and performance) to stud farms (and laminitis etc). Lots of illustrations.

38alsvidur
Feb 26, 10:33 am



Book #: 67
Title: Monopolized: Life in the Age of Corporate Power
Author: David Dayen
Genre: Non-fiction, economics
Classification: 338 / HD
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

Each chapter is essentially a magazine article on a different area of the economy that has been monopolized/oligarchized. Nothing is revelatory - we all know there are only a few medical companies, a few airlines, a few hotels, etc etc, and we all know that it stinks. This one was a little boring, actually, but it had a nice framework.

39alsvidur
Edited: Mar 2, 1:27 pm



Book #: 68
Title: The Essential Hoof Book
Author: Susan Kauffmann and Christina Cline
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2017
Acquisition: 6 years ago
Rating: 4

This book is very nicely illustrated with good graphic design. It has the basics of hoof anatomy and the usual disorders (laminitis, navicular, etc). I would recommend it to owners with the following caveat: I can tell the authors are barefoot trimmers, not traditionally trained farriers, and their bias does carry throughout the text. It's not a problem until it gets to the disorders section where it pretty much advises owners to ignore their vets if the vet is saying the horse needs to be euthanized and just try different trimmers. This touches a nerve - the worst part of working emergency is not the euthanasias like everyone thinks, but when the pet needs to be euthanized and the owner refuses, so we are the ones who have to watch the pet slowly suffer and die for days. Aside aside, this book breaks things down clearly and is a good introduction to the topic.



Book #: 69
Title: Pilates Exercise Planner
Author: Gillian Higgins
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: 1 week ago
Rating: 5

Although this was designed to be a companion to Higgins's Pilates for Horses program, it stands perfectly fine on its own. It starts out with a thorough documentation on where your horse is now, spots for you to write how you plan to improve each score, long-term goals, short term goals, weekly planners to break things down, recaps at the end of each month, and a recap/re-evaluation of your horse at the end of 3 months. This breaks things down so well that I am half tempted to buy a few of these and use them as my riding journal for the next year. It makes me want to join her study program as well.



Book #: 70
Title: Exploring Equine Anatomy: A Mindfulness Colouring Book
Author: Gilliam Higgins
Genre: Coloring/Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: unknown
Acquisition: 1 week ago
Rating: 4.5

I would rate it 5 stars, but I want more. It is rare to find an anatomy study book with illustrations of animals in any other position than a stationary lateral view. Each illustration was a drawing in action or a unique view. How many horse anatomy books show the muscle/ligament difference between a trotting saddlebred vs warmblood in extended trot vs piaffe? Or foals? Or mini horses? This is very nicely done, even if a bit simple.



Book #: 71
Title: Sport Horse Conformation: Evaluating Athletic Potential in Dressage, Jumping, and Event Prospects
Author: Christian Schacht
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2012
Acquisition: 9 years ago
Rating: 4

This book focuses on applying conformation to their use in dressage and jumping. The author has some strong opinions. If you are buying a warmblood in Europe based only on photos and video (it happens), this would be obscenely helpful. This book is so very, very, very *German*. I can tell how this guy rides just by his text. If you have a horse that is not a warmblood or at worst a thoroughbred, you are out of luck. If your riding style is more French or American, you are also out of luck. I guess by saying 'out of luck', I'm not saying you won't learn anything, but you can *feel* the disdain this guy has for you/your horse. I did appreciate that this was focused on actual modern athletic goals, and it was simple to follow and understand. It made it easy to take what he was saying, look at a horse's photo, and apply his thoughts.



Book #: 72
Title: Ghost Rider: Saddle Club #24
Author: Bonnie Bryant
Genre: Pony book
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 1992
Acquisition: 15 years ago
Rating: 3.5

The Saddle Club is a horse-themed book series involving a group of friends in the 90s. It may be due to sentimentality and prejudice, but I think the focus on friendship makes this series superior to many others. There are over 100 in the series, not including the young adult spin-off, the spin-off for younger readers, and the special editions, and I'm slowly going through them all as an adult. I stopped reading around #55 when I was younger since I aged out of them around #40.

The three girls go out to visit their friend Kate out West to help her mother plan a fundraiser for a local school. While there, Kate tells them she wants to adopt a mustang, but local legend says that the particular stallion Kate wants is special to the native Americans.

This episode seems like one of the ghostwriters had a super short story that no one picked up to publish, so they focused this book on using their legend idea. There wasn't as much 'Saddle Club' as an introduction to indigenous cultures for little girls.

40HorseNerd
Mar 6, 11:46 am

Yeah Saddle Club!! It's always been my favourite and I collected the whole series lol. Also that colouring book looks really cool! I don't think I've ever seen one with horses in action besides possibly a very standard trot stride.

41alsvidur
Mar 11, 4:18 pm

>41 alsvidur: The Saddle Club is the best, isn't it? I joined the fan club when I was young, saved the stickers, and now it's in the center on my tack trunk lid.

42alsvidur
Mar 11, 4:43 pm



Book #: 73
Title: Slow Dance
Author: Rainbow Rowell
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: 8 months ago
Rating: 4

After being close friends in high school, Shiloh and Cary reconnect at a friend's wedding. They would like to date, but Shiloh is worried that she never amounted to much and Cary is concerned that Shiloh won't be able to handle his Navy career.

It's a realistic romance, not a stock romcom, with sweet characters and pretty writing.



Book #: 74
Title: Words in Deep Blue
Author: Cath Crowley
Genre: YA
Classification: 823 / PZ
Pub date: 2018
Acquisition: 6 years ago
Rating: 4

Rachel lost her brother Cal in a drowning accident. She's struggling in school and with her friends, so her mother sends Rachel to her aunt's in the town she moved from a few years ago. While there, she reconnects with her friends and crush. Rachel recovers from the incident while working with her crush in her crush's family's failing bookstore.

This was well written, pretty, and touching.



Book #: 75
Title: Riding Lessons
Author: Sara Gruen
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2007
Acquisition: Over 16 years ago
Rating: 2

Annemarie's life is falling apart - she got fired, her husband is leaving her, her daughter is a terror, and her dad was just diagnosed with ALS. She moves back to the family riding stable with her daughter, where she runs her parents' business to the ground, alienates her daughter by fooling around with an old boyfriend, and - in a terribly unrealistic portion full of plot holes - tries to hide an old horse from another rider. *

*She finds this old horse that went through an auction house, has someone scan a chip and "call it in", realizes that someone reported this horse dead (in an insurance scam), and then dyes the horse to hide it because apparently the original owners were magically notified and will be back for it?

This was a disappointment after the well-rounded previous two reads. I didn't like the main character, the writing felt flat, and the horse stuff was just off enough to give someone a pat on the back and say 'Very good attempt, dear. Now try again.' I will not be keeping this one.



Book #: 76
Title: The Serpent Prince
Author: Elizabeth Hoyt
Genre: Historical romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2012
Acquisition: 2 months ago
Rating: 3

Lucy stumbles upon a beaten man in the road. The man is a viscount that survived a murder attempt. Lucy and the Viscount fall for each other, but the Viscount has to balance his driving need to revenge with his love for Lucy.

Typical Hoyt - nice way to spend an afternoon.

43alsvidur
Mar 16, 5:55 pm



Book #: 77
Title: Slightly Single
Author: Wendy Markham
Genre: Contemporary romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2002
Acquisition: 2 years ago
Rating: 2



Book #: 78
Title: Slightly Settled
Author: Wendy Markham
Genre: Contemporary romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2004
Acquisition: years ago
Rating: 2.5



Book #: 79
Title: Slightly Engaged
Author: Wendy Markham
Genre: Contemporary romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: years ago
Rating: 2

I can't believe I kept these on my shelf taking up space for over 20 years and moved them a dozen times between residences. Ugh.

While I might not have noticed how terrible Tracey was if I read this series in my early 20s, I certainly do now. The book seems to be about losing weight in New York City while forcing oneself to read classics and how doing those things simply have to make jerky boyfriends commit. Tracey is not very likable - she looks down on her friends, family, and worst of all - herself. In book two, she meets a new boyfriend. In book 3, she is OBSESSED with getting this poor guy to propose. That is the entirety of the book: her mental whining about the proposal (and dieting).



Book #: 80
Title: Life Moves Pretty Fast: Lessons we learned from eighties movies (and why we don't learn them from movies anymore)
Author: Hadley Freeman
Genre: Non-fiction, media
Classification: 791 / PN
Pub date: 2015
Acquisition: 1.5 years ago
Rating: 4.5

Freeman includes humorous asides and writes with enthusiasm about 80s popular movies. What I found different than the usual 80s movies books is that she includes a bit more recent history of film and elucidates WHY we don't get the fun movies like we used to. While my favorite movies are not hers, it was still a fun read. (And it helped me get a Jeopardy question right the next night!)

44alsvidur
Mar 23, 11:04 am



Book #: 81
Title: Cheating at Solitaire
Author: Ally Carter
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2005
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

Julia has made a name for herself as a writer of self-help books for single women. When she bumps into an upcoming actor whose terrible agent decides that telling the press that the two are dating will get his client some buzz, her life is pretty much ruined when she decides that the best thing would be to take this actor to her Midwest hometown and hide out. There are so many plot holes my tires fell off the car. That aside, I can see some of the fun that I enjoy Carter's books for.



Book #: 82
Title: The Wild Card
Author: Stephanie Archer
Genre: Romance
Classification: 823 / PR
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Jordan is happy being a bartender at the preferred watering hole of the local pro hockey team, but her estranged father wants to pass along his ownership of the team to her. She offers him a compromise of learning the ropes, so she is assigned to follow the coach around. Archer's books are great dumb sports romances. While I preferred the stories of some of the other couples in the series, this was still done well.



Book #: 83
Title: The War That Saved My Life
Author: Kimberly Brubaker Bradley
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2015
Acquisition: 9 years ago
Rating: 4.5

Ada is relocated from the slums of London into the care of a young spinster in Kent during WWII. Ada has been kept inside her apartment her entire life due to a club foot. Once in the country, Ada begins to ride, read, and grow.

I don't know why this was on my TBR pile for so long - it's written by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley, one of my favorite Saddle Club ghostwriters and journalists, features a girls' passion for horses, and also involves WWII. Bradley did a terrific job; I can see why it won a Newbery honor.



Book #: 84
Title: The War I Finally Won
Author: Kimberly Brubaker Bradley
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2017
Acquisition: 2 months ago
Rating: 4

Ada's clubfoot has been corrected, but her home has been bombed. Along with Susan and her brother, Ada ends up living in the cottage of Lady Thornton. When a German Jewish refugee also moves in to be educated in higher math, tensions are high. Ada is also dealing with the mental fallout from blaming her mother's abuse on her foot - now that her foot is corrected, did she really deserve all that?



Book #: 85
Title: Ride On
Author: Faith Erin Hicks
Genre: Middle grades graphic novel
Classification: 741 / PN
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: 2 months ago
Rating: 3

Victoria moves barns to avoid her best friend and find a lower-key environment. Burned for a fight with her best friend, she rebuffs attempts at friendship from the new barn kids. She regrets it though, when they discover mutual passions for an old TV show.

The perspective of someone who enjoys horses but is growing out of them is sure different. This is a solid entry into the modern pony book pantheon, but not strong enough for me to keep it. It used horses more as a launch pad for the inter-personal relationships between the kids.



Book #: 86
Title: Adventures at Shelby Stables
Author: Julie Driscoll
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2012
Acquisition: 5 years ago
Rating: 2

I'm assuming this was a companion book for a doll. There is no other way to explain the creepiness of the illustrations. The eyes...the eyes will steal your soul.

Lily Anna moves to her grandparent's ranch where she learns to ride and within a year is showing in grands prix. Uh huh. Sure. In the mean time, she gets bolder with classmates, solves a long-time mystery on the ranch to reunite her grandfather and his brother, tames a horse no one else can, and sells lemonade. You know, as you do.

Oddly, I am most mystified by the vocabulary used. This seems like a book for first or second graders, but it tossed in random vocab words around every other paragraph. Presume, laryngitis, forged, brownstone, etc, are used with otherwise lower-level concepts, storylines, and illustrations.

45alsvidur
Edited: Mar 29, 12:32 pm



Book #: 87
Title: Breed of Giants
Author: Joyce Stranger
Genre: Pony book
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 1966
Acquisition: 7 years ago
Rating: 4

A breeder of Shire horses in the 1960s gets fouled by a run of bad luck, which he blames on a local badger. (Yes, the little wild animal.) Everyone in town is sad about the slow death of agriculture. This is an homage to draft horses and those grumpy old men who keep raising them. It's well written and a bit melancholy. The illustrations are beautiful as well - they remind me a bit of Wesley Dennis.



Book #: 88
Title: The Jump (Touchstone not working https://www.librarything.com/work/35030354/310094394 )
Author: Natalie Keller Reinert
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: 2 days ago
Rating: 4

Brooke quits college to be a working student (an unpaid apprentice in the horse world) for a big name trainer. She is incredibly naive and is almost all self-taught. She's having problems with her horse on XC at starter level (the lowest level possible in eventing), yet the trainer picks her to come work for him. Things that seem too good to be true usually have a reason behind them though.

I kept waiting for something big to happen, but it's pretty much a novel about a girl experiencing the horse world. It's very real and glances on the Issues Today in the horse world. I don't think those people new to horses would get bogged down, nor would horse people get bored. (Well, they might roll their eyes at how inexperienced Brooke is.) I am eager to pick up Reinert's Eventing series that's been on by TBR - which has a heroine who is supposed to be the opposite of Brooke.



Book #: 89
Title: Happily Never After
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: Romance, contemporary
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Sophie wants to end her engagement, but can't without setting off feuds between the families. Her best friend hires someone to object during the wedding. Eventually, she starts working with Max, saving others from marriages they can't go through with. Eventually, one of the couples they're hired by happens to be Max's ex-girlfriend.

Cute, silly romance.



Book #: 90
Title: The Seat Filler
Author: Sariah Wilson
Genre: Romance, contemporary
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 1.5

Juliet is hired to be a seat-filler and ends up hitting it off with a famous actor. When he wants to date her, she reveals her big secret - she has a pathological fear of kissing. They try to work through it.

This was a bummer of a novel. I couldn't get into the hero because the author made it impossible for anyone to envision ANYONE but Adam Driver (who it's supposed to be fan-fiction about). She sledge-hammered that home every other page. It made me feel creeped out, and I'm not even the subject of this. I could tell the author was also very religious - she brought in religion within the first few chapters and the characters kissed for a few weeks before he proposed. It felt like it was written by someone with zero experience in the real world - like it was a high school girl's fantasy. It would make a great romcom for those who like closed-door romances only, or those who like romcoms with zero spice, or home schooled high schoolers. As an aside, the heroine (a dog groomer) decided to help the hero find his lost dog NOT because there was a dog who was lost and could get hurt, but because she could get brownie points with her crush. I think the author has a lot of potential and her other books might be solid conservative reads, but the weirdness of the stalker-factor made this a no for me.



Book #: 91
Title: The Summer War
Author: Naomi Novik
Genre: Fantasy novella
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2012
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Celia accidentally curses her older brother, knight Argent, to a life without love. She tries to undo the curse and stop a centuries-long war between humans and fairies.

While just a novella, this was a good reminder that I really enjoy truly well-written whole works and not just fluff. Novik is a beautiful writer. I would like to read something with more heft next, but all my library books are silly romances.

46alsvidur
Edited: Mar 30, 2:01 pm

Lula Dean's Little Library of Banned Books
Author: Kirsten Miller
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: 1 week ago
Rating: 4.5

Lula realized that she can get attention by trying to ban books in her small town. She stocks her Little Free Library with what she considers 'proper' reading material (that she purchased for 50 cents at the local Goodwill). When a town prankster removes the books' slipcovers and changes the books inside to banned books, members of the town start finding their sleepy town life upended.

The satire was funny. Yes, most things were too easily solved. I still ended up placing a bunch of tabs on good quotes and concepts I want to return to. Recommended. I wonder why I hadn't heard of this book before stumbling upon it on a display at my local indie bookstore. I also want to check out the author's satire about menopause, 'The Change', even though the description doesn't seem like something I would usually enjoy.

47alsvidur
Edited: Apr 1, 5:01 pm



Book #: 93
Title: Lazy B: Growing up on a cattle ranch in the American southwest
Author: Sandra Day O'Connor
Genre: Memoir
Classification: 347 / KF
Pub date: 2003
Acquisition: 3 years ago
Rating: 3.5

Sandra, the first female Supreme Court justice, and her brother Alan write their memoirs of growing up on their family's large ranch in Arizona/New Mexico during the 1920s and 1930s, along with their family's history in the area. There was very little politics/law involved - it was all stories of the ranch hands and their father's hard work in building the ranch up. While I would not describe O'Connor's writing as beautiful, it was descriptive enough to satisfy those that are looking for 'cowboy' stories.



Book #: 94
Title: Amazon Adventure: How Tiny Fish are saving the world's largest rainforest
Author: Sy Montgomery
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 577 / QH
Pub date: 2017
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

When you think of the aquarium hobby trade in fish, you probably think they we shouldn't be taking wild caught fishes and that we need to work on breeding them instead. Montgomery covers the New England Aquarium's work with local fisherman - who fish instead of farm cattle, mine, or give up - and how it's actually healthier for the local ecosystem than letting the fish all die during yearly draughts.

48alsvidur
Edited: Apr 2, 12:26 pm



Book #: 95
Title: The Right to Repair: Reclaiming the Things We Own
Author: Aaron Perzanowski
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 346 / KF
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Intellectual property, monopolies, and unfair competitive practices have made it difficult to repair things that you buy. Perzanowski details why this should matter. I think he focused on the wrong things - I am interested in learning more, but for swaths of pages, the author was focused on 'word-packing' and didn't include enough specific examples. It took me months to get through, and I was pretty bored.

49alsvidur
Edited: Apr 8, 12:05 pm



Book #: 96
Title: The Dark Lord's Guide to Dating (and Other War Crimes)
Author: Tiffany Hunt
Genre: Romance, humor
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

Satire/humor. I couldn't get into this at all. If I could, I'm sure I would have liked it, but I never disappeared into the story.

Arabella is kidnapped by the villain Kazimir, who forces her to marry him. Arabella discovers she is not so perfect after all. They fall in love and try to defend themselves from the heroes.



Book #: 97
Title: A Girl Like Her
Author: Talia Hibbert
Genre: Non-fiction, technology
Classification: 823 / PR
Pub date: 2018
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

This is a reprinting of one of the author's earlier stories. You can tell that she was not as polished as she is now.

Ruth lives in a small town that has turned her into a pariah. New guy Evan moves next door and finds that Ruth isn't so deserving of her reputation as some would think.



Book #: 98
Title: The Change
Author: Kirsten Miller
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 5

Three women, each at the perimenopause stage of life, find each other - and some magical powers. Jo's hot flashes give her superhero-like heat. The women of Nessa's family have always been able to see ghosts. Harriet snapped when her husband left her and she finally had enough of the workplace patriarchy; learning about the powers of plants and nature turned her into the neighborhood 'witch'. They stumble upon a body of a teenage girl and try to solve the murder, realize there is a potential serial killer out there, and battle injustices to women throughout.

This was terrific. It was nice seeing the low-level rage that has begun to burn in me as a common thing and channeled into appropriate (haha) hobbies. (This is an understatement. It was more than nice.) It touched on certain topical events too - I was surprised to see it a Good Morning America book club pick since I assumed that GMA is fairly conservative. Even though the cover doesn't draw you in and the copy on the jacket wouldn't have inspired me to read this at all, I am so glad I picked it up. The plot flew by, I loved the friendship between the characters, and I gloried in the revenge each of them got. I might send some money and buy a copy for my shelves. I will definitely read more by this author since she's gotten 2 great reviews out of 2 books read.

50alsvidur
Apr 10, 12:46 pm



Book #: 99
Title: And Now, Back to You
Author: BK Borison
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Jackson is a shy radio weather person and is assigned to work with Delilah, an almost manic-pixie-thing who does the TV station's weather. They are supposed to travel to a mountain resort and report on a big snowstorm.



Book #: 100
Title: Blood & Roses Volume 1
Author: Callie Hart
Genre: Dark romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Sloane is searching for her missing sister. Zeth is in the criminal underworld and is shocked when his boss decides to start trafficking women, along with guns, drugs, and laundered money. They ::ahem:: bump into each other.

Ohhhhhh Kay. So *this* is what they call dark romance. Got it. That is some messed up stuff. I thought about DNFing multiple times - there is less than zero plot - but it was like a bad car wreck or something. Not the writing, that was fine, but the topics and characters. It is QUITE a leap from reading The Change a few books ago to this. I really don't know what to rate this.



Book #: 101
Title: The Love Wager
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Hallie meets Jack and has a one-night stand. They are matched on a dating site and start commiserating over dating before agreeing to be each other's wingman. Hallie and Jack are a bit young, so the usual emotional maturity issues were believable. I like the author but think she's done better.

51alsvidur
Apr 11, 8:23 pm



Book #: 102
Title: Till Summer Do Us Part
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Missing log: This showed up on my recommendations, but I read this earlier this year.

OK, so this was completely ridiculous (characters, relationships, plot, everything) but it also ended up being amusing. Scottie's boss thinks she's in a relationship. This is not a terrible thing but when Scottie wins a couples trip - with her boss attending too - she needs to find someone to pretend to be her partner. She finds a friend of a friend who is a budding actor and has some time to help her out. It was so stupid but it did stick with me.

52alsvidur
Apr 11, 8:42 pm



Book #: 103
Title: The Night We Met
Author: Abby Jimenez
Genre: Fiction, romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

You know those little moments where you look back on and wonder what would have happened to your life if you made the other choice? Jimenez focuses on that here. Larissa is out at a concert where two friends of friends are able to take her home. She picks Mike and ends up dating him. His best friend Chris was the better choice, but she didn't know it at the time - only a long time later. She tries to get out of poverty and her family's bad choices and Chris struggles with the death of his mother.

Jimenez handled a delicate situation with empathy. This could have been easily messed up. Her characters deal with addictions in loved ones, loss, working themselves too hard, and more. Her books manage to have real characters with terrible problems that inspire introspection yet not be a drag.



Book #: 104
Title: Fake Skating
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: YA romance
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Alec and Dani were inseparable when they were kids, but when Dani moves away, they lose touch. Dani moves back to town to find Alec is now the high school hockey superstar. They start fake dating for reasons - as you do.

I think I really like Painter's books. This was the first YA romance I've read in a very long time where I didn't feel skeevy and didn't roll my eyes.

53alsvidur
Apr 16, 10:10 am



Book #: 105
Title: His Majesty's Dragon
Author: Naomi Novik
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

In an alternate historical fiction, dragons exist during the Napoleonic wars. France has many more dragons than Britain. When a British captain takes over a French ship during a sea battle, he finds a dragon egg. It hatches into a dragon that bonds to the captain - who is now forced to leave the navy and enter the aerial corps.



Book #: 106
Title: Entitled: How Male Privilege Hurts Women
Author: Kate Manne
Genre: Non-fiction, sociology
Classification: 305 / HQ
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

Did you know that most rapists are not convicted? Did you know that banning abortion sometimes hurts women? Did you know that women in positions of power are looked at as 'bitchy'?

Erm, if these things are news to you, then yes, this book would be worth it. Otherwise, the only thing that interested me was a tiny little citation that led me to a journal article that was relevant. There were a lot of words that said very little.



Book #: 107
Title: The Lizard Scientists
Author: Dorothy Hinshaw Patent
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 597 / QL
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

The Scientists in the Field series is one I will never stop championing for kids. I wish I had these when I was younger. This entry covers field research and how one topic - evolution in anoles - can support so many different questions and investigators.

54alsvidur
Edited: Apr 16, 10:15 am



Book #: 105
Title: His Majesty's Dragon
Author: Naomi Novik
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

In an alternate historical fiction, dragons exist during the Napoleonic wars. France has many more dragons than Britain. When a British captain takes over a French ship during a sea battle, he finds a dragon egg. It hatches into a dragon that bonds to the captain - who is now forced to leave the navy and enter the aerial corps.



Book #: 106
Title: Entitled: How Male Privilege Hurts Women
Author: Kate Manne
Genre: Non-fiction, sociology
Classification: 305 / HQ
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

Did you know that most rapists are not convicted? Did you know that banning abortion sometimes hurts women? Did you know that women in positions of power are looked at as 'bitchy'?

Erm, if these things are news to you, then yes, this book would be worth it. Otherwise, the only thing that interested me was a tiny little citation that led me to a journal article that was relevant. There were a lot of words that said very little. The author's statement that misogyny is the 'law-enforcement' for gender roles was intriguing, but it wasn't explored in depth and left it to the reader to think about.



Book #: 107
Title: The Lizard Scientists
Author: Dorothy Hinshaw Patent
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction, animals
Classification: 597 / QL
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

The Scientists in the Field series is one I will never stop championing for kids. I wish I had these when I was younger. This entry covers field research and how one topic - evolution in anoles - can support so many different questions and investigators.

55alsvidur
Apr 19, 5:19 pm



Book #: 108
Title: How to Survive the End of the World
Author: Dorothy Hinshaw Patent
Genre: Non-fiction, science
Classification: /
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Five doomsday scenarios are illustrated, explained, and defused - AI, climate change, nuclear bombs, asteroids, etc. I came across a review in Book Page and was inspired to give it a try. By no means is this badly done, but I don't think I was the intended audience: nervous teenagers. Recommended for that purpose.



Book #: 109
Title: Throne of Jade
Author: Naomi Novik
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

During the early 1800s, Britain agrees to send the dragon Temeraire back to China with the Emperor's brother. Temerarie refuses to be parted with his captain, so Laurence goes to China. Multiple attempts are made to separate the two.

56alsvidur
Apr 21, 11:47 am



Book #: 110
Title: Just for the Cameras
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

I read this awhile ago and forgot to log it - it's a good think LT recommends things I'm actually interested in, since that's what exposed my lapse.

Aa football player is forced to volunteer at a zoo to help his team image. He's paired with the flamingo keeper. The keeper is looking forward to using the PR to raise funds for a new habitat. This contains a grumpy-sunshine romance trope, cute male friend bonding, and an animal background story that didn't make me want to poke out my eyes.

57alsvidur
Edited: Apr 25, 10:54 am



Book #: 111
Title: Love Song: A Novel
Author: Elle Kennedy
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Blake heads to the family lake house to get over a bad breakup. (The lake house, FYI, is a massive compound with several boats - including a yacht, gated entrance, etc.) To bad family friend Wyatt is already there, trying to get out of his song writer's block. Wyatt takes pride in his single status and also happened to crush Blake's heart a few years ago. They decide to embrace the tension by having a summer fling when something tears their relationship apart.

Kennedy's books are all pretty similar. The heroine was a bit generic. The call backs to previous novels were gratuitous. There were a lot of pages for not a lot of plot. But I desperately needed to escape from my real life for a few hours and this worked when several other half-finished books did not.

58alsvidur
Edited: May 10, 1:14 pm



Book #: 112
Title: I'm Looking for a Man in Finance
Author: Sabrina Waldorf
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 1.5

I'm betting that this was written by AI. I'd bet a lot. Like all of it.

Things were just...off. Frequent odd paragraph breaks, smashing dialog of different people together so you couldn't tell who was saying what, frequent punctuation mistakes, no breaks between scenes (one memorable instance was when they were in the shower together and suddenly she was eating an Italian sub), oddities (five flights of stairs INSIDE a rich person's NYC house but without an elevator? a finance bro's suit consisting of light blue shirt, navy slacks, and a brown plaid suit jacket?), stereotypical things but without a nod to it being stereotypical, different names holding the book's copyright, weird phrasing in romantic scenes, etc etc.

The plot smacks of the How to Lose a Guy in X Days movie: Hallie is supposed to write about dating a suit in order to get her dream job of being a restaurant critic. A guy trades going on the dates for a review of his family's restaurant. They fall for each other. Something happens with Hallie's series.



Book #: 113
Title: Daughter of No Worlds
Author: Carissa Broadbent
Genre: Fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5



Book #: 114
Title: Children of Fallen Gods
Author: Carissa Broadbent
Genre: Fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2



Book #: 115
Title: Mother of Death and Dawn
Author: Carissa Broadbent
Genre: Fantasy
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Tessanah escapes slavery and seeks shelter with The Orders, a magical NGO, so she can learn magic and go back to free her friends. She's assigned as an apprentice to Maxantarius, a magician who has been in hiding after his military service years ago. She isn't prepared for war to hit her world.

Decent series, but a bit uneven. The second book was a slog to get through, but the third really picked up. I dislike the font used; it makes you read more slowly. The covers make the series seem sluttier than it is - there was some romance, sure, but it was more of a romantic fantasy adventure than romantasy.

59alsvidur
May 14, 2:12 pm



Book #: 116
Title: One & Only: A Novel
Author: Maureen Goo
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Cassia Park is a matchmaker - she inherited the ability from her Korean ancestors to see people's past lives and soulmates. Her grandmother read Cassia's past; Cassia has been looking for a Daniel Nam for 10 years. She gets tired of looking and decides to have a fling with a younger guy. She's feeling really happy with things until she meets Daniel's boss: Daniel Nam.

I enjoyed the play between fate and making your own way, as well as not knowing which one Cassia would choose. Neither guy was a jerk. The side characters were great; Cassia's best friend was very well drawn. The love of family was more important to Cassia's growth than the romance. Thumbs up.



Book #: 117
Title: I Feel Bad About My Neck: and other thoughts on being a woman
Author: Nora Ephron
Genre: Essays
Classification: 814 / PS
Pub date: 2006
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Every woman has heard about this book. I am not quite sure why though. Yes, Nora Ephron wrote great romcom screenplays; I couldn't even read this without hearing her words in the voice of Meg Ryan. The essay topics were much more focused on beauty, fashion, and New York City real estate than I expected though, and it's only 140 pages long.



Book #: 118
Title: A Little Princess
Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 1905 (1981)
Acquisition: 12 years ago
Rating: 4

I never read this when I was a child; my only experience was the Shirley Temple film. (My VHS was in black-and-white, not even colorized.) That film is only very loosely based on the novel, it turns out.

Sarah's rich father parks her in a girls boarding school while he goes back to India. When he dies, she is left without money so the headmistress turns Sarah into a scullery maid and errand girl for the school. Sarah has always been a bit 'off', and now she really has to live in her own head to be brave and survive.

60alsvidur
May 20, 8:55 am



Book #: 119
Title: The Wish Switch
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

The heroine is going through middle school years. Her grandmother's pet project was a town legend of wish granting. The heroine follows the steps to get her wishes, but they are coming true not for her, but her nemesis, the new boy at school. He ends up being noticed by peers, he ends up being swole, he ends up on the student council, etc etc. Her last wish would screw up the guy's life so they team up to switch the wish grantee before mayhem happens.

Aw, it's baby's first romance novel.



Book #: 120
Title: Vacation Wars
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Tessa's family has always visited the same summer resort in Greece, and Tessa has always noticed the same boy there. As an adult, she comes back for her sister's wedding. Her friends all team up to get her a boyfriend (in the most rude and embarrassing ways), but Tessa is really just enjoying her new relationship with Myles and decides to fight back.

Cute, silly, stupid, vacuous mind candy. The descriptions of the setting were really good.

61alsvidur
May 20, 9:50 am



Book #: 121
Title: Cherry Baby
Author: Rainbow Rowell
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Cherry is divorcing her husband Tom. She goes out and meets an old friend Russ - they start dating. Neither Tom nor Russ is a hero or crush (neither is Cherry, frankly), but I can get what they represent - what you need and what you want. Cherry has an intense family, has an interesting fashion sense, and is overweight - all of which affect her choices.

Fractured relationships, the taking love for granted in long-term relationships, lack of communication: this was a study in real life and not a sweet happy romance. I usually like the realness of Rowell's books and how beautifully they are treated and written. I'm not sure I was sold on this one though.

62alsvidur
May 23, 10:56 am



Book #: 122
Title: Bridesmaid for Hire
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

Maggie is a workaholic wedding planner on vacation. Her brother's friend Brody is also at the same venue to schmooze during his boss's wedding. They team up to benefit both of them.

I didn't like either of the main characters - they seemed like jerks. I also didn't really care about their romance. Some of the comedy was overplayed, but that might have been a good thing.



Book #: 123
Title: Bridesmaid Undercover
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2023
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

Wedding planner Everly agrees to set up a best man with his ex-girlfriend maid-of-honor. Too bad she has a crush on the best man herself.

While this entry was marginally more sympathetic than the first in the series, the hero messed up so badly toward the end that I'm not sure the relationship was redeemable. I sure as heck wouldn't have taken the jerk back.

Both of these were a little boring. Usually you get some over-the-top comedy in a Quinn book (and the moments were silly), but I don't think it was enough to redeem the characters' actions.

63alsvidur
May 26, 1:08 pm



Book #: 124
Title: Confessions of a Bookseller
Author: Shaun Bythell
Genre: Memoir
Classification: 381 / Z
Pub date: 2019
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

This is an edited diary that lasts a year. While the author is a used bookseller, the best bits are the people involved in the author's rural Scottish life. There are a lot of mundane details of his life included, but it was still entertaining enough for me to finish it and want a bit more. I looked up the bookseller book he quotes frequently. None of the libraries have it and a used copy is $400. Bummer.

64alsvidur
Jun 1, 2:23 pm



Book #: 125
Title: The Diary of a Bookseller
Author: Shaun Bythell
Genre: Memoir
Classification: 381 / Z
Pub date: 2018
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Proof that I will indeed read anything. This is more mundane details: which employee was 15 minutes late, how much he paid for how many boxes of books, what the weather was like and how it affected his fishing, etc etc. I felt like there was even less about actual bookselling in this one that in 'Confessions of a Bookseller'.



Book #: 126
Title: Seven Kinds of People You Find in Bookshops
Author: Shaun Bythell
Genre: Humor
Classification: 381 / Z
Pub date: 2020
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Used bookseller Bythell categorizes his customers into different stereotypes. Not as funny as I thought it would be, but not terrible.



Book #: 127
Title: Killers of a Certain Age
Author: Deanna Raybourn
Genre: Mystery
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

Billie and her 3 coworkers have spent the last 40 years being an all-female team of assassins. Upon retirement, they find themselves targeted by other assassins - who ordered the hit and why? Can they all make it out?

This felt like an action movie, for both good and bad.



Book #: 128
Title: The Secret Lives of Booksellers and Librarians: True Stories of the Magic of Reading
Author: James Patterson
Genre: Short stories
Classification: 025 / Z
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

Patterson collected 2-3 page essays from libraries and booksellers (mostly managers of Barnes and Noble locations) that focus on their choice of bookselling, how they got into the field and their early lives, what they enjoy about it, etc.

Each essay was too short to connect to the authors. The topics were too smarmy. This was 300 pages of sucking up to Patterson and preaching to the choir without any meat in a sermon. It felt like published scholarship essays of high schoolers. There was nothing detailed; there were no secrets. Skip this one.

65m.belljackson
Jun 1, 2:45 pm

Love your fearless Reviews!

66alsvidur
Jun 3, 11:30 am



Book #: 129
Title: The Imperfect Ride: Your Guide to Being Better By Not Trying to Be the Best
Author: Andrea Monsarrat Waldo
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 798 / SF
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: 2 weeks ago
Rating: 4

Waldo's first book, Brian Training for Riders, helped me past a HUGE mental block. This one is more for the everyday rider who lets her thoughts get in the way of being present and enjoying her horse. I have several tabs going and will try to remember to refer back to it in the future.

Some of my favorite takeaways are below.

Mistakes are necessary for neurons to wire and fire together. It's the effort and struggle that tell the brain to make those chains.

Saying 'I'm worthless because I can't pick out the correct golf club' or 'I'm worthless because I don't have the balance needed to make spin jumps while ice skating' is the same as saying you are worthless because you make mistakes riding. When we care deeply about something, it becomes harder to separate our skills from our worth.

Humans made up riding and all disciplines. It's all made up. The rules we made to define perfection are arbitrary. It doesn't even exist in the first place.

If you avoid situations where you don't feel confident and capable, you miss the chance to practice handling them, so when real situations arise, you are more likely to get hurt or get really scared.

When you do get frustrated that you made a mistake or something didn't go perfectly, stop judging yourself. Ask what happened, who made the mistake (you or your horse - who is also not perfect and will make mistakes when learning just like humans do), where it started to go wrong, when it went wrong, why did your horse have trouble, and how do you address and fix it. Be a curious journalist instead of a mean girl.

Nobody besides you cares if you shirt matches your saddle pad, if your aisle is raked in a herringbone pattern, if your horse's mane is even, or if your tack is spit-shined every day. If you do care, do it your way.

There is no such thing as 'finished' with your career, house work, kids, or horses. It all keeps coming back.

67alsvidur
Jun 4, 3:54 pm

>65 m.belljackson:: Thanks (?). I am turning pretty crotchety as I age. I do feel bad for authors who try hard; I'm sure I certainly couldn't do any better.

68alsvidur
Jun 4, 4:03 pm



Book #: 130
Title: Broken or Beautiful: The Struggle of Modern Dressage
Author: Domonique Barbier
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 798 / SF
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: 2 weeks ago
Rating: 4

This book is in desperate need of a copy editor, but I can forgive some of the oddities in structure since English is not the author's first language. Barbier can be a little 'woo-woo' about mental abilities of riders, but he is also a staunch defender of classical French dressage - which is NOT the German/American dressage seen in competition lately. Advocates can be hard to find, but for those whose horses go better with lightness as the priority instead of power and precision, it's worth it. This was one of the first books to call out what's going on lately in the FEI. By following the changes made in the FEI rulebook over several decades, we can see the gradual decline in school balance and the rise of the German school. Even though Barbier bounces back-and-forth in topics, he does go to the mattresses for horses. More information on why he thinks the 45 degree shoulder-in is better than the 30 degree one would have been appreciated. (OK, I'll buy that the shallow one can cause stiffness, but HOW?)

69alsvidur
Jun 6, 12:21 pm



Book #: 131
Title: Betting on You
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: YA romance
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

Bailey and Charlie start off hating each other but find themselves turning into friends (and more). Both have parents who are divorced and starting to date again, so they support each other through moving into strangers' homes, etc. This would be a good 'support' book for kids whose parents are divorcing.



Book #: 132
Title: Shut Up and Read: A Memoir from Harriett's Bookshop
Author: Jeannine Cook
Genre: Memoir
Classification: 798 / SF
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3.5

The founder of a Philadelphia bookshop that features female authors and authors of color writes about her family, her health, and starting 3 shops.

70alsvidur
Edited: Jun 9, 2:06 pm



Book #: 133
Title: Norwegian Wood: Chopping, Stacking, and Drying Wood the Scandinavian Way
Author: Lars Mytting
Genre: Non-fiction, homelife
Classification: 662 / TP
Pub date: 2015
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

This is a helpful book if you are new to fireplaces, heating with wood, or chopping your own firewood. Mytting briefly covers everything from wood selection and proper timing on chopping/drying to stove selection and tool brands. Even though I don't chop my own wood, I did wish the chapter on wood selection and proper cutting was a bit thicker (but the author states that this is because you need to learn from an experienced woodsman in person instead of a book).



Book #: 134
Title: How My Neighbor Stole Christmas
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

This was a ridiculously awful book. Now, please don't think this means it needs to get thrown across the room - sometimes you want a terrible book. This is the literary equivalent of the worst Hallmark comedy Christmas movie, and sometimes a literary Hot Frosty mind rot hits the spot. I never *once* lost myself in the story, but I did roll my eyes and scoff at the silly stupidness every few chapters.

Storee comes back to Kringletown to take care of her aunt Cindy Louise. The town is obsessed with Christmas. She enters the annual town contest to see who is the Christmas-iest of them all, but her new neighbor Cole Black (you can get the type of book this is by now...) decides that he will do anything to make sure Storee loses. Each chapter is headed by a few verses of a knock-off Grinch poem that is twisted to include the story. The narrator interacts with the hero. This is pure absurdity.

A little quibble - the reindeer stuff was weird. Aside from the hero 'liking reindeer - even though they're gross' and the heroine swooning because the guy who runs a reindeer farm knows his animals' personalities, the stuff they get up to in the barn was....erm... Barns are cold as heck in the winter. What gives?

There are a crazy amount of 4 and 5 star reviews, but most of them mention the audio book. I'm not sure if I'm super hard to please or the narrator makes it better.

71alsvidur
Jun 9, 4:38 pm



Book #: 135
Title: Horse Foot Care
Author: Doug Butler
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 1993
Acquisition: library
Rating: 1.5

This is not Butler's Principles of Horseshoeing textbook. This is a 30 page booklet with the barest basics of hooves. It definitely is from the past: "Teach the horse patience by leaving it tied for extended periods. Restraint is often necessary to produce submissiveness in horses." "Horses that have not been trained to stand still for shoeing may need to be disciplined by the farrier. Usually all that is required is a slap against the side with a leather popper." "Reduce the grain portion of a working horse's ration by two-thirds on days the horse is idle to prevent colic of azoturia." "Horses are living beings with feelings and are subject to many ailments that affect their well-being and useful to their human partners." Yikes. There is no actual shoeing information in here aside from some diagrams of different types of shoes. This is mostly outdated information on issues and diseases that can affect the horse's feet. I'm sure it was a great help to the horse owners that shouldn't own horses back in the 80s and 90s, but now it's historical - and not even the good kind with loads of weird information.

72alsvidur
Jun 10, 5:40 pm



Book #: 136
Title: Better Than the Movies
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: YA romance
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

This was the sweetest, 'aww'-iest YA romance without being syrupy.

Liz's old crush Michael moves back to town. She needs an in - and it's her neighbor nemesis Wes. She asks him to help her spend time with Michael in exchange for a coveted parking spot. Wes, the bestest little YA book boyfriend, already has a crush on Liz, but helps her out. While pursuing Michael, Liz realizes the Wes is pretty OK. In fact, she might really like him.

73alsvidur
Edited: Yesterday, 11:31 am



Book #: 137
Title: Nothing Like the Movies
Author: Lynn Painter
Genre: YA romance
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2024
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

A sequel to 'Better than the Movies'. Wes's dad dies and in trying to take care of his family, he decides that Liz would be better off at UCLA without being tied to him. When he gets his life back in order, he tries to get Liz back - but Liz's feelings were hurt.

While not as achingly sweet as the first, this is still a terrific YA romance.



Book #: 138
Title: I Remember Nothing: and Other Reflections
Author: Nora Ephron
Genre: Memoir
Classification: 814 / PS
Pub date: 2010
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Short essays on random bits of life are much like those from 'I Feel Bad About My Neck' - frothy bits that are fairly girly - but are a bit more well-rounded than just focusing on NYC.



Book #: 139
Title: The Wolves and Moose of Isle Royale
Author: Nancy Castaldo
Genre: Juvenile non-fiction
Classification: 599 / QH
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Using the population fluctuations between the moose and wolves on an island national park, Castaldo introduces little kids to the concept of a ecological web. She uses loads of analogies (which I usually love) but they are so simplified it talks down to kids a bit. As a Michigander and former Yooper, I'm familiar with the park and I think she could have gone into a bit more detail, but I'll forgive her and just say the book is for younger kids than others in the Scientists in the Field series.



Book #: N/A
Title: Manual of Equine Lameness
Author: Gary Baxter
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2022
Acquisition: library
Rating: 3

Notes just for my own thoughts, as I did not read this cover to cover:

This is literally just bullet points of the important bits of Adams and Stashak. According to the forward, they cut it down and kept the videos. The bullet points make it hard to read but might make it a better 'call back' if you've learned the topic already and forgot it. This would be a bit disappointing to someone that already has Adams.

74m.belljackson
Jun 13, 1:53 pm

The Polish Pottery website has a plate in Clearance with Mustangs running around it.

75alsvidur
Yesterday, 11:34 am

>74 m.belljackson:: Ooh, they have several pretty horse patterns! If only I used fancy dishes... Those are beautiful.

76alsvidur
Yesterday, 12:07 pm



Book #: 140
Title: Dial A for Aunties
Author: Jessie Sutanto
Genre: Fiction
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2021
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2.5

Meddy is working for her family's wedding business when she accidentally kills her blind date. Her Asian aunts spring into action to help her out, but when the body gets shipped to their big wedding event -and when Meddy's college boyfriend shows up at said event - things get a little messy.

I can see why this was immediately picked up to be made into a move, since it reads just like you're watching a crazy heist movie.



Book #: 141
Title: The Lions' Run
Author: Sara Pennypacker
Genre: Juvenile fiction
Classification: 813 / PZ
Pub date: 2026
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4.5

Lucas is an orphan in occupied France and has earned a reputation as a coward. When he rescues a litter of kittens from bullies, he ends up meeting a girl hiding her horse, learning to ride said horse, helping the resistance, saving babies, and realizing he is brave.

I love Pennypacker's kids' books, and this was no exception. The historical fiction bits meld wonderfully with the kids book bits.



Book #: 142
Title: Propaganda Girls: The Secret War of the Women in the OSS
Author: Lisa Rogak
Genre: Non-fiction, WWII
Classification: 940 / D
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

There was a crew in the OSS in charge of putting out propaganda in enemy and occupied territory to encourage resistance in those favorable to the Allied cause and discouragement and desertion in the Axis. Some of these writers and creatives were women. Rogak profiles four of them: a wife of the diplomat to Japan who had a passion of Japanese culture but was taken hostage for months by the Japanese after Pearl Harbor, a Hawaiian journalist who wanted to write bigger stories, a film star who hated Hitler, and a multi-lingual educated Czech native who joined the American armed forces to save her homeland. Rogak follows them each before, during, and after the war.

I wish there was more here - more stories, deeper stories, more photos, etc - because Rogak did a great job whetting the appetite.



Book #: 143
Title: Bridesmaid by Chance: Bridesmaid for Hire #3
Author: Meghan Quinn
Genre: Romance
Classification: 813 / PS
Pub date: 2025
Acquisition: library
Rating: 2

I was really hoping that Hudson's story would be better than Hardy and Brody's. Alas.

Hudson is a workaholic. He hires his business partner's sister as his assistant. When he volunteers her for their bridesmaid for hire venture in a business deal gone sideways, they end up swapping marriage (he needs to be married to get into a club to secure a deal) for money (she needs to buy her house). Of course, a marriage of convenience is never simple. He treats her like garbage, and she keeps taking him back whenever he says 'I'm sorry' over and over again. This bummed me out because Hudson was my favorite side character from the previous installments in the series.



Book #: 144
Title: Diagnosis and Management of Lameness in the Horse
Author: Gary Baxter, Sue Dyson
Genre: Non-fiction, horses
Classification: 636 / SF
Pub date: 2011
Acquisition: library
Rating: 4

I got this from ILL but apparently already had a digital copy on my laptop. Oopsy.

This is a comprehensive alternative to Adams and Stashak. Not sure why we needed one, but here it is. I'm glad I have a copy.