rainpebble joins the ROOTS RUN late

Conversazioni2016 ROOT Challenge - (Read Our Own Tomes)

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rainpebble joins the ROOTS RUN late

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1rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 26, 2016, 3:37 pm



THE YEAR OF THE BIG BOOK PURGE AT BELVA'S HOUSE.
My "PURGE GOAL" for the year is 300.


_________________________________________________________________

A world of ROOTs is at my fingertips and I am setting my goal this year at just 1 per month as I have read not one single book in the past 3 or 4 months.



____________________________________________

FIRST HALF OF 2016 IN ROOTS:

January:
0

February:
0

March:
1. The House at Riverton by Kate Morton; acquired 09/18/2009; (3*); purged
2. The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton; acquired 02/24/2010; (3*); purged
_________________________________________________________________

April:
3. The Meeting Place by Mary Hocking; acquired 04/24/2015: close enough to 1 year to count; (4 1/2*)
4. The Distant Hours by Kate Morton; acquired 09/28/2011; (3 1/2*); purged
5. The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton; acquired 10/16/ 2012; (3 1/2*); purged
6. Coventry by Helen Humphreys; acquired 02/03/2015; (4*)
7. The Rector and the Doctor's Family by Mrs Oliphant; VMC; acquired 11/09/2009; (4*); purged
8. The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner; VMC; acquired 01/15/2010; (5*); purged
9. Still Missing by Beth Gutcheon; Persephone; acquired 04/19/2012; (1*); purged
________________________________________________________

May:
10. Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris; acquired 06/14/2013; (4*); purged
11. Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier; acquired 01/05/2011; (4*) purged
12. Once in Every Life by Kristin Hannah; acquired 01/26/2013; (3*); purged
13. Magic Hour by Kristin Hannah; acquired 03/24/2011; (4 1/2*); purged
14. Fortune's Rocks by Anita Shreve; acquired 09/09/2007; (1*); purged
15. Object Lessons by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
16. Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
17. Blessings by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (3 1/2*); purged
18. One True Thing by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
19. Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons; acquired 10/12/2007; (4*); purged
20. Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende; acquired 10/12/2007; (3*); purged
21. Shanghai Girls by Lisa See; acquired 02/25/2009; (3*); purged
22. Lucy Gayheart by Willa Cather; VMC; acquired 05/09/2010; (5*)
23. All Good Things: From Paris to Tahiti: Life and Longing by Sarah Turnbull; acquired 08/06/2013; (1*); purged
24. Phoebe Deane by Grace Livingston Hill; (2 1/2*); acquired 12/03/2013; Book 2 of 3-read out of order; purged
25. Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen; novelette, prequel to Lost Lake; (3*); acquired 01/22/2014; purged
26. Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen; ARC/ER; (3 1/2*); acquired 02/25/2014; purged
27. A Far Cry From Kensington by Muriel Spark; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/23/2011; VMC; purged
28. Charms for the Easy Life by Kaye Gibbons; (3*); acquired 09/02/2007; VMC; (440); (G.P. Putnam's Sons edition); purged
29. A Virtuous Woman by Kaye Gibbons; (4*); acquired 09/12/2007; VMC; (419); (Vintage Contemporaries edition); purged
30. Where the Apple Ripens by Jessie Kesson; (2*); acquired 01/15/2011; VMC; purged
31. A Lost Lady by Willa Cather; acquired 08/06/2013; VMC; (21); (Vintage Books edition) ; purged
32. Eight Cousins or The Aunt Hill by Louisa May Alcott; (4*); acquired 10/01/2009; VMC; (Puffin Classics); purged
33. Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott; (3 1/2*); acquired 10/01/2009; VMC; (Puffin Classics); purged
34. A Change in Altitude by Anita Shreve; (3*); acquired 05/07/2011; purged
35. Flush by Virginia Woolf; (5*); acquired 10/29/2009; Persephone; purged

June:
36. Out of Love by Victoria Clayton; (4 1/2*); acquired 09-17-2009
37. Black Water by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 02/11/2015; purged
38. Death by Darjeeling by Laura Childs; (1 1/2*); acquired 01/22/2014; purged
39. Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes; (4*); acquired 09/10/2007; purged
40. Bella Tuscany by Frances Mayes; (1 1/2*); acquired 09/24/2007; purged
41. The Lamorna Wink by Martha Grimes; (2*); acquired 12/29/2013; purged
42. Cane River by Lalita Tademy; (1*); acquired 09/11/2007; purged
43. Past Mischief by Victoria Clayton; (3 1/2*); acquired 11/12/2009; purged
44. TALK BEFORE SLEEP by ELIZABETH BERG; (5*); acquired 09/22/2008;
45. Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell; (3 1/2*); (Kurt Wallander, bk 1); acquired 03/21/2013; purged

2Jackie_K
Mar 2, 2016, 1:44 pm

Welcome back! Great to see you again :)

3Tess_W
Mar 2, 2016, 2:14 pm

Better late than never! Welcome and good luck!

4Soupdragon
Mar 2, 2016, 3:15 pm

So happy to see you here Belva 😊♥️

Good luck with the ROOTing and reading!

5rabbitprincess
Mar 2, 2016, 5:50 pm

Welcome back and good luck!

6connie53
Mar 3, 2016, 2:08 am

Welcome to the ROOTers, Belva!

7CurrerBell
Mar 3, 2016, 2:25 am

Any Virago?

8MissWatson
Mar 3, 2016, 5:24 am

I'm very happy to see you here again, Belva. My best wishes that you find books to bring back the joy of reading!

9avanders
Mar 3, 2016, 1:02 pm

Welcome back! I'm happy to see you have a bunny hopping through the bubbles again :)
Good luck w/ your 2016 ROOTs!

10rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 2, 2016, 11:51 pm


THIRD QUARTER IN ROOTS, 2016:

July:
46. Summer in February by Jonathan Smith; (5*); acquired 08/23/2014;
47. Heat Wave by Penelope Lively; (4 1/2*); acquired 02/13/2014;
48. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era by James M. McPherson; (5*); acquired 06/20/2009; purged
49. Raven Black by Ann Cleeves; bk 1 of the Shetland series; (4*); acquired 09/21/2009;
50. White Nights by Ann Cleeves; bk 2 of the Shetland series; (4 1/2*); acquired 11/16/2009;
____________________________________________________________________

I READ THESE ROOTS IN JULY BUT NEGLECTED TO LIST THEM SO I AM COUNTING THEM FOR AUGUST:
51. I, Anna by Elsa Lewin; (3*); acquired 01/25/2015; purged
52. Atonement by Ian McEwan; (4*); acquired 11/12/2007; purged
53. The Railway Man by Eric Lomax; (3 1/2*); acquired prior to L/T; purged
54. The Giver by Lois Lowry; (4*); Y/A; acquired prior to L/T; purged
55. From the Terrace by John O'Hara, (one of my favorite authors way back in the day); (4*); acquired prior to L/T; purged

August:
56. The Dogs of Riga by Henning Mankell; (5*); acquired 03/21/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 2);
57. Fingersmith by Sarah Waters; (4*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 608 pgs; acquired 08/29/2011; purged
58. The White Lioness by Henning Mankell; (4 1/2*); acquired 03/24/2014; (Kurt Wallander, bk 3);
59. THE HOURS BEFORE DAWN by CELIA FREMLIN; AV/AA; (5*); VMC #423; acquired 09/25/2013;
60. The Man Who Smiled by Henning Mankell; (3*); acquired 04/04/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 4);
61. The Fountain Overflows by Rebecca West; (3 1/2*); VMC, #143; acquired 07/02/2009;
62. This Real Night by Rebecca West; (4*); VMC, #270; acquired 08/08/2011;
63. The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx; (4*); acquired 09/25/2007; purged
64. Sidetracked by Henning Mankell; (4*); acquired 03/14/2013; Kurt Wallander (5);
65. The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood; (1/2*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 637 pgs; acquired 07/06/2011; purged
66. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough; (4 1/2*); AV/AA, VMC #530; BFB, 704 pgs; acquired prior to L/T;
67. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith; (5*); AV/AA; VMC, #410; acquired 07/02/2009;

September:
68. We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 07/18/2007; purged
69. The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West; (5*); VMC, #32; acquired 08/24/2009; purged
70. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens; (4*); acquired 09/11/2007; purged
71. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys; (4 1/2*); acquired 09/08/2011
72. High Rising by Angela Thirkell; VMC, #569; acquired 05/20/2010;
73. I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/05/2007; purged
74. Emma by Jane Austen; (4 1/2*); VMC, #341; acquired 04/27/2009;
75. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson; (4*); acquired 08/28/2009

11mmignano11
Mar 9, 2016, 7:37 pm

I'm just getting started here as well but I have been reading books off my shelf since the year started. I'm reading them for my 75er challenge also. I just want to get some books off the shelf. I realize I have such wonderful books as I select the next to read. Good luck to you!

12rainpebble
Modificato: Nov 20, 2016, 1:09 pm


FOURTH QUARTER IN ROOTS, 2016

October:
76. The House of the Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne; (5*); from prior to L/T;
77. The Woman in Black: A Ghost Story by Susan Hill; (3 1/2*); acquired 08/13/2014;
78. Empire Falls by Richard Russo; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/05/2009;
79. Uncle Silas: A Tale of Bartram-Haugh by J Sheridan Le Fanu; (5*); acquired prior to L/T;
80. The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe; (with criticism); (4*); acquired prior to L/T;
81. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy; (4 1/2*); acquired prior to L/T;
82. The Double Bind byChris Bohjalian; (5*); acquired 03/22/2009;
83. We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver; (5*); acquired 01/05/2012;
84. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte; (5*); acquired prior to L/T;
85. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie; (4*); from prior to L/T
86. The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/10/2015;
87. Carmilla: a Vampyre Tale by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu; (4*); acquired 09/14/2009

November:
88. Winterwood by Dorothy Eden; (4*); acquired 09/09/2007;
89. The Color Purple by Alice Walker; (5*); acquired 10/22/2011;

December:



13avanders
Mar 12, 2016, 9:10 pm

>12 rainpebble: wow. Just wow. 3 to 4 thousand books!!
Good luck in purging all that!

14Tess_W
Mar 13, 2016, 6:37 am

>12 rainpebble: Wow--no other word for 3-4 thousand books. Good luck with the purging. I had difficulty going from 400-200 books!

15mmignano11
Modificato: Mar 13, 2016, 9:39 pm

Unhappily, I was forced to leave behind close to 3000 books when I moved from my house. There was no way for me to take them. Thane another move. More books lost. It was truly heartbreaking for me. I try to put it into perspective. There are worse things, I know. Now I try to read and get rid of what I have read before I am ever forced to do so again. I only keep my craft books because I refer to them over and over again and many of them are simply gorgeous.

16rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 1:24 pm

MARCH ROOTS:


March:
1. The House at Riverton by Kate Morton; acquired 09/18/2009; (3*); purged
2. The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton; acquired 02/24/2010; (3*); purged



I have begun my very first ROOT of the year:

1. The House at Riverton by Kate Morton; acquired 09/18/2009; (3 1/2*); purged

I enjoyed this one a bit more than The Lake House as I was able to follow the characters more easily & thus keep my head in the story. The more I read of Morton's work, the more I find that her 'houses' & gardens become characters of the books in their own right. I quite like that.

17rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 7, 2016, 3:05 pm



2. The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton; acquired 02/24/2010; (3 1/2*); purged

I loved the storyline and I love Morton's writing but I do not care for her writing style. When I read her I just feel pushed & pulled around.

This is a tale of many characters, both likable & unlikable, whose lives take you in, out & around a walled estate garden to which time has attempted to lay waste. The garden is essential to the plot & all of the characters in one way or another; also to many answers of past mysteries & secrets of the characters.
Very nicely done by Morton except for the time & character jumps.

18mmignano11
Mar 16, 2016, 7:01 pm

One of my ROOTS is The House At Riverton so I'm glad you liked it.

19mmignano11
Mar 16, 2016, 7:04 pm

Can I ask why you are moving into a travel trailer? Is it for a grand adventure? Does that mean that will be your primary dwelling? Sorry if I'm being nosy but it sounds quite interesting.

20Tess_W
Mar 16, 2016, 7:07 pm

>12 rainpebble: just down-sizing or seeing the world?

21rainpebble
Mar 17, 2016, 1:57 pm

>19 mmignano11: & >20 Tess_W:

We ARE beginning to down-size & rid the house of a lot of "stuff" so that our 3 children do not have to when the time comes. Hubby has never been thrilled with my 13 bookcases dominating the house. He would like to see some wall space. So my plan this year is to go through my books, giving up those that I have read & are not 'heart' books. Then I will give up those unread which I have duplicated on my Kindle. Then I should be able to find new homes for some of the bookcases.
Also we are considering selling 'the old homestead' within the next few years & living in our bumper pull camp trailer full time for a while. We loved Arizona and would like to continue spending 5 - 6 months a year there or perhaps more if we can find a park at a higher elevation where it is cooler later into the year. Mind you these are plans that are just in the talking stages at this point, other than the down-sizing.

22avanders
Mar 18, 2016, 10:26 am

>17 rainpebble: I think that was the first book by Kate Morton that I read... I haven't yet read House at Riverton.. but it's on the shelves ;)

>21 rainpebble: Sounds like a few great reasons! I've also had to get ride of most (really, almost all) of my books at a few points in my past for various reasons... it's hard to do, but once they're gone, there is that relief.. plus remember they are always still available, whether in used book stores, from thriftbooks.com or amazon, the library, or on your kindle.. when you're ready to read them again, they'll be available :) That's helped me a lot in getting rid of books, esp. the ones I hadn't read yet! Fortunately I don't have to do much of that now, but I'm sure the time will come again in my future :)

Living for 5-6 months a year in Arizona sounds like great fun!

23rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 1:27 pm

APRIL ROOTS:


I read 2 ROOTs in March and am well into my 3rd, The Distant Hours & beginning a 4th, The Meeting Place now. It feels good to be back in the saddle again.

April:
3. The Meeting Place by Mary Hocking; acquired 04/24/2015: close enough to 1 year to count; (4 1/2*)
4. The Distant Hours by Kate Morton; acquired 09/28/2011; (3 1/2*); purged
5. The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton; acquired 10/16/ 2012; (3 1/2*); purged
6. Coventry by Helen Humphreys; acquired 02/03/2015; (4*)
7. The Rector and the Doctor's Family by Mrs Oliphant; VMC; acquired 11/09/2009; (4*); purged
8. The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner; VMC; acquired 01/15/2010; (5*); purged
9. Still Missing by Beth Gutcheon; Persephone; acquired 04/19/2012; (1*); purged

24rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 8, 2016, 12:41 pm



3. The Distant Hours by Kate Morton; ROOT; acquired 09/28/2011; (3 1/2*); purged

I found this book to be a nice, whimsical mystery story that held my interest mainly because of the characters. I liked it.

25Tess_W
Apr 7, 2016, 9:16 am

>24 rainpebble: a BB for me!

26connie53
Apr 11, 2016, 2:23 pm

Good to see you are making progress with the ROOTs, Belva!

27rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 8, 2016, 12:41 pm



4. The Meeting Place by Mary Hocking; acquired 04/24/2015;
(4 1/2 *)

Last night I completed my first read of The Meeting Place and as I pretty much only read in bed, I couldn't wait to get to bed the past couple of nights. I loved it and cannot find any fault in it. There were so many subplots within the main storyline and yet I did not find myself confused with the characters nor the stories. M.H. was just such a good writer.
In The Meeting Place Clarice is a woman who works as a prompter for plays and as such finds herself in the countyside & on the moors while working on Pericles. In this place she begins to find people, local historical events & places that are seemingly familiar and before she knows it she is seeking more.
Near perfection. A bit of suspense, a bit of the supernatural and a lot of comfort. Not really a book of time travel but I would say more like parallel lives of the protagonist. Like Mary Hocking’s other books that I have read, I know it will be even better when I reread it.
I found this story to be very interesting & I believe Hocking will be one of the authors that I *hide* in the trailer as hubby is so concerned about 'book weight'.

28avanders
Apr 20, 2016, 10:11 am

>27 rainpebble: how many Kate Morton books have you read? I've read The Forgotten Garden and the Secret Keeper... I liked both, but the second started to feel a little formulaic...I think I have the Distant House on the shelves and wondered how you liked it... and if it's the same formula (which isn't necessarily bad, but good to know!) :)

29rainpebble
Apr 23, 2016, 1:53 pm

>28 avanders:
Hello Ava. I believe I have all of Kate Morton's published works now excepting a short story that was published in a book with several other writer's works. Of the two you have read, The Forgotten Garden scored 3* with me and The Secret Keeper was a 3 1/2* read. Like you, I found her books to be rather formulaic but I did enjoy them for a quick 'Calgon' read.
The Distant Hours and The Secret Keeper were my favorites of her books. I think I enjoy the story in The Secret Keeper more than the others. I was happy to move on to someone else though.

30connie53
Modificato: Apr 23, 2016, 1:58 pm

>28 avanders: I love Kate Morton books. I have 5 books of her and read 4. And loved them. I think it's perfect reading material for a sultry summer evening.
De vertrouweling - **** 1/2
De vergeten brief - *** 1/2
Het geheim van de zusters - ****
De vergeten tuin - **** 1/2

31rainpebble
Apr 23, 2016, 2:02 pm

WOW! You did like them, Connie. I am so glad. They would make for good summer/beach/vacation reads.

32rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 7, 2016, 3:08 pm



5. The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton; acquired 10/16/ 2012; (3/2*); purged

I enjoyed this story line tremendously and did not feel nearly as pushed & pulled around time & characters as I have in Morton's other books. This one I can recommend. (happy, happy, joy, joy)

33rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 8, 2016, 12:45 pm




6. Coventry by Helen Humphreys; acquired 02/03/2015; (4*)

(I read this on my Kindle yesterday on our 4 hour drive to our niece's wedding reception.)

It is such a beautiful story and Humphreys writes so beautifully.
About how people's lives can touch one anothers even & perhaps especially on a night such as England suffered in the Coventry blitz. This is a wonderful book. Humphreys is so good with growing her characters.

34MissWatson
Apr 23, 2016, 5:04 pm

>33 rainpebble: Oh, I just came across Mrs Oliphant for the first time and I thought The fugitives is not at all what you imagine when you hear "Victorian novel". How's your book shaping up?

35rainpebble
Modificato: Apr 24, 2016, 12:57 pm

>34 MissWatson:
I am really enjoying this author's writing. It is my first Oliphant & I am very happy that I have a few more of hers on my TBR shelf. The Fugitives is one I do not have. It sounds as if you liked it? I checked for it on Amazon but didn't find a Kindle edition & the print editions run high. I do like Victorian though & the older, the better.

36rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 1:32 pm



7. The Rector and the Doctor's Family by Mrs. Oliphant; acquired 11/09/2009; (4*); purged

Have finished The Executor, the first of three stories in this small volume & I really enjoyed it. Now onto the 2nd one: The Rector.
Finished The Rector last evening & enjoyed it as well. Mrs. Oliphant's writing style is a bit different from what I have come across in the past & I find that I am really enjoying it and also I am finding these little novellas extremely humorous, actually laugh out loud funny at times. I would expect that to be difficult to do within these small dark stories but it works marvelously.
Now I am into the last of the three: The Doctor's Family.
_________________________________________________________________

(a): The Executor: I thoroughly enjoyed this. Lovely but rather Victorian story, aren't they all.....lovely? (4*)

(b): The Rector: Again I thoroughly enjoyed this Victorian short. I love how Mrs. Margaret Oliphant uses her words. (4 1/2*)

(c): The Doctor's Family: An enjoyable story about a young woman who takes care of & provides for her sister & her family of 3 children. Yearning for but refusing to admit that she wants a life of her own, she goes about her duties with a happy heart daily. I love a happy ending (sometimes) and I think our protagonist did as well. (4*)

Lovely writing from Mrs. Oliphant. (4*)

37avanders
Apr 24, 2016, 2:04 pm

>29 rainpebble: I see you copied that response onto my thread too :) Thanks! (& I responded there). What I forgot to mention there, though, was that I love your "'Calgon' read" phrase :)

>30 connie53: hmmm, maybe I should keep the House at Riverton after all! (I was considering keeping Distant Hours and getting rid of that one, but I'll think on it more ;)) Which one haven't you read yet that you own?

>36 rainpebble: I love that cover! :)

38MissWatson
Apr 25, 2016, 5:51 am

>35 rainpebble: I found it on Openlibrary.org. It was bundled together with The duke's daughter in a three voulme edition and then digitised and only available as a PDF. Which suits me fine for lunch time reading at the office PC, but not on an e-reader. I liked them both, but The fugitives was especially interesting because of the unusual plot.

39WordMaven
Apr 27, 2016, 4:44 pm

I love your ticker.

40rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:13 pm



8. The Story of an African Farm by Olive Schreiner; VMC; acquired acquired 01/15/2010; (5*); purged
My thoughts and comments:

I found it to be more of an essay than a story for the most part. I loved it. It speaks to the very heart and soul of mankind.
The story takes place in South Africa on a sheep farm. The main characters are three children, two young girls and one young boy, the overseer and the Boer owner of the farm. There are interactions, of course amongst the characters and the little boy I especially warmed up to. But most of the prose is the thought processes of these characters and a lot of it is very soul searching with a lot of depth.
Here is just one quote out of the very, very many I would love to share:

"They say that in the world to come time is not measured out by months and years. Neither is it here. The soul's life has seasons of it's own; periods not found in any calendar, times that years and months will not scan, but which are as deftly and sharply cut off from one another as the smoothly arranged years which the earth's motion yields us.
To stranger eyes these divisions are not evident; but each, looking back at the little track his consciousness illuminates, sees it cut into distinct portions, whose boundaries are the termination of mental states.
As man differs from man, so differ these souls' years. The most material life is not devoid of them; the story of the most spiritual is told in them. And it may chance that some, looking back, see the past cut out after this fashion"

I was quite drawn into this little novel and I am sure that it will not be long before I read this one again.

41rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 8, 2016, 1:05 pm



9. Still Missing by Beth Richardson Gutcheon; Persephone; acquired 04/19/2012; (2 1/2*); purged

So far it hasn't really grabbed me. It is about a missing little boy and I would swear that I saw a movie quite some years back that played exactly like this book is going, even to the point of the sameness of conversations.

AHA!~! I just went to the book page and it tells me that "Still Missing was made into a feature film called Without a Trace, and also published in a Reader’s Digest Condensed version which particularly pleased her mother."

Since I remember the movie so well and am rather bored with the 'rerun' I am Pearl Ruling this one at page 71.

42rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 1:46 pm

MAY ROOTS:


I managed to read 7 ROOTs in April.

May:
10. Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris; acquired 06/14/2013; (4*); purged
11. Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier; acquired 01/05/2011; (4*) purged
12. Once in Every Life by Kristin Hannah; acquired 01/26/2013; (3*); purged
13. Magic Hour by Kristin Hannah; acquired 03/24/2011; (4 1/2*); purged
14. Fortune's Rocks by Anita Shreve; acquired 09/09/2007; (1*); purged
15. Object Lessons by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
16. Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
17. Blessings by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (3 1/2*); purged
18. One True Thing by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged
19. Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons; acquired 10/12/2007; (4*); purged
20. Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende; acquired 10/12/2007; (3*); purged
21. Shanghai Girls by Lisa See; acquired 02/25/2009; (3*); purged
22. LUCY GAYHEART by WILLA CATHER; VMC; acquired 05/09/2010; (5*)
23. All Good Things: From Paris to Tahiti: Life and Longing by Sarah Turnbull; acquired 08/06/2013; (1*); purged
24. Phoebe Deane by Grace Livingston Hill; ROOT; (2 1/2*); Book 2 of 3-read out of order; purged
25. Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen; ROOT; novelette, prequel to Lost Lake; (3*); purged
26. Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen; ROOT; ARC/ER; (3 1/2*); purged
27. A Far Cry From Kensington by Muriel Spark; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/23/2011; VMC; purged
28. Charms for the Easy Life by Kaye Gibbons; (3*); acquired 09/02/2007; VMC; (440); (G.P. Putnam's Sons edition); purged
29. A Virtuous Woman by Kaye Gibbons; (4*); acquired 09/12/2007; VMC; (419); (Vintage Contemporaries edition); purged
30. Where the Apple Ripens by Jessie Kesson; (2*); acquired 01/15/2011; VMC; purged
31. A Lost Lady by Willa Cather; acquired 08/06/2013; VMC; (21); (Vintage Books edition) ; purged
32. Eight Cousins or The Aunt Hill by Louisa May Alcott; (4*); acquired 10/01/2009; VMC; (Puffin Classics); purged
33. Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott; (3 1/2*); acquired 10/01/2009; VMC; (Puffin Classics); purged
34. A Change in Altitude by Anita Shreve; (3*); acquired 05/07/2011; purged
35. FLUSH by Virginia Woolf; (5*); acquired 10/29/2009; Persephone; purged

43Tess_W
Apr 30, 2016, 7:47 am

>42 rainpebble: great pic!

44rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 8, 2016, 1:09 pm



10. Blackberry Wine by Joanne Harris; (4*); purged

Last night I finished the light & whimsical yet sad Blackberry Wine. I quite enjoyed this book and it's characters. Harris tends to blow hot or cold for me. I would call this one hot along with her Five Quarters of the Orange while her Chocolat left me out in the cold, though I loved the movie.

45connie53
Mag 3, 2016, 2:26 am

>37 avanders: I did not read Aan de rand van het meer. I'ts on my SoonToBeRead pile though.

46Tess_W
Modificato: Mag 3, 2016, 8:56 am

>44 rainpebble: Without a Trace was a great TV series for 5-6 years. It's no longer on.

47avanders
Mag 4, 2016, 10:50 am

>41 rainpebble: >44 rainpebble: whoa, you're kicking butt! Congrats!

>45 connie53: I will look forward to your thoughts when you get to it!

48rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:13 pm



11. Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier; acquired 01/05/2011; (4*); purged

This novel is a captivating story, a blend of history and fiction, inspired by a famous painting. Set in the 1600s 16 year old Griet is sent to work for a successful painter of the time, Vermeer. During the course of her apprenticeship, her master takes a romantic interest in her as she does him. Chevalier creates an amazing plot for the picture and creates a story that captures the reader although she never fully develops her characters’ feelings which detracts from the romanticism of the story.
The story that the author creates using this beautiful picture is one that shows an incredible amount of creativity. Chevalier imagines a story behind the painting that is sometimes referred to as the “Dutch Mona Lisa”. Even though no one knows who the girl in the painting is Chevalier is able to envision a romance about her. She invents a love story that crosses class lines as well as religious lines in a rigid society. The author portrays beautiful imagery for the reader. She describes the paintings making the reader feel as if they are right before them. Griet describes a woman in one of the paintings: “She wore a mantle of rich yellow satin trimmed with white ermine, and a fashionable five point ribbon in her hair.” The reader can imagine this woman’s elegant clothing with ease and can easily become mesmerized by by the descriptiveness of the novel.
Although the characters in the novel are interesting and cleverly drawn they lack depth of feeling and their motivations remain hidden from the reader. While it is easy to understand a few of the characters the two main ones, Griet and Vermeer, are never fully exposed. The reader is never told in any depth what Griet feels and thinks and Vermeer remains a mystery. At the end of the novel, immediately after Vermeer finishes the painting of Griet, Chevalier decides to end the story. Griet runs out of the house when Vermeer’s wife Catharina, sees the painting. There is no explanation of how Griet changes from this experience or what she truly feels. That left this reader with many unanswered questions.
The Girl with a Pearl Earring was an interesting blend of history and fiction. Chevalier is successful with her imagery and with the plot of the story. However she could have improved the novel by adding the exquisite detail that she used in the plot and imagery, applying it to the characters. The novel, even with those negative points was quite successful for this reader. I simply wanted more.

49rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:16 pm



12. Once in Every Life by Kristin Hannah; acquired 01/26/2013; (3*); purged

Nice little story with some time travel, a 2nd lifetime & a bit of romance to round it out. Good book for a beach or vacation read. Nothing too deep here but I do enjoy Hannah's writing.

50rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:15 pm



13. Magic Hour by Kristin Hannah; acquired 03/24/2011; (4 1/2*); purged

One of my two favorites by Hannah, the other being Winter Garden. I like Hannah's writing for its ability to take the reader to another place & this book does exactly that.

51rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:14 pm



14. Fortune's Rocks by Anita Shreve; acquired 09/09/2007; (1*); purged

This was a very 'unfortunate' choice of book to read. Shreve's poorest yet. I can usually find some redeeming value in one of her books and there have been a few that I really enjoyed. However, not this one. If you've not yet read it, don't waste your time nor your money. You will only be unhappy.
All of her characters are poorly developed and flat. That especially disappointed me, knowing how capable Shreve can be. But she doesn't show it here.

52rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 13, 2016, 2:25 pm



15. Object Lessons by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged

I enjoyed this coming of age story of three generations of an Irish family where the patriarch rules all. (little surprise at the end of the book about that) Our protagonist is the 13 year old granddaughter, Maggie, and I would have to say that the story is nearly as much about her mother, Connie, as it is about Maggie.
This is a coming of age tale both in the literal and figurative sense. Young and old alike, the characters all realized that in the end no matter what effect other people had on them it was up to them on how they react to those outside influences. It is what they decide about who or what they will become that truly matters and not what others expect or want from them.

53avanders
Modificato: Mag 9, 2016, 11:46 am

>51 rainpebble: wow! A 1* review... I've not yet read anything by Shreve, but I'll be sure to stay away from that one!

Also.. it looks like you met & passed your goal for this year? Congrats!!!

54rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 11, 2016, 2:15 pm

>53 avanders:
Gotta keep it real, Ava. Most of the Shreve books that I have read I have really liked. But for me this one was a dud.
And thank you for your kind words. I don't think I am going to change my goal but just keep reading ROOTs which should bump our numbers up. (I hope)

55Tess_W
Mag 11, 2016, 5:24 pm

>48 rainpebble: One of my all-time favorite books and author! Also, congrats on reaching your goal!

56avanders
Mag 12, 2016, 12:39 pm

>54 rainpebble: lol yeah you do! But it's good -- it helps the rest of us know what not to read... ;)

Well we definitely appreciate all the extra numbers you can add to the group! :)

57rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 13, 2016, 2:35 pm



16. Black and Blue by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged

This wonderful book hit way too close to home for me. Wives or girl friends who are battered may relate very well to the character, Beth, in this book. She is very typical of the abused significant other. I thought that if I was just better or if I didn't make him mad he wouldn't hurt me any more. The problem was I was unable to figure out how I could be better or what I had done to make him mad.
This 'novel' is a sad commentary on personal relationships and how we don't take care of ourselves very well. In this 'story' it is difficult to see a cop, a person who should uphold the law, abusing it. Not that it doesn't happen. It happens in every class, profession of people. There is not one exempt from it. It is a well-known fact that men and even women who have high stress jobs are more likely to become batterers and abuse alcohol or drugs. The really sad thing is how the the kids get hurt so badly & it effects their entire lives and their relationships. Often in domestic violence there are no winners, only losers. It is the woman who loses most often and the children are horribly affected by this.
Quindlen is an easy author to read. Her descriptions of people and places is excellent.
I found that reading this 'novel' triggered feelings and emotions in me that I thought had long died. After all it has been 44 years since I found the courage to get out. But apparently even after 6 years of counseling, those emotions are still there, buried deep. So if you are a person who has suffered at the hand of an abuser, read with caution,.............this wonderful book.

58rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 13, 2016, 2:36 pm



17. Blessings by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (3 1/2*); purged

This is the story of Lydia Blessings, an elderly woman who lives alone in a large house. She has a gardener and handyman, Skip, who lives in an apartment above the garage. She also employs a cranky maid, Nadine.
One night Skip finds a newborn baby lying in a box on his doorstep. He wants to keep the baby so he attempts to hide her from everyone. But soon Lydia and Nadine find out about the her. Eventually they begin to see their lives transformed by the influence of this tiny creature. Lydia especially finds her own heart softening and begins to relive past memories of her own childhood as well as her daughter's.
The message I found while reading this book is the old adage that "no man is an island" or "it takes a village".
Lydia has become a recluse but upon learning about the baby she watches Sip as he goes about his work with the baby attached to him. The more she watches, the more she opens up. And as she begins to open up her world enlarges and she becomes not so distant.
I really enjoyed this little novel and had a very warm and fuzzy feeling after the read.

59rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 14, 2016, 12:06 pm



18. One True Thing by Anna Quindlen; acquired 09/09/2007; (4*); purged

One True Thing is the perfect book for a quiet winter day, a cozy chair and a cup of hot chocolate or tea. Quindlen's writing is both lyrical and stark, showing her keen observations about how we relate with and by those we love.

Ellen, who lives and works in New York has basically been summoned home by her father to care for her mother who is dying of cancer. Her father and her two brothers are to carry on with their lives at school and at work. Ellen is angered by this. She does not want to give up her life, work and apartment in the city. But she does what is expected of her, moves home and helps her mother and father.

At first her mother is still able to get around but needs to be driven to her chemo treatments and needs help with the housework. She can enjoy her life and she is happy spending these days with her daughter and the two of them getting to know one another better. She decides she wants to do a book group with her daughter. They go the the bookstore and choose three novels to read and discuss. They get two copies each of: Anna Karenina, Pride and Prejudice and Great Expectations. They make it through P and P and most of the way through Anna Karenina before her mother gets to ill to continue.

Ellen's mother is beginning to have a lot of pain by now, especially in her back. Her oncologist is very hands on with her treatment and even comes to the house when Ellen calls for help. She is now receiving morphine in tablet/capsule form and through a port in her chest through which she can dose herself just by pressing a little button. This manages her pain much better for a time.

Ellen spends tender moments with her mother throughout this time. Her brothers come home and realize their mother will never be well again and they return to the city and to school in great emotional pain, grieving already. Their father spends the nights with his wife and Ellen often sees them together with her father pulling a chair up to the hospital bed and hears them murmuring quietly with each other.

When her mother dies, for some unspecified reason, they do an autopsy. (This did not ring true to me. I have never known of an autopsy being done on someone who has died of cancer.) At any rate after the funeral the doctor speaks of this to Ellen and lets her know that lethal amounts of morphine were found in her mother's body and that she is a suspect.

What follows is the meat of the story, other than the relationships within the family.

I recommend One True Thing for Anna Quindlen's beautiful writing style and for the way she confronts her reader's worst fears. The judicial aspects of the book's ending were distracting and more unlikely than not. But I found this to be a good read.

60rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 14, 2016, 12:45 pm



19. Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons; acquired 10/12/2007; (4*); purged

Ellen Foster is a small book with a big story. The time it will take to read it is time well spent.
This novel provides a reminder that it is really up to each of us to decide how we will respond to what life throws at us. None of us would choose to have Ellen Foster's life. She is given little comfort anywhere. Yet though her lot is hard she has resilience. She is a child who discovers possibilities even in her darkest of times. She doesn't fall victim to self pity which would be easy enough to do, given her life story. She judges people and situations based on the humanity of the people and of the circumstances. In doing so she proves to herself that she can make the best of almost any of life's situations that come her way. Eventually she is able to share her own humanity with others through her behavior & reactions to situations. She becomes able to see the lies that allow racism to exist. She, remarkably for an 11 year old, understands the value of giving and receiving. She finds love and comfort in the simple act of sitting in silence with a friend.
I suspect that anyone can learn something from reading Ellen Foster's story.

61rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 17, 2016, 7:27 pm



20. Daughter of Fortune by Isabel Allende; acquired 10/12/2007; (3*); purged

My thoughts & comments:
As this book has already been reviewed several times you all know the story line.
I found the lead character to be an interesting girl who endured much change throughout the book. I loved her sidekick, the little Chinaman. I enjoyed all of the eccentric, colorful characters they ran into in San Francisco and on the trail. I could have done without the whole storyline of the 'boyfriend'. For me this was rather a meh read. Good enough to finish but not good enough to write home about. I may or may not go on to read Portrait in Sepia and The House of Spirits. I have them on hold at the library but am debating.

Debating no longer. I was just over reading the reviews on those two and I think I will take a pass.

62rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 17, 2016, 8:04 pm



21. Shanghai Girls by Lisa See; acquired 02/25/2009; (3*); purged

This is the story of the coming of age of two sisters of Shanghai before, during and after WWII. They are from a very wealthy appearing family and live quite a high life. They have beautiful clothing, model for calendars and other artists for money of their own and have a very close relationship. However the father, unknowingly to them, has gambled away the family fortune including the money belonging to the sisters. He is also into the loan sharks for a great deal of money. In order to get out from under his mounting debts he basically makes a deal with the devil. He arranges to marry his daughters off to the sons of a Chinese man from Los Angeles in order to alleviate his debt.
As the bombs start flying over Shanghai, the sisters make their way to America and must go through all manner of horrific troubles. When they arrive they are held in quarantine for months. One of them gives birth while there and then they begin searching for their "husbands".
For me this was just an okay read. It wasn't bad, it wasn't wonderful. As I read Shanghai Girls, I couldn't help but compare See's writing to that of Gail Tsukiyama's and it definitely came up short. I know that is unfair to See, but the story lines they weave are so similar that it was quite difficult not to do
If you are not familiar with the work of Tsukiyama you will most likely quite enjoy this story. I gave it 3 of 5 stars.

63Tess_W
Mag 13, 2016, 2:45 pm

>59 rainpebble: Great review and such a BB for me!

64avanders
Mag 16, 2016, 10:30 am

That's a lot of Quindlen! :)
You've sure been reading a lot lately!

65rainpebble
Mag 16, 2016, 2:49 pm

>64 avanders:
I know and it feels so wonderful after so many months of not being able to even get through a book, let alone enjoy one or want to read one. Life is getting good again. The blues are gone for the most part and I am able to feel happiness once again.
And that is a LOT of Quindlen!

66avanders
Mag 17, 2016, 10:39 am

>65 rainpebble: oh you've beaten the book slump and it sounds like the life slump too! You're so right - it's such a good feeling! :) I'm glad you're feeling happiness again!

67rainpebble
Mag 17, 2016, 6:00 pm

Thank you Ava. Your kind words are so appreciated.

68Nickelini
Mag 17, 2016, 9:42 pm

>61 rainpebble: I may or may not go on to read Portrait in Sepia and The House of Spirits. I have them on hold at the library but am debating.

I think critics and readers alike put The House of the Spirits in an entirely different category than any of her other works.

69rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 20, 2016, 3:31 pm



22. Lucy Gayheart by Willa Cather; VMC; acquired 05/09/2010; (5*)

This slender novel filled me with nostalgia and a renewed love for the small town life that I have always lived. This is, hands down, Willa Cather at her best.

It is the story of Lucy Gayheart, a young pianist who leaves small town, Nebraska and travels to Chicago to study music. She becomes a rehearsal pianist for an opera singer. The book follows Lucy's life, her loves and the tragedies that affect her life and that of those around her. It is a haunting story of youth and regrets.

As in some of Cather's other works there is a contrast between small town Nebraska and big city Chicago with each having its virtues and its flaws. As always Cather's characters are well rounded and her locale and character descriptions are vividly painted. The way her characters observe and interact with each other is a wonder to read.

This contains some of the loveliest writing I've come across for a while. Cather writes with simplicity yet with such beauty. There is just so very much within her words. Every page contains some of the most beautiful prose you'll ever read. Though hardly well acclaimed, this dark novel is a treasure. It ends with such a haunting epilogue.

I think that Willa Cather was somehow an instinctively great writer. One would perhaps expect this little book to be light reading but I did not find it so. Tragedy is key in this novel because it is the insight that gets conveyed after the fact that gives this work it's depth.

70rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 19, 2016, 5:24 pm



23. All Good Things: From Paris to Tahiti: Life and Longing by Sarah Turnbull; acquired 08/06/2013; (1*); purged

After reading Almost French: Love and a New Life in Paris, which I greatly enjoyed, I found All Good Things: From Paris to Tahiti to be quite a let down. It was easy to read but it did not engage this reader as the previous book had done. It seemed very self indulgent and I felt as if she was struggling to write it. Perhaps she should have left the first as a stand-alone book. She is a much better writer than this book shows.
I am sorry but I simply was unable to connect with her travels, her new life in Tahiti, the trying to have a baby and all of the treatments, her marriage, the swimming, diving & fishing, etc. I just wished that I had picked up something else to read.

71avanders
Mag 20, 2016, 12:40 pm

>68 Nickelini: interesting, interesting... do tell? What category is that one put in? Do you know why?

>69 rainpebble: and >70 rainpebble: man, a 1* following a 5*? Rough! Sounds like you made the right call!

72rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 20, 2016, 3:25 pm

Yup, Ava!~! It worked for me.

My mind & heart are still with the Cather novel. Soooooooo beautiful! As you can tell, it took me a bit to work out my thoughts and comments on that one. When one is so overcome by a book it is quite difficult to transfer one's thoughts to paper. (or computer, as it were)

73Nickelini
Modificato: Mag 20, 2016, 3:42 pm

>71 avanders: interesting, interesting... do tell? What category is that one put in? Do you know why?

Well, House of the Spirits is considered one of the seminal pieces of magical realism (along with 100 Years of Solitude and Midnight's Children). It's widely taught at universities, and has sections for it in Shmoop.com and Sparknotes.com. It's on the 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die, American Library Association's 100 Most Challenged Books, Orange 50 Essential books, and many other 'best of' lists. The New York Times calls it "powerful and original," and Rolling Stone calls it "brilliant."

And none of that applies to her other books.

Interestingly, lots of LT users tag anything by Allende "magical realism," but I think that only applies to House of the Spirits. Perhaps if she's looking for critical acclaim, she should return to her magical realism roots. ;-)

74avanders
Mag 23, 2016, 1:51 pm

>73 Nickelini: Yep, that was one of the books in my Latin American Literature class from college, which focused on magical realism :) I just didn't know about her others! I always thought of her as a magical realism author too... good to know! Thanks for the explanation :)

75Nickelini
Mag 23, 2016, 2:35 pm

>74 avanders: It baffles me when people tag her historical fiction with magical realism. I'm sure if you asked them, they wouldn't even know what magical realism was.

76rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 23, 2016, 11:04 pm



24. Phoebe Deane by Grace Livingston Hill; acquired 12/04/2013; (2 1/2*); Book 2 of 3; read out of order; purged

I thoroughly enjoyed this squeaky clean little book with a nice Christian emphasis but Livingstone Hill did not go overboard with it. The characters were fairly well developed and the story was believable for the time period although I do not believe that Hiram would have taken things quite so far.
The story kept me wanting to know what was going to happen next. There was a lot of sadness in Phoebe's life and it doesn't look to get much better until a stranger offers his friendship. The characters are much like I would imagine they would be in the time period in which the story is set. I had to remind myself a few times that this story was written when women had few rights and were at the mercy of the men in their lives as well as their surroundings. It was extremely rare for a woman to be able to live a self supporting, independent life in those days and I would imagine many had few or no close friends. This book made me want to reach into the story and clobber Hiram, the bad guy. I wanted to find a way to rescue the innocent girl and have a serious talk with Phoebe's family members, especially her 'milk toast' brother.
While I liked and cared about the character of Phoebe, our protagonist, I loved the character of Miranda. What a hoot of a girl! I was friends with a couple of girls just like her when I was in Jr. High & High School so she brought back many good and hysterical memories for me.
This is a good story, not great but good, for those of us who like a clean romance now and then that's not too mushy and has just a bit of substance to it.

77rainpebble
Mag 23, 2016, 11:07 pm



25. Waking Kate by Sarah Addison Allen; acquired 01/22/2014; novelette; prequel to Lost Lake; (3*); purged

This is just a brief introduction to Kate, the protagonist of Allen's Lost Lake. This short story takes place on the day that Lost Lake begins and the story is just that; short.
Kate goes through a bit of a transformation during a conversation with an elderly neighbor but in true Allen style we are left wondering about that conversation. Did it really take place or is it something she dreamed. A nice lead-in to Lost Lake.
Then it goes on to preview the first few chapters of Lost Lake. I am not sure if my feelings would have been different if I had read this first but looking back on it, it wouldn't have been a bad way to meet the main character. I wish I could say more but it was short and sweet; a great little story written in the true Addison Allen style that her fans have all come to love. It left me wanting to reread the rest of the story (Lost Lake) immediately.
It also left me with a desire and yearning for butter coffee! Mmm, I think I will go make a cup.

78rainpebble
Mag 23, 2016, 11:11 pm



26. Lost Lake by Sarah Addison Allen; acquired 01/25/2014; ARC/ER; (3 1/2*); purged

I am a Sarah Addison Allen fan. When life becomes too challenging, bereft, busy or dreary, her books & stories can simply carry the reader "away from it all". I have enjoyed all of her books and this one was no exception.
It doesn't seem to matter the plot, the story line, whatever; she always gives the reader great & well rounded characters. Her novels are magical but yet realistic, the real world mixed in with just enough of the supernatural to make it believable.
This one gives us the story of a young widow with a very cool & in a world of her own daughter. The mother in law is wealthy & interfering. She has convinced Kate, the young widow, that she is not strong enough to make good decisions for herself & her daughter and that they should move in with her.
In packing up her house Kate's daughter finds an old post card from Kate's great Aunt Eby that Kate's mother had apparently hidden from her many years prior. The card invites Kate to return to her Aunt Eby's Lost Lake resort any time she wants. Kate's most cherished childhood moments & memories are of summers spent there. So rather than move in with her mother in law, Kate decides that she and her daughter will return to Lost Lake to see if it is indeed still magical.
Once there we meet some truly wonderful characters. First there is Aunt Eby herself who is now in her 80s & widowed. She is still tall, lean & lovely. She continues to run the neglected resort. We meet Lisette, born without a voice box & thus cannot speak, who followed Eby & her husband George from Paris to Lost Lake and is the cook for the guests. We meet Wes who was Kate's dear friend & playmate the summer she spent at Lost Lake. He's not changed much. He is now the proprietor of a pizzeria and has a repair business. Then there is Jack who has come each summer & is very quietly & timidly in love with Lisette. We also get to meet Bulahdeen, who has recently had to put her husband in a special facility for Alzheimer patients, and her friend Selma, the man hungry red head looking for Mr Right # 8. (Yes, that's right. Number eight.) These two are quite the characters and I enjoyed them tremendously. They added a lot of spice to the story. They have been coming to the resort since Aunt Eby & Uncle George bought it.
But times & things have changed over the years. Kate is shocked to find how run down the resort has become though she still loves it and she & Devin, her daughter, help as much as they can and are very surprised & shocked to find that Aunt Eby has decided, much to the chagrin of the regulars, Lisette and the community to sell. It has just become too much for her to handle.
You will be surprised at all of the many back burner story lines going on in this one story.
This is not deep literature but it is a story that takes you out of yourself and we all need that now and then. I loved reading it and hated for it to end. I recommend it for those reasons stated above. I actually felt good when I had finished reading it and I haven't felt good in several months so that has to say something.

79avanders
Mag 24, 2016, 1:41 pm

>75 Nickelini: lol perhaps ;)

80rainpebble
Mag 24, 2016, 3:13 pm



27. A Far Cry From Kensington by Muriel Spark; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/23/2011; VMC; purged

My thoughts & comments:

Muriel Spark is an author whose books are 'to die for'. I really loved reading A Far Cry From Kensington. The story is not plot driven but is a whole lot of fun. I enjoyed how she drew her characters, how she played them, the story, the entire work. I am so happy she wrote quite a few books and I will be seeking them all out.

81rainpebble
Mag 24, 2016, 3:30 pm



28. Charms for the Easy Life by Kaye Gibbons; (3*); acquired 09/02/2007; VMC; (440); (G.P. Putnam's Sons edition); purged

This book is a kind and gentle read. There are no startling insights or life altering observations But it is worth reading because it does speak to values and ethical behavior.
The grandmother is a strong woman whose opinions are revered and who doesn't tolerate fools. She is unfailingly consistent in her outlook and mission which is to help other people with or without their consent. Her daughter is lonely and well-meaning. The granddaughter is growing into herself and her beliefs with help from her grandmother. This book has 'charm'.

82rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 24, 2016, 4:00 pm



29. A Virtuous Woman by Kaye Gibbons; (4*); acquired 09/12/2007; VMC; (419); (Vintage Contemporaries edition); purged

This is a simple but beautifully drawn novel about the love within a marriage. It is the story of Jack & Ruby. They were both migrant workers & Jack fell for Ruby the first time he saw her. Ruby's life was not an easy one and Jack wanted to remove her burdens from her lovely shoulders.

As I read this story I thought often of my own parents & my husband's. Both couples worked their way West from Kansas & Missouri respectively, doing migratory, seasonal work all the way.

The story follows them and Jack's love for Ruby throughout their marriage & her illness. The sweetness of this tender tale had me in tears more than once. I really cared about both of these characters and for a bit I lived their lives with them.

I highly recommend this book by Gibbons. You will be so glad you read it.

83rainpebble
Mag 24, 2016, 4:15 pm



30. Where the Apple Ripens by Jessie Kesson; (2*); acquired 01/15/2011; VMC; purged

While I liked this little book of short stories I disliked the writing style enough that it totally disturbed my affection for the stories. I know that Kesson is one of Scotland's most beloved of writers and so I will not give up on her but will simply read more of her in the attempt to make my brain accommodate her method of writing.
I am not going to attempt to review the book as I believe that there are fine reviews out there and because of the above.

84rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 24, 2016, 5:00 pm



31. A Lost Lady by Willa Cather; (3*); acquired 08/06/2013; VMC; (21); (Vintage Books edition); purged

A Lost Lady is titled very nicely. It is about the deterioration of a woman who goes from being principled, dignified and well respected to becoming a lady who is adulterous, financially unscrupulous, and disrespected. The lady Marian Forrester is a well constructed character, as are the main male character, Niel Herbert, and the novel's villain (ish, Ivy Peters.
This slim novel is filled with subtlety and nuances but somehow it lacks the energy of O Pioneers and My Antonia which are novels that Cather seemed to really put her heart into. This is still a good novel, just not her best and I've always read Cather at her best. In fact I did not realize that she had anything out there that was not 'her best'.

85rainpebble
Mag 24, 2016, 5:01 pm

I have been reading like a mad woman this month in an attempt to put myself in a place where I may be able to meet my 100 book goal this year. Hard to do when one reads nothing for several months. I read not one single book in January nor in February & only 3 (I think) in March. I read at least 6 hours a night in bed and whatever I can squeeze in during the day. I think I am finally at a point where I can rest my weary eyes & body and get back to some normalcy with my books. The purging is coming along nicely, I am happy to say.
Happy reading, one & all.

86Tess_W
Mag 24, 2016, 6:00 pm

>85 rainpebble: I go through periods like that, rain. I look at it as reading is a hobby, required only when I feel like and have the time. Fortunately, I feel like it most of the time. Don't sweat the numbers, just enjoy!

87MissWatson
Mag 25, 2016, 4:02 am

I'm glad to see you found so many books you enjoyed. Happy reading!

88rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 27, 2016, 1:21 pm



32. Eight Cousins or The Aunt Hill by Louisa May Alcott; (4*); acquired 10/01/2009; VMC; (Puffin Classics); purged

Loved it! This is a wonderful story about a young girl overcoming depression, fighting against loneliness and the social restrictions of the era. A kind, forward-thinking uncle takes Rose under his wing after the death of her parents. Despite protesting the strange and shocking lifestyle changes she's asked to make she finds that her life is changing and she is becoming a healthy and happy person. She is the sole female child in the family amid seven rowdy boy cousins.
Rose befriends a household servant, ignoring the crossing of class lines so prevalent at the time. As she allows others to help her grow and learn, the people around her are affected by her changes, her inner beauty and are also changed.
This is a wonderful read for anyone, but especially youngsters, who might be struggling with self image or sadness issues. Alcott writes so wonderfully.

Again with the reading way into the night.............


89avanders
Mag 26, 2016, 3:04 pm

>85 rainpebble: lol YES you have been reading like a mad woman! SO much reading! Congrats!
But like I said on the main thread -- make sure you're enjoying it too!!

>86 Tess_W: yep, me too. I think we all do :)

90rainpebble
Mag 27, 2016, 1:27 pm



33. Rose in Bloom by Louisa May Alcott; (3 1/2*); ROOT; VMC ; (Puffin Classics); purged

This book is a must read for all of you readers who enjoyed Eight Cousins. Some of you may have thought that Rose's story ended with Eight Cousins but it doesn't stop there. It continues on here in Rose in Bloom and we get to find out how Rose and these cousins grew up and what happened to them.
This book has lost some of the innocence found in the first book as it is slowly lifted as Rose enters into the real world after her return from Europe. All but one of the characters from the first book return in this charming sequel.
The cousins are older as well and have found love. The heartwarming challenges these young lovers go through are refreshing in their innocence. Even Jamie is not immune to the talk of love and his innocent candor on the matter is quite amusing.
Rose In Bloom answers many questions this reader had the end of 'cousins'. Not everyone comes out of this novel unscathed but that is simply life, isn't it?
This is a lovely little book for those readers who enjoyed Eight Cousins.

91kac522
Mag 27, 2016, 1:52 pm

>90 rainpebble: Those two books have been on my shelf since a girl (they were my mom's), and yet I haven't read them in years. Time for a re-read.

92rainpebble
Modificato: Mag 30, 2016, 3:44 pm



34. A Change in Altitude by Anita Shreve; (3*); acquired 05/07/2011; purged

Though it is not her worst, this definitely isn't one of Shreve's best. I enjoyed it enough to keep reading but when it was over I felt such a letdown. I suppose we were supposed to link the climb & topping the summit of Mount Kenya to Margaret's marriage challenges. But it didn't work for me. Also what novice climber would choose Mount Kenya for their first climb with practically no preparation. It simply didn't have a 'real' feel to it.
In regards to Shreve's characters none of them were what I would consider rounded but were all rather flat other than the locals: James, Adhiambo, Mr. Obok, Jagdish, and Rafiq; and of course, Margaret, but only in her relationships with these local to the area. And I found myself only 'involved' with the locals and the environs. Shreve's descriptive writing of Africa was what worked the best for me in this book. She really knew what she was doing here. Her writing of Kenya, the animals, the people, the country, the politics, the terrors; all of it beautifully done & believable.
Margaret & Patrick's marriage didn't work for me from the beginning, feeling very wooden. I don't believe either of their heads nor their hearts were in the marriage.
I have read much of Shreve's work and find her to be a good 'go-to-author' when I can't figure out my next read but she isn't as consistent as I found her to be early on. However I still find her books worth the read.

93rainpebble
Mag 31, 2016, 12:36 pm



35. Flush: A Biography by Virginia Woolf; (5*); acquired 10/29/2009; Persephone; purged

Flush is a first person fictional narrative about the Cocker Spaniel owned by Elizabeth Barrett/Elizabeth Barrett Browning. The real dog was stolen three times but in the novella it is capsulized into a story of one theft.
Virginia Woolf opens the novel writing as if the book were non-fiction. After a few pages, she slips into the narrative form with the dog describing his life. She explores the dog's relation to the owner and tells us what it is like to be a dog. The dog is very sensitive to the moods of his owner and is protective, even becoming jealous on an occasion or two. One could say that Woolf gives Flush a soul.
"Flush dances through the meadows as a puppy. The cool globes of dew or rain broke in showers of iridescent spray about his nose; the earth, her hard, here soft, here hot, here cold, stung, teased and tickled the soft pads of his feet. Then what a variety of smells interwoven is subtlest combination thrilled his nostrils...".
This story is light hearted and avoids the heavy cloud of despair usually portrayed in books about the Barretts of Wimpole Street, though Wimpole Street is the setting of the first part of the book.
I loved how Woolf described Flush running through the parks, chasing birds & whatnot; lying soaking up the sun, etc. Her descriptiveness of a 'dog's life' is pretty spot on. This story allows Woolf to be more playful than any of the other piece she has written. The mix of fiction and fact allows her to tell a story filled with heroes and villians which make the book quite captivating like an adult fairy tale. By the end I was fully engaged and completely consumed by Flush and his life. I didn't want it to end but sadly it had to. This is a must for any fan of Woolf or even anyone who has a love for animals. The deeper meaning of the narrative is the telling of loyalty and love. We can all take a lesson from that.
I fell in love with this little book and highly recommend it. It boggles my mind just how timeless Virginia Woolf's works are.

94Nickelini
Mag 31, 2016, 3:18 pm

I read Flush and agree that it's lovely. It's also a quick read.

95rainpebble
Modificato: Set 11, 2016, 6:23 pm

JUNE ROOTS:


I read 23 ROOTs in May.

June:
36. Out of Love by Victoria Clayton; (4 1/2*); acquired 09-17-2009
37. Black Water by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 02/11/2015; purged
38. Death by Darjeeling by Laura Childs; (1 1/2*); acquired 01/22/2014; purged
39. Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes; (4*); acquired 09/10/2007; purged
40. Bella Tuscany by Frances Mayes; (1 1/2*); acquired 09/24/2007; purged
41. The Lamorna Wink by Martha Grimes; (2*); acquired 12/29/2013; purged
42. Cane River by Lalita Tademy; (1*); acquired 09/11/2007; purged
43. Past Mischief by Victoria Clayton; (3 1/2*); acquired 11/12/2009; purged
44. TALK BEFORE SLEEP by ELIZABETH BERG; (5*); acquired 09/22/2008;
45. Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell; (3 1/2*); (Kurt Wallander, bk 1); acquired 03/21/2013;

96Tess_W
Giu 2, 2016, 7:11 am

>95 rainpebble: Oh....a bb for me!

97avanders
Giu 3, 2016, 10:52 am

>95 rainpebble: wow that's quite the review!! " I chortled, giggled, and sighed, (not quite moaning) my way through the entire book and raced to the computer at the finish to order everything Victoria Clayton that I could get my little hands on!" wow! Glad you found such a fun read!

98rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 2:11 pm



36. Out of Love by Victoria Clayton; (4 1/2*); acquired 09-17-2009

First I would just like to say that I loved this cozy, comfy read. I chortled, giggled, and sighed, (not quite moaning) my way through the entire book and raced to the computer at the finish to order everything Victoria Clayton that I could get my little hands on!~!
So we have two very best friends who love each other dearly and tell each other every (and I do mean) everything. Min has the hots for this boy and wanted her friend Daisy to meet him so invites her to a ball. But Daisy must needs stay at the same home as the "boyfriend" due to space and propriety, etc. Well, long story short, Daisy gets drunk at the ball, must go home early, boyfriend takes her, they end up sleeping together, (rather?) unknown to Daisy due to her drunkenness, and she awakes the next morning with Hugh (creepy, but hunky boyfriend) in the sack with her and her very 'bestest' friend in the whole wide world sitting on the window seat calmly smoking a cigarette and waiting for them to wake up.
Wow!~! I do love a book that begins with a "bang"!~! hee hee!
So Min is pissed and the girls have a row and don't see each other for 15 years when they suddenly come face to face at a reading in Oxford. They see each other from across the room; Min speaks of the quarrel and laughs. Time has moved on and so has she. The quarrel is let go and Min makes Daisy promise to come and have a long visit with she, her husband and their two children. And so Daisy does.
All manner of troubles and fun ensue and it just keeps getting better and better.
I cannot wait to read more of Clayton's work.
This book is written with a wit I would die to have and that I love to read. It is not your everyday simple love story. There is nothing simple about it. It is a hoot and a darned good read as well. I highly recommend it.

99avanders
Giu 6, 2016, 12:22 pm

>98 rainpebble: I agree - it's so great to find that book!

100rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 10, 2016, 5:42 pm



37. Black Water by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 02/11/2015; purged

It took me a bit of time pondering this novella to bring myself to the point where I could put my thoughts & comments about it down on paper, so to speak.
I think Oates is a brilliant writer and I do believe that this book was written quite brilliantly. The prose is so very different from anything that I have ever read before. I even found the format & punctuation of the novella appropriate to the book & the story.
This slim volume, written in the voice & mind of a dead/dying girl, is based on the Chappaquiddick incident from 1969 involving Senator Ted Kennedy & his young colleague, Mary Jo Kopechne, who drowned on that night. It read a bit strange to me but I don't think that is due to the writing. I think it is due to the fact that I am a product of the sixties & recall the circumstances surrounding the real incident so well. I didn't realize this was what the book was about when I picked it up. I may not have read it had I known. But I am glad I read it.
However it did leave me feeling 'cold' just as the title suggests.

101rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 11, 2016, 5:49 pm



38. Death by Darjeeling by Laura Childs; (1 1/2*); acquired 04/22/2014; purged

I have always been a tea lover throughout my life. It is one of my go-to remedies for everything from cramps to cold & flue to depression among other ailments. I love quaint, little towns and I always enjoy a good mystery. I was so hoping to enjoy this little book as my niece recked it to me. However I really didn't care for anything about it. The plot had potential but the characters were flat, one dimensional and the book simply didn't work at all.
Some parts of the story were not well developed and some areas were never developed. There were scenes that were simply incongruous and caused this reader to wonder why they were there at all.
I felt rather sad that this book had such a negative impact on me, not only because my niece recked it to me but I have been seeking a 'cosy mystery' series & I was hoping this was the one. Perhaps someone reading this poor review of comments & thoughts will take pity on me and have a good 'cosy' series recommendation for me.

102rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 12, 2016, 3:47 pm



39. Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes; (4*); acquired 09/10/2007; purged

I wanted to share with you all of the reasons I loved this book. However I am finding there are too many to name. This is a book that brings the reader comfort and peace. And if you are like this reader, it will make you feel as if you are living in the wrong place.
Mayes goes into detail about her love for Tuscany and really makes one feel that. In the small medieval town of Cortona, Mayes is adopted by townspeople as one of their own. There she takes up the enormous task of obtaining an old abandoned farmhouse and remodeling it inside and out.
I loved the way that she described the Italian way of life compared to the American. The food, the wine and just the way the Italians live their lives.
I found this book to be a very satisfying read and it makes me want to immediately travel to Tuscany.

103avanders
Giu 12, 2016, 6:45 pm

>101 rainpebble: nooooooo I was so excited about that one....
Have you tried Mayhem at the Orient Express by Kylie Logan? Of course everyone likes something different in a cozy series, but I liked that Logan writes a little more modern :) I haven't read that one yet... I accidentally started w/ the second in the series, but I enjoyed it :) Good luck finding a series you like!

104Nickelini
Giu 12, 2016, 7:07 pm

>102 rainpebble: I found this book to be a very satisfying read and it makes me want to immediately travel to Tuscany.

I'm only saying this to prevent heartbreak for you, but . . . Under the Tuscan Sun is pure fantasy. My husband is Toscano, and has an extensive network of family and friends there. Nothing in her book matches real life at all. It's a fun and lovely read, but that's it. If you need details on what it's really like to renovate in Italy, I can tell you many stories. They aren't very happy.

105rainpebble
Giu 13, 2016, 3:15 pm

>104 Nickelini:
Ha ha, Joyce. Nothing like being brought back to reality, is there? Oh well, I was looking for something to read when I found the 'Tuscany' series. I appreciate your comments.

106rainpebble
Giu 13, 2016, 3:47 pm



40. Bella Tuscany by Frances Mayes; (1 1/2*); acquired 09/24/2007; purged

Mayes' smug, contrite, & superior attitude is a total turn-off. This sequel has none of the charm, the warmth nor the character of her first book, Under the Tuscan Sun. I didn't buy this book to read about her childhood or her parents or her siblings. I didn't buy this book to read about Minnesota, her house in California, or her daughter's wedding. I didn't buy this book to read about her trashing her house guests. I didn't buy this book to read poetry, or her opinion of art. I bought this book for more of what I loved in it's predecessor. I am so disappointed in this author.
Now that her vacation getaway in Tuscany has been renovated, the olives trees planted, Mayes has sadly run out of things to say. There are only so many pages of people eating, gardening and lounging in their lemonarias that one can stand. The vignettes of Italian life that made Under the Tuscan Sun so delightful are all but absent here. The author & her husband appear to be spoiled academics with too much money and time on their hands. It is difficult to sympathize with their minor construction problems as if they are life tragedies.
Come back with another as good as the first & I will buy it.

107rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 13, 2016, 4:16 pm



41. The Lamorna Wink by Martha Grimes; (2*); acquired 12/29/2013; purged

This is number 16 of her 'Richard Jury' series and I've read a few other mysteries by Grimes that I thoroughly enjoyed. But I can't say that I liked this one very much. The mystery features the terrible deaths of two small children which is woven throughout the plot of the story. I just can't find a mystery with something that disturbing to be more enjoyable than sad. Also the motive for the killings in this case don't seem quite believable. It is just too much of a stretch to believe that this motive would drive someone to commit these crimes. There were also upsetting elements of the story which made me wish that I had picked up a different mystery.
Having said that, I find this author's writing to be beautiful and her characters to be well developed. I am sure that I will be reading Grimes' other books one day, just probably not any more of this series.

108rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 15, 2016, 6:20 pm



42. Cane River by Lalita Tademy; acquired 09/11/2007; purged

After attempting to read this family generational history numerous times over the years, I finally decided to pearl rule it this time around at 139 pages. I just could never get into it. Don't know why, but sometimes that is just how it is.
The next one will be better.

109Tess_W
Giu 13, 2016, 5:10 pm

>108 rainpebble: Sorry you didn't like that book, it is one of my favs; so much so I bought the rest in the series. I have Pearl ruled my last 2 reads.

110rainpebble
Modificato: Giu 15, 2016, 6:03 pm

>109 Tess_W:
It is always so disappointing when as a reader one must Pearl Rule a book. I always begin any book fully intending to complete the read but occasionally it cannot be helped but to just put the book down.

111rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 25, 2016, 3:23 pm



43. Past Mischief by Victoria Clayton; (3 1/2*); acquired 11/12/2009; purged

Miranda seems to have everything: looks, brains, three children and a 15th-century moated manor house in Kent. Then when she finds her husband dead, shot in the chest, her friends believe that fortune has turned against her. Turns out that this is just the beginning of a better life for her.
I found this lengthy novel to be a bit of a bore but I do like Clayton's writing. Her books can be fun and entertaining.

112rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 25, 2016, 3:56 pm



44. TALK BEFORE SLEEP by ELIZABETH BERG; (5*); acquired 09/22/2008;

Because she has written with such clarity, authority and feeling, Berg's novel may cause readers to forget that this story of a woman's death from cancer is fictional. Berg's depiction of a sisterhood of women banding together to support a friend is never falsely sentimental. Accurately observed details and honest descriptions of the body's frailties make the narrative gripping and it's sense immediate. Intensely real characterizations, black humor and graceful prose make this one so memorable.
Ann, the teller of our tale is a nurse by trade & recognizes a soul mate when she meets Ruth, who is a talented artist. Ruth is outspoken, fearless, charming, & charismatic. When she leaves her caustic, icy husband and regrettably, her teenage son, she is eager to embrace new experiences, to find love and artistic fulfillment. Instead, and sadly, she is struck down with cancer instead. Ruth is a fighter and doesn't give up even when the cancer is found to be terminal. Ann and several other devoted friends spend days and nights by Ruth's side, helping her through the dying process.
Berg writes candidly about the bonds between women that I find to transcend the male/female relationship. This is a book that celebrates intimate friendship as well as a cry of grief.
Having been through the same with a brother, my mother & my mother-in-law all within the past year, I found this book to be quite cathartic.

113avanders
Giu 20, 2016, 11:04 am

Wow you've really been reading a lot lately! congrats :)

>112 rainpebble: I look forward to more thoughts on your 5* read!

114rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 5, 2016, 1:11 pm



45. Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell; (3 1/2*); acquired 03/21/2013; (book 1 of Mankell's Kurt Wallander series);

Kurt Wallander is a Swedish investigative detective. He is estranged from his wife, his daughter and friends. He has a problematic relationship with his father, who I found to be such an interesting character in the novel. I thought that all of the characters were well developed, that the dialog was very well done and I found the story-line to be quite engaging. I loved the sparse prose style Mankell has used with this series.
In this particular book of the series the brutal torture and murder of an elderly farm couple puzzles and horrifies the department. The only clues are the unusual ligature on a rope used in the crime and the wife's dying whisper that their attackers were "foreign". This puts the police on the track of the immigrant population. Wallander soon finds himself spending as much time dealing with attacks by racists as with the initial crime and Mankell uses the scenario as a way to explain both Wallander's own frustration with an immigration system that's obviously badly broken and as a warning about the escalating tensions and the hatreds of folk less level-headed than the detective.
Wallander, as a detective, is a sympathetic character and the observations about Sweden in particular and Europe in general I found to be quite a brain-worm for myself. The cultural backdrop, against which the story is set, is as bleak and as barren as the wintry landscape.
I definitely recommend this series.

115rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 23, 2016, 4:56 pm

JULY ROOTS:



I totaled 10 ROOTs in June.

July:
46. SUMMER IN FEBRUARY by Jonathan Smith; (5*); acquired 08/23/2014;
47. Heat Wave by Penelope Lively; (4 1/2*); acquired 02/13/2014;
48. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era by James M. McPherson; (5*); acquired 06/20/2009; purged
49. Raven Black by Ann Cleeves; bk 1 of the Shetland series; (4*); acquired 09/21/2009;
50. White Nights by Ann Cleeves; bk 2 of the Shetland series; (4 1/2*); acquired 11/16/2009;
__________________________________________________________________________

I READ THESE ROOTS IN JULY BUT NEGLECTED TO LIST THEM SO I AM COUNTING THEM FOR AUGUST:
51. I, Anna by Elsa Lewin; (3*); ROOT, 01/25/2015; purged
52. Atonement by Ian McEwan; (4*); ROOT, 11/12/2007; purged
53. The Railway Man by Eric Lomax; (3 1/2*); ROOT, prior to L/T; purged
54. The Giver by Lois Lowry; (4*); Y/A; ROOT, from prior to L/T; purged
55. From the Terrace by John O'Hara, (one of my favorite authors way back in the day); (4*); ROOT, from prior to L/T; purged

116rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 20, 2016, 1:38 pm



46. SUMMER IN FEBRUARY by JONATHAN SMITH; (5*); acquired 08/23/2014;

I loved this book so much that I immediately went to Amazon & ordered the movie to stream. As per usual disappointment was the result. But the book is quite lovely.
It is the story of the Lamorna artists colony of pre-war Lamorna, Cornwall in England & is based on true events. It is beautifully set and the the author provides a possible scenario of an emotional and tragic chapter of the artists' lives. There is some absolutely beautiful writing in this novel.
I found it to be a great insight into the eccentric and genius, twisted and obscene world of art at the turn of the century. It is, indeed, a love story and the backdrop made it even more worth the read.

117rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 5, 2016, 1:33 pm



47. Heat Wave by Penelope Lively; (4 1/2*); acquired 02/13/2014;

This is the story of a woman in her fifties who is spending the summer in a remote English cottage with her daughter, her son-in-law and her grandson. As she watches her daughter's marriage dissolve she is thrown into flashbacks of the disintegration of her own marriage.

This is a short and inward dwelling book. Not much action but rather full of minute observations of relationships. Some, no more than a glance or a single word. There is a lot of interpretation and projection on the mother's part onto her daughter. But it is presented as observations rather than projection.

The descriptions are very insightful. The characters are very human. I quite enjoy the writing of Lively and admire her skill with the pen.

Recommended.

118Tess_W
Lug 21, 2016, 1:16 pm

Wow, looks like some really great reading! I added Summer in February to my wish list!

119rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 17, 2016, 2:25 pm



48. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era by James M. McPherson; (5*); acquired 06/20/2009; purged

I have found that this year in particular, the timing for a reread of this masterpiece was so appropriate for reasons I am certain you all are aware of.

This volume is one of the most comprehensive studies of the Civil War period that addresses every aspect of the war. McPherson does an excellent job of setting the context. He describes the changing demographics, economics, politics and policies of the United States in the 19th century. He covers the institution of slavery; how it developed and how southerners sought its expansion. He discusses the impact of westward growth and the war with Mexico; the series of compromises as new states became part of the union along with the increasing divisions as those compromises failed to appease both sides. And lastly the secession of the southern states after Lincoln was elected president is covered. I especially appreciated the details of the months when secession spread which includes the stated rationales of the seceding states and the maneuvers that led to the firing on Fort Sumter.
The discussion of the war covers virtually all of the major military campaigns and battles and is accompanied by maps showing Union and Confederate movements. We get to know all the important generals and follow them through their checkered or glorious careers. McPherson is stellar at using anecdotes and/or quotes to convey the character of each general. The strengths and weaknesses of the Union and Confederate armies at certain times or battles are clearly delineated. He also assesses the structures of leadership and the quality of leaders in the Federal Government and in the Confederate states. Lincoln had to contend with political rivals and war opponents, worry over whether foreign nations might recognize the Confederacy, defend his Emancipation Proclamation from critics, and agonize over whether he would ever find an effective general to break the southern army and restore the union. Jefferson Davis had the challenge of winning the cooperation of the wildly independent Confederate states to raise sufficient armies, produce enough food, clothes and armaments, and agree on strategy and tactics.

Battle Cry of Freedom is very readable for a nearly 900 page book on nonfiction. It took me nearly 10 days to read it and it is a fascinating read. It held my interest throughout. I found James McPherson to be a masterful author in this field.

I very highly recommend this work.

120rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 5, 2016, 2:11 pm



49. Raven Black by Ann Cleeves; bk 1 of the Shetland series; (4*); acquired 09/21/2009;

I was drawn to this book because of its setting in the Shetland Islands, which I have long found fascinating but know very little about. Cleeves writes well about island life among people in a remote area where there are no secrets kept except for the bad ones.

The story centers around two murders of young women. One occurred eight years ago and one very recently. Both girls were seen in the company of Magnus, who has limited intellect and has lived a sheltered life with his domineering mother who, even in death, can control him. He is a simple man, alone & lonely.

The story takes place shortly after New Years when everything is still, frozen and covered with snow. It is a perfect atmosphere for the events of the story. Magnus is fascinated by the two pretty young ladies who show up at his house on New Years Eve, drunk and being silly. When one of them is found dead in a snow covered field a few hours later, Magnus' world tips on its head.

From the beginning I liked Magnus and felt pity for him. It was clear that he was disadvantaged but who could the killer be?
Enter detective Jimmy Perez who is quickly on the case, working the mystery.

Cleeves is a very sparse and straight forward author and her writing keeps the reader immersed in the story. Nothing is overdone. Her characters are well drawn and believable. I enjoyed Raven Black and look forward to others in the Shetland series.

Recommended.

121rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 6, 2016, 1:23 pm



50. White Nights by Ann Cleeves; (4 1/2*); bk 2 of the Shetland series; acquired 11/16/2009; hardcopy at home;

I enjoy these types of mysteries and not just for the mystery but also for the development of the key characters and the sense of space & time. I am enjoying finding out more about our detective, Perez, and more about the village & its inhabitants. The description of the bleak and stark but beautiful environment intrigues me. Summers are vastly different in the Shetlands from the winters.

I think Cleeves does a good job of rolling out her characters & building them. Also I like how she gives the reader hints to help one guess who our villain is. Thus far I have been surprised in both stories I have read in this Shetland series.

I look forward to reading the next book in the series.

122rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 26, 2016, 12:35 am

AUGUST ROOTS:

I read 10 ROOTs in July.

(Read in July but didn't get around to posting until Aug 3rd so will count them toward August's ROOT total.)

51. I, Anna by Elsa Lewin; (3*); ROOT, 01/25/2015; purged
52. Atonement by Ian McEwan; (4*); ROOT, 11/12/2007; purged
53. The Railway Man by Eric Lomax; (3 1/2*); ROOT, prior to L/T; purged
54. The Giver by Lois Lowry; (4*); Y/A; ROOT, from prior to L/T; purged
55. From the Terrace by John O'Hara, (one of my favorite authors way back in the day); (4*); ROOT, from prior to L/T; BFB, 912 pgs; purged
___________________________________________________________________

August:
56. The Dogs of Riga by Henning Mankell; (4 1/2*); ROOT, 03/21/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 2);
57. Fingersmith by Sarah Waters; (4*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 608 pgs; ROOT, 08/29/2011; purged
58. The White Lioness by Henning Mankell; (4 1/2*); ROOT, 03/24/2014; (Kurt Wallander, bk 3);
59. The Hours Before Dawn by Celia Fremlin; AV/AA; (4 1/2*); VMC #423; ROOT, 09/25/2013;
60. The Man Who Smiled by Henning Mankell; (3*); ROOT, 04/04/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 4);
61. The Fountain Overflows by Rebecca West; (4*); VMC, #143; ROOT, 07/02/2009;
62. This Real Night by Rebecca West; (4*); VMC, #270; ROOT, 08/08/2011;
63. The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx; (4*); ROOT, 09/25/2007; purged
64. Sidetracked by Henning Mankell; (4*); ROOT, 03/14/2013; Kurt Wallander (5);
65. The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood; (1/2*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 637 pgs; ROOT, 07/06/2011; purged
66. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough; (*); AV/AA, VMC #530; BFB, 704 pgs; ROOT, from prior to L/T

123connie53
Lug 31, 2016, 9:09 am

>122 rainpebble: That was a good book, I remember!

124rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 6, 2016, 1:31 pm



51. I, Anna by Elsa Lewin; (3*); acquired 01/25/2015; hard copy; purged

A very absorbing novel about a mystery which poses difficulty to the police, the family, the neighbors but which is understood by the reader. Lewin shares a keen understanding of the extremes to which emotional illness, grief and sorrow can drive one.
I would not call this a novel of redemption but rather a novel of realism. I would call this New York Noir and so this reader knew going in that there would be no fairy tale nor happy endings within the covers of the book. The reader may just come away with a deeper understanding of human frailty. I believe I did and I recommend this read.

125rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 6, 2016, 1:53 pm



52. Atonement by Ian McEwan; (4*); acquired 11/12/2007; purged

I found this novel to be completely absorbing.
The first part draws the reader into a confined setting which occurs on a very hot day in a country house with ongoing preparations of welcoming the son home. He is bringing a friend with him.
The book allows the reader to observe scenes portrayed from the perspectives of the characters within the house. Although McEwan focuses more on the internal lives of the characters than on external events, he devotes most of the attention to their impressions and reflections on what takes place around them. The reader can feel the tension building towards what will most certainly culminate in a disaster.
The second part of the novel describes the dire consequences of these events which grow out of the lively imagination of a young girl who half sees and half imagines what is happening in the house and tries, with good intentions, to put things right. Children are very good at seeing everything that goes on around them but they do not yet have the life experiences to understand these events. McEwan ties everything together beautifully in the last part of the book where our young girl has grown old and has spent all the intervening years trying to reconcile herself with what she did as a child. The author does a marvelous job of tying up all the threads.
I don't want to spoil anyone's reading by giving away too many details. The book was different than what I expected but I found it to be very good and I highly recommend it.

126rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 26, 2016, 12:47 am



53. The Railway Man by Eric Lomax; (3 1/2*); from prior to L/T; purged

127rainpebble
Modificato: Set 26, 2016, 4:46 pm



54. The Giver by Lois Lowry; (2 1/2*); Y/A; from prior to L/T; purged

I would say that this book is creative and unlike any book I have previously read. I found it to be new and fresh but unable to hold my interest. I will admit that I am not big on the apocalyptic nor the dystopian novels but for some reason I wanted to like this book.
The setting is a bland world, a bland community with bland people, bland colors, bland minds & personalities, bland jobs, bland everything except for one character, The Giver. He has memories of times gone by, of feelings, of passions, of a life no one else remembers and now, as he is aging, it is time for him to turn over & teach the upcoming Giver, our protagonist, all of this.
Our new & young Giver in training has trouble accepting all of this and his mind begins to stretch out on its own. When the powers that be learn of this they begin their protest to his uniqueness.
I can see why readers of school age & their teachers hold such high regard to this book especially in today's world when the media controls so much of what we, the public, are allowed to know. I don't see myself continuing the series. Sadly, this book didn't do much for me.

128rainpebble
Modificato: Set 12, 2016, 4:58 pm



55. From the Terrace by John O'Hara, (one of my favorite authors way back in the day); (4*); from prior to L/T; BFB, 912 pgs; purged

I loved From the Terrace. I could not put it down and it applies to today even though it really gets going in the twenties. It is not just about the power of money, but also about the power of love and how so many of us just do not really know what it is. His writing is magnificent. I have read so many of his great books: Appointment in Samarra; Ten North Frederick; Rage to Live. O’Hara is/was a master and I have always envied him his genius as I suppose a great many writers have as well.
However, I think that as good as O'Hara's novels are, he was even a better short story writer.

129rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 3:57 pm


56. The Dogs of Riga by Henning Mankell; (5*); acquired 03/21/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 2);

This story is a dark & suspenseful mystery, like all of the other Wallander police procedurals. I have read 5 of them thus far & this remains my favorite of them all. I loved & creeped out to this novel.
The Dogs of Riga is not your run of the mill crime drama. This story takes in international crime & criminals involved in dangerous & deadly pursuits in which Inspector Kurt Wallander finds himself literally locked within the very midst of. Though the story and related characters are interesting, it seemed another creative way to delve further into understanding Wallander himself. This is the second of the Wallander series & for me the basic combination of a meticulous, thorough, creative, & highly organized criminal investigator who is also an awkward, insecure, and sensitive man is what I find most compelling and is what stays on my mind long after finishing each of these novels.
This one I have found to be the best of the lot so far but the entire series has enveloped me.

130rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 3:41 pm



57. Fingersmith by Sarah Waters; (4*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 608 pgs; acquired 08/29/2011; purged

I can't say enough good things about this book. Our heroine Sue, is an innocent narrator when she tells of her crooked, impoverished life. She is bright, charming and a girl you could listen to forever. Our other narrator is weak and cruel, yet stakes a claim for affection too. To tell anything more would deprive readers of a wonderful experience in reading.
This is a tale the reader simply gets lost in.

131rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 3:10 pm



58. The White Lioness by Henning Mankell; (4 1/2*); acquired 03/24/2014; (Kurt Wallander, bk 3);

I found The White Lioness to be a great surprise and an excellent read. Mankell's novel is impressive in many ways and on many levels. The characters are quite compelling. Wallander and the entire cast of Swedish police officers are wonderfully human, with a realistic mix of goof offs and good guys. The bad guys are portrayed with depth as well. They are terribly evil and coldblooded but also incredibly resourceful and quite realistically so. The historic events and characters are not unbelievable which is a big plus when reading.
I thought this to be a thrilling tale with human and realistic well rounded characters. I liked it a great deal.

132rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 3:09 pm



59. The Hours Before Dawn by Celia Fremlin; AV/AA; (5*); VMC; acquired 09/25/2013;

This author has the uncanny ability to take a perfectly normal, if not mundane, situation and create an atmosphere of sheer terror. The Hours Before Dawn, which won an Edgar for best novel of its year, introduces us to Louise Henderson. She is a sleep deprived young housewife & mother with a fretful new infant that is causing complaints from both her family and neighbors.
The only person who doesn’t complain is Vera Brandon, the boarder the Hendersons have recently taken in. In fact Brandon is so quiet that at times the Hendersons don’t even know she is in the house.
Soon the boarder’s actions begin to arouse Louise’s suspicions She finds herself doing all sorts of things she has never done before. Attempting to search the woman’s room, contacting total strangers for information about her, and finally taking the baby out for a night time walk in his pram, only to fall asleep and lose him in a park.
Fremlin skillfully weaves truly frightening events into Louise’s daily routine of meals, housecleaning, and childcare. Her great characterization has the reader pulling for Louise & just as terrified as Louise is by the time the story reaches its surprising conclusion. I knew what was going to happen.................except that is not what occurred. Kudos to Fremlin.
This is a really good story and I want to read more by her.

133rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 3:06 pm


60. The Man Who Smiled by Henning Mankell; (3*); acquired 04/04/2013; (Kurt Wallander, bk 4);

While Wallander is a great character, I found him to be rather flat in this episode, the 4th of Mankell's series on this police officer. Actually though I love this series, in this particular book every thing seemed somewhat forced & flat to me.
Neither Wallander nor the other officers responded to events as this reader would have thought them to, from reading the other books leading up to this one. Events & characters, villains & officers alike, just didn't reach out to me as in the past novels.
I am thinking that possibly Mankell was going through a bad time when he wrote this episode. Still and all, I gave it 3 stars I suppose simply for the continuity of the series, which I love.

134rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 2:59 pm



61. The Fountain Overflows by Rebecca West; (4*); VMC, #143; acquired 07/02/2009;

I first discovered Rebecca West in college when I had to read The Return of the Soldier (which I loved) for my British Lit class. I love her descriptive writing. She really captures the emotion and setting of her stories. I found this to be more than just a good read.

I do find reviewing her work difficult and would have to agree with the following quote.

"Rebecca West's novel touches the very essence of life ..... Reviewing Rebecca West is like trying to review Michaelangelo. Perhaps we have become afraid of acknowledging contemporary greatness."
~ Sybille Bedford

135rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 2:56 pm



62. This Real Night by Rebecca West; (4*); VMC, #270; acquired 08/08/2011;

I really appreciated West's The Fountain Overflows and This Real Night has the same beautiful, poignant writing and the same characters, but is not quite the compelling narrative of the previous novel. Even so I would have to say that I am glad I read it. However I don't know that I will go for the third in the trilogy: Cousin Rosamund.

I find that I quite agree with this quote:

"Reviewing Rebecca West is like trying to review Michaelangelo. Perhaps we have become afraid of acknowledging contemporary greatness."
~ Sybille Bedford

136rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 2:09 pm



63. The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx; (4*); acquired 09/25/2007; purged

The Shipping News does not have a conventional plot as such. Instead it unfolds in quirky, graceful episodes so soaked in atmosphere that they are very much like beautifully polished, linked short stories. It would be unfair to give away too much of these delicious vignettes, except to say that Quoyle is eventually attracted to a local woman, the widowed Wavey Prowse, mother of a son with Down's syndrome.
Forget the movie and read the book. It stays with the reader. I found it to be captivating and very good.

137rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 1:56 pm



64. Sidetracked by Henning Mankell; (4*); acquired 03/14/2013; Kurt Wallander (5);

Kurt Wallander, the melancholy detective in Henning Mankell's Swedish police procedurals, takes it personally when a crime is committed on his turf. In Sidetracked the work of a serial killer who takes the lives of his victims with an ax and takes their scalps as trophies throws Wallander into another depression. He feels great sorrow as he realizes that a new & foreign kind of violence has now struck in Ystad, his turf & his hometown.
The author observes local police routines in detail, while taking a parallel path to follow the insane logic and precise methods of the killer. But it is Wallander's anguished voice that really sucks us in. While all of Sweden is following World Cup soccer and everyone is preparing for their summer holiday, this cop can't get over the girl who torched herself in a farmer's field. Brooding on the alienation of the young, the breaking down of the family unit and the loneliness that attends this breakdown of modern society, our philosophical hero vows to make it up to the coming generation while he still can.
I continue to enjoy this series.

138rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 1:19 pm



67. The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood; (1/2*); AV/AA; Virago fiction; BFB, 637 pgs; ROOT, 07/06/2011; purged

Maybe Atwood IS a genius, but if she is, then I am the one magically remaining Dodo Bird. I LOVED her The Penelopiad and had been looking forward to this read for ever so long. Through the first 100 or so pages I kept telling myself: It will get better. The characters will flesh out and the story lines will clear up and become something interesting. Didn't happen. I simply found The Blind Assassin to be 637 pages of the purest boredom.
Taking the precious time to read this book was a complete waste of time for me. I should have applied CurrerBell's Pearl Rule & shut her down at page 50! But I just kept telling myself: But this is Margaret Atwood. It has to be me and perhaps it is because she is stellar in the world of writing & most everyone who has read this book has raved about it.
This reader found The Blind Assassin to be dull, tedious, boring, ummm....... that probably tells my story about it.
I guess I just did not get it. I could not even tell you what this one was all about!

139MissWatson
Ago 18, 2016, 3:48 am

Wow, you have been busy! Happy rooting!

140rainpebble
Ago 18, 2016, 2:27 pm

Thanks Missy and to you, as well. :-)

141rainpebble
Modificato: Ago 26, 2016, 4:16 pm



66. The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullough; (4 1/2*); AV/AA, VMC #530; BFB, 704 pgs; ROOT, from prior to L/T

The Thorn Birds is a sweeping love story set on a sheep station in the Australian outback. At its heart is the ill-fated romance of the beautiful young Meggie Cleary and the handsome Roman Catholic priest, Father Ralph de Bricassart. Forced to choose between the woman he loves and the Church he is sworn to, Father Ralph's ambitions win and he stays with the Church giving up his love. He eventually becoming a Cardinal in Rome.
De Bricassart never realizes that Meggie's bright young son is his child. Even when the boy comes to Rome to study for the priesthood Father Ralph has no clue. After the boy's tragic death Meggie must choose between her own comfort and the independence of her beautiful but willful daughter who is a talented actress.
McCullough's Thorn Birds, at over 700 pages, details the private lives of three generations of the Cleary clan over a 55 year span. It paints a very real portrait of the trials and rewards of life in the Australian outback on a sheep ranch and of one woman's doomed love for a man who would always be beyond her reach.
I loved it all over again.

142Tess_W
Modificato: Ago 27, 2016, 8:34 pm

>141 rainpebble: One of my top 5 favorite books of all time!

143avanders
Ago 29, 2016, 12:14 pm

Hi! I couldn't possibly catch up on the threads after my crazy-long absence, but I just wanted to say hi :)

144connie53
Ago 30, 2016, 2:06 am

>141 rainpebble: I remember I loved that book back in the days!

145avanders
Ago 30, 2016, 2:01 pm

>138 rainpebble: half a star for The Blind Assassin? Do tell! I haven't read it, but it's been recommended to me by several people!
The only other thing I've read by her is The Handmaid's Tale, which I thought was good but not as enjoyable as I'd have liked....

>141 rainpebble: that book keeps coming up ... glad you enjoyed it so much!

146Nickelini
Ago 31, 2016, 11:39 pm

>145 avanders: half a star for The Blind Assassin? Do tell!

I missed that detail. Yes, do tell. To me, that means "written by an orangutan, but stupid and mean as well." Excited to hear about this.

147rainpebble
Set 1, 2016, 12:58 am

Will throw up my thoughts on BA soon. Real life seems to have gotten very real again & at my age I do not appreciate it. Back to boring would be fine with me.

148rainpebble
Modificato: Set 4, 2016, 1:25 pm



67. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith; (5*); AV/AA; VMC; acquired 07/02/2009

This is the story of an eccentric poor family living in a decrepit, crumbling yet picturesque castle. There is our protagonist, 17 year old Cassandra who loves to write in her journal/diary and records the day to day lives of her family. Then we have her older sister, Rose, who wants nothing more than to marry rich and thus help her family. There is the very eccentric father who was once an acclaimed author but is in the midst of a dry, oh so dry, spell. He pretends that he is trying to write but in actuality spends much of his time hidden away from his family reading detective novels in the attic. Then we have (in a very minor role) Topaz, the father's much younger, but also eccentric in her own way, wife. The household is depressive, stagnant and poor so when 2 young American lads come into their lives great excitement abound with the girls.
I Capture the Castle is a character driven novel and our Cassandra is witty, intelligent and imaginative and has a talent for closely watching and understanding other people. She can be quite blunt to the point of rudeness and the diary-like narrative makes it the story even more enjoyable.
I loved this tale and it had most everything for me. Lightness, darkness, a bit of the whimsy and so much more. This was a 5 star read all around for me.

149avanders
Set 2, 2016, 3:31 pm

>146 Nickelini: lol I like your translation of half a star :)

>147 rainpebble: no worries - it sure does happen!
I know, it's crazy how much I miss so-called "boring" days (those are, in fact, reading days ;))

150Jackie_K
Set 3, 2016, 7:35 am

>146 Nickelini: >149 avanders: To me, half a star (which I've awarded to two books this year, and just one or two other books over the past few years) basically means 'no redeeming features whatsoever and there's no way I'd reread it in a million years'. I'd then use my review to specify why - I do think that if I'm going to give somebody's book that low a star then I need to justify why. I don't add reviews of most of the books that I read, which is probably why if you look at my reviews I look really mean! I must remember to review the good ones too! In my scheme of things there is a very fine line between 4.5 and 5 stars. I've given a few books 4.5 this year, which basically means I loved it and thought it was brilliant. To get 5 stars though a book has to be what I'd consider life-changing - one of those books that stays with you for ages afterwards, where you feel bereaved when you've finished it.

151rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:39 am

SEPTEMBER ROOTS:

I read 16 ROOTs in August.

September ROOTs:
68.. We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 07/18/2007; purged
69. THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER by REBECCA WEST; (5*); VMC, #32; acquired 08/24/2009;
70. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens; (4*); gothic; acquired 09/11/2007; purged
71. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys; (4 1/2*); gothic; acquired 09/08/2011; Jean Rhys reading week, (unable to recall who is hosting);
72. High Rising by Angela Thirkell; (4 1/2*); VMC, #569; (September Series on the 75 gig); ROOT, 05/20/2010;
73. I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/05/2007; purged
74. Emma by Jane Austen; (4 1/2*); VMC, #341; acquired 04/27/2009;
75. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson; (4*); acquired 08/28/2009

152Nickelini
Set 4, 2016, 4:14 pm

>151 rainpebble: Interesting cover on your edition of We Were the Mulvaneys. It fits my satirical read of that novel.

153rainpebble
Modificato: Set 11, 2016, 6:15 pm



68. We Were the Mulvaneys by Joyce Carol Oates; (2 1/2*); acquired 07/18/2007; purged

My first ROOT for September & I thought I would love this novel, as Oates is a favorite of mine. But turns out not so much. The characters were well rounded as all of Oates' characters are. And in this case they all react differently to a critical event within the family history. But the book didn't really work for me.
Like I said, this was an okay read for me but I have found that I far prefer Oates' short stories to her novels. She is masterful with the short.

154Tess_W
Set 7, 2016, 9:50 pm

>69 rainpebble: Not an Austen fan, Belva? Or not just this particular book? Amongst my friends and colleagues, I'm the only anti-Austen fan!

155Nickelini
Set 7, 2016, 10:04 pm

Yes, do tell. Emma was my first Austen and I really didn't like it at all. But then I learned that I was reading Austen wrong and have loved all the other Austen I've read. I plan to give Emma another chance one day. There's a tutored read going on at LT right now, but it hasn't inspired me to go for that reread yet.

156rainpebble
Modificato: Set 19, 2016, 4:41 pm



69. The Return of the Soldier by Rebecca West; (5*); VMC, #32; acquired 08/24/2009; purged

The Return of the Soldier is the first WW I novel to be written by a woman and is written in such lovely prose.
Chris Baldry, a wealthy soldier, returns from the front suffering from amnesia and having forgotten the past fifteen years of his life. He has forgotten his marriage to Kitty along with the birth and subsequent death of their son, Oliver. He believes himself to be yet romantically involved with the daughter of an innkeeper, Margaret, who is now married to William Grey.
Jenny, our narrator, is Chris's unmarried cousin and childhood playmate who now lives with Chris and Kitty. It appears that she feels romantically inclined toward Chris. Chris asks to see Margaret and Kitty agrees that would be the best thing as Margaret is who he remembers being close to. Margaret whose love for Chris coexists with her tenderness toward her husband, then begins to visit Baldry Court regularly to spend time with the amnesiac.
The novel traces the reactions of Jenny and Kitty to Chris's forgetting them and to his undiminished love for Margaret. They grieve, they are filled with anger, but Jenny cultivates a bond with Margaret in order to rekindle her relationship with Chris. They call in doctors to attempt to cure him. Finally a Dr. Anderson arrives. He talks to Kitty and Margaret and learns of the death of Chris and Kitty's son. Margaret suggests that giving Chris some objects loved by his son might shock Chris back to his memory of the last fifteen years. This proposal is put forward. Margaret goes to Chris on the grounds of Baldry Court with the child's ball and jersey. Kitty and Jenny wait watching from the window as Margaret sacrifices her own happiness and Chris' in order to bring him back to a sane and current reality.
In spite of portraying this cure as a sacrifice of Chris and Margaret's happiness and at a risk to Chris's life, for he will now have to return to the front, the doctor moves ahead with what he sees as a possible cure for the young soldier. Chris is repeatedly described as ill, a term which helps make curing him seem the only sensible thing to do.
I find this to be a wonderful book. It is written beautifully and I highly recommend it.

157Caramellunacy
Modificato: Set 9, 2016, 6:27 am

>102 rainpebble:, >104 Nickelini:

I was going to pipe up that I had read this one recently as well, but it would have been a big mistake! I have this one on my TBR, but recently read The Ripening Sun about a woman who bought and worked a vineyard in France, which I really enjoyed for the most part...

Edited to add that by "this one" I meant Under the Tuscan Sun as the thread has most definitely moved on from then!

158rainpebble
Modificato: Set 19, 2016, 4:51 pm



70. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens; (4*); gothic classic; acquired 09/11/2007;

This book was not at all what I was expecting. I recall reading it eons ago for my Jr. Lit class and being sooooo bored that I ended up simply skimming through it & writing my report, which I Aced anyway. ??
I don't think this is even the same book. Well, of course it is not as I was 16 then and am 69 now.
Great Expectations is a wonderful work of 'art' about a young man who has lost his mother and father. He is raised by his older sister whom I immediately nicknamed 'Hagatha', for obvious reasons, & her husband.
The story is one of great poverty, coming of age and all of the events, emotions & angst that go along with that. Pip, our protagonist, is an English lad. His tale is one of the adventures of his life. As Pip grows up, he must strive to understand what is going on, why it is happening & how he should adjust to his life at the time.
The book is long and covers most of Pip's life. Great Expectations is rich with humor which we can all relate to. Short episodes make up the majority of the book. Dickens is able to link the episodes together in a way that gives the readers a meaning behind the stories.
A wondrous book to be read by those of all ages. Those of you with life experiences will love & appreciate it.

159rainpebble
Modificato: Set 19, 2016, 4:51 pm



71. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys; (4 1/2*); gothic; acquired 09/08/2011; Jean Rhys reading week, (unable to recall who is hosting);

I think that Jean Rhys did an excellent job of creating an interesting storyline as well as boggling our minds with the beauty of Colubri. Her images were so strong that I didn't have to try to imagine the characters or settings. I could see, smell & feel them.

This brilliant novel primarily deals with contradictions and ambiguity. Written as a prelude to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, Jean Rhys creates an identity for the otherwise shadowy figure of Bertha Mason, Rochester's mad creole wife, through Antoinette a beautiful lonely Creole woman.
Wide Sargasso Sea deals with contradictions and not just with feminist "rag issues" as other reviewers suggest, rather tending to deal with gender reversal. Christophine, the freed black slave from another Caribbean Island, is a strong female character who displays masculine traits standing up to the bullying unnamed Englishman (Rochester) who tries to use oppressive colonialist tactics to control the inhabitants of an exotic Island which cannot be controlled. Both are wild and unruly compared to his staid English persona and as such, something which he cannot relate to. Antoinette is the weak female figure who is finally destroyed by the Enlgishman, driven to madness through a combination of his desire for her and his distaste and hate for everything that she represents. An intriguing tale full of ambiguity Wide Sargasso Sea is a sad tale of dispossession and dislocation.

But please do not attempt to compare The Wide Sargasso Sea to Jane Eyre. To do that is to do yourself & Jean Rhys a great disservice.

160rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:40 am



72. High Rising by Angela Thirkell; (4 1/2*); VMC, #569; (September Series on the 75 gig); acquired 05/20/2010;

This story is a hoot!~! The first of many in the Barsetshire series, I loved it. The characters this author has thought up....oh how I do hope they appear in the next & the next & the next books of the series.

The main character, Laura, reads the most bizarre combination of books. We find her reading Death in the Potting Shed, Bleak House, The Bucket of Blood, The Butcher's Revenge, Omnibus Book of Blood, Torture and Disease, The Noseless Horror, & Who'll Sew His Shroud?. And she is a writer of books, no less. There is also a mention of a writer, Miss Mary Hocking, who is in need of a secretary or typist for her manuscripts.

I am not going to bother writing a review on this one for if you go to the book page there is a wonderful review written by Cariola that lends me to think no others are necessary. Suffice it to say I cannot wait to get along to the second in this series, Wild Strawberries.

161avanders
Set 22, 2016, 10:21 am

>150 Jackie_K: lol Also a good definition of half a star ;)
I suppose my interpretation is "terrible, not recommended to anyone for any reason, I'd give it 0 if I could" ;)
And I largely agree re 5 star books -- either I was incredibly impressed for some reason(s) or I was incredibly moved :)

>151 rainpebble: cool picture!

>158 rainpebble: I agree.. I really love that book. :)

162rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 3, 2016, 1:24 am



73. I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb; (4 1/2*); acquired 12/05/2007; purged

Lamb can just flat write. He is an author who can draw his readers in and make us want to keep turning those pages until the book is finished. The accessibility of his prose reminds us that a deep, thoughtful & moving narrative need not be artistically obscure as so much 'great literature' seems to be.
The characters in the book are wonderfully drawn and the themes are well developed. The introduction of 'Papa's manuscript', in the last portion of the book, seemed curious to me at first. But by the end of the book its power and purpose became quite clear. It can said that a simple Sicilian born factory worker would not be likely to write an autobiographical work with the degree of shocking self disclosure that the manuscript contains. Nor that we would find his writing to be so gripping. But this bit of literary license taken by Lamb is to be forgiven in the context of the work as a whole.
The greatest flaw in the novel, I found to be in its ending, which again this reader can forgive considering the whole body of the work.
All in all I found Lamb's novel to be a great literary achievement and one I wholeheartedly recommend.

163rainpebble
Ott 3, 2016, 1:29 am



74. Emma by Jane Austen; (4 1/2*); VMC, #341; acquired 04/27/2009;

Austen's prediction that her Emma was not a person many people would like certainly came to fruition. In point of fact Emma is one of the least likable characters in British literature. She comes across as a snob. She is a rich and manipulative character whom I found to be rather despicable throughout the novel. But for this reader, Emma came to be a character I loved to hate, so to speak.
The novel is quite funny and the characterizations I found to be well rounded, not flat, and I could easily identify with most all of them. There were the irritating Bates', the hypochondriac Father, the dashing, the elegant neighbor & brother in law, the accomplished Jane Fairfax of whom Emma is fiercely jealous, and the fawning lower class friend Emma wants to 'match up' with someone of a higher class.
The comic exchanges between characters, the complexity of the plot and the witty conversations/bickerings between the characters makes reading Emma a great deal of fun indeed. The reader has no need to like or agree with Emma in order to enjoy this great piece of literature. If not for Jane Austen's brilliant use of the English language, which pulls the reader right in and holds one captive for the duration, I could have never gotten through this book with so much joy and entertainment.
But it is exactly the author's control of language which makes the novel the masterpiece it is and why we still enjoy it some 200 years later. Emma is filled with complexity and interesting, funny interludes. The dialogue between the characters is quite brilliant. Emma is highly enjoyable to read and to re-read. I highly recommend this novel.

164rainpebble
Ott 3, 2016, 1:31 am



75. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson; (4*); acquired 08/28/2009

165rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 10:53 am

OCTOBER ROOTS:

(I managed 8 ROOTs in September.)

76. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES by NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T;
77. The Woman in Black: A Ghost Story by Susan Hill; (3 1/2*); acquired 08/13/2014;
78. Empire Falls by Richard Russo; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/05/2009;
79. UNCLE SILAS: A TALE OF BARTRAM-HAUGH by JOSEPH SHERIDAN LE FANU; (5*); acquired from prior to L/T;
80. The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe; (with criticism); (4*); acquired prior to L/T;
81. WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN by LIONEL SHRIVER; (5*); acquired 01/05/2012;
82. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy; (4 1/2*); acquired prior to L/T;
83. THE DOUBLE BIND by CHRIS BOHJALIAN; (5*); acquired 03/22/2009;
84. JANE EYRE by CHARLOTTE BRONTE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T;
85. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie; (4*); acquired 09/24/2007;
86. The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/10/2015;
87. Carmilla: a Vampyre Tale by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu; (4*); acquired 09/14/2009;

166rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 19, 2016, 3:22 pm



76. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES by NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T; gothic; (Great Halloween Read, 75 gig)

This is the story of the Pyncheon family that is slowly becoming extinct. We meet Hepzibah Pyncheon, poor and old, who lives alone in the family mansion. This house was built with seven gables, thus the title. Without funds Hepzibah opens a penny shop to earn money to live on. Other characters in this tale are her brother Clifford, imprisoned because of the acts of Jaffrey Pyncheon, a wealthy judge who lives in his own country manor and is determined to find an ancient deed to other Pyncheon property.
When the penny shop seems to be failing the young Phoebe Pyncheon appears. She is a lovely, vivacious, and enthusiastic young woman who lives in the country and has come to visit her cousins. She enjoys running the penny store and brightens the gloomy atmosphere in the house. When Clifford returns from prison she entertains him with her charms. In addition she meets Holgrave, a young boarder in the house and romance blossoms.
This story is often considered a romance but I think it is more a story about the Pyncheon family and the curse it endured. Hawthorne sets the stage by giving us an overview of how the original Pyncheon obtained the property and built the house. His actions brought about a curse from the original land owner that is to last throughout the family's existence.
There are ghosts and strange occurrences in the house and we are exposed to the lives of former residents. But life improves for the current residents when another tragedy strikes the Pyncheon family, particularly the judge. Hepzibah and Clifford temporarily leave their ancestral home. It all comes to a climax as the author weaves the tale into an ending that is unexpected but makes the reader smile. Many like to look at the symbolism used to represent aspects of the human condition. I have never been certain that Hawthorne chose to approach the novel in this manner. Nevertheless I like this tale more each time I read it.

167rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 15, 2016, 12:45 pm



77. The Woman in Black: A Ghost Story by Susan Hill; (3 1/2*); gothic; acquired 08/13/2014; (Great Halloween Read, 75 gig)

A good story of haunting, The Woman in Black really held this reader's interest. It has everything a good ghost story entails. A dark & boding house, the eerie marshlands surrounding said house, strange things that 'go bump in the night', the small village where no one wishes to speak of the strange goings on out at the house and of course your innocent who is sent to the house to do some sleuthing work.
Mrs. Alice Drabble of Eel Marsh House is a client of Arthur Kipps' soliciting house in London and when she dies, his employer sends him out to her lonely house on the marsh to dig through her private papers to speed up dealing with her estate.
When Arthur gets to the village he finds no one there will speak with him of the reclusive Mrs. Drabble, her house nor her life. However the man who trundled her groceries & needs out to her house in his pony cart is willing to take him to the house.
While at the house Arthur hears the most frightful sounds, sees apparitions and literally hears the things that 'go bump in the night'. He is there alone and tries to remain calm and continue with his work but it becomes more and more difficult. As he goes through Mrs. Drabble's papers he finds very little of use until he comes across a bundle of letters regarding a distant relative of Mrs. Drabble's who is unmarried and in the family way. The young lady wishes to keep the baby but doesn't have the means and so the little boy is adopted by the Drabbles. He later comes across legal paperwork that suggests the reasons for the hauntings of Eel Marsh House and the more he learns the more the hauntings continue until Arthur becomes ill in heart, soul & body. He is rescued from the house in a collapsed state and taken to the home of a gentleman he met on the train who says he must remain until he is on the road to recovery. He is attended by the local doctor, fed nourishing broths and which coupled with much bed rest does Arthur good. He is surprised one day to receive his fiance, Stella, who has come to take him back to London on the train.
They marry soon after and Arthur puts the experience behind him until one day.........one day................
Well, you will have to read the book to discover more of the particulars and the finale. Needless to say I enjoyed this book as I have every Susan Hill I have read. (Mrs. de Winter aside) I like the spare way she writes without throwing in flowery phrasing and unnecessary wording. I found this to be a good read and recommend it for those who enjoy a little spooking and haunting.

168rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 2, 2016, 2:48 pm


78. Empire Falls by Richard Russo; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/05/2009; American lit; Pulitzer Prize winner

LOVED IT!~!

Richard Russo surprises me in Empire Falls with the trials & life of Miles Roby, a restaurant manager, who's worried that the town dowager, Francine Whitney, will go back on her promise to leave him the restaurant when she dies. Empire Falls is a dying mill town and Francine owns everything including most of the people.
Things get complicated when the reader learns that Miles's mother had an affair with Francine's husband who owns the dying mills and he thinks that she is taking her angst out on him.
Miles has a daughter, Tick, who is the epitome of teenage angst & is having difficulty dealing with her father's looming divorce. We also have Miles's younger brother, David, who may or may not be the dead mill owner's son. Miles's naughty father, Max, steals from his son every chance he gets, there is the gay priest (who acts as Miles's confidant), a town police officer who suffers a low self esteem, Janine, Miles's ex and her fiancé, Walt, who owns a gym & is always trying to get Miles to arm wrestle with him. You know, prove who the better man is.
The reader is treated to most of these characters through each ones POV. Russo gets inside their heads and stays there for pages on end, telling us what they are thinking but just when we get interested in one of them he switches perspectives. This is not a short nor exceptionally easy book to read.
But this reader took no issue with that. Russo had me from the start. The book can be quite nostalgic and yet hysterically funny at times. Consider Miles' father. Max is very funny & I caught myself laughing out loud more than once. He has always wanted to go to the Florida Keys but this would take money, of which he has none. He gets the parish priest to help him steal money from the church's collection plate. Whoah! Dad is a hoot!
The ending of Empire Falls is one that I must admit I was not prepared for. Neither were the characters. I found this to be a very well written slice of life in small town America. I know I will eventually return for seconds. I highly recommend it.

169rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 15, 2016, 12:44 pm


79. UNCLE SILAS: A TALE OF BARTRAM-HAUGH by J SHERIDAN LE FANU; (5*); gothic; acquired prior to L/T; (Great Halloween Read, 75 gig)

Uncle Silas is both J. Sheridan Le Fanu's greatest novel and also his most celebrated and widely known which is a rare combination. It is a thorough reworking of the Radcliffean mode and of the Female Gothic in general, but it is also something entirely fresh, at least for a novel published in 1864, concerning as it does elements as diverse as Swedenborgian mysticism, Wilkie Collinslike sensationalism, and .. a rarity for its time and genre, the first person retrospective narration of a young female protagonist. A classic work of 19th century Gothic, it is also generally considered one of the first examples of the 'locked room mystery' and it contains many motifs that have now become common stock of detective fiction and of the mystery genre in general.

Written with the kind of lush and yet curiously straight forward prose that characterizes all of Le Fanu's fiction Uncle Silas concerns for the most part three extremely well written characters. The first, its titular hero/villain is an impressive revision of the Byronic hero in all its complexity of characterization and is one of the most successful of these 'stock types' in all of Gothic literature; the second our narrator Maud Ruthyn is fleshed out to a degree that is much more three dimensional than the typical 'Emily St Aubert' of most of these kinds of fictions; and the third and perhaps most remarkable of Uncle Silas's cast, is the insidious, revolting and utterly outrageous Madame de la Rougierre who is worth the price in and of herself. With these characters Le Fanu takes the familiar mechanisms of the gothic novel and twists and turns them about into fabulously crisp and colorful new shapes that are as enjoyable and darkly fascinating today as they were to Victorian audiences one hundred and fifty years ago.

The plot itself concerns the isolation of our young protagonist at the decaying rural estate of her rumour haunted Uncle Silas after the death of her father. She may or may not be the target of a plot that is still capable of chilling the blood. Silas whose decades old association with a ghastly crime which he may or may not have committed and which continues to plague him has been entrusted with Maud's guardianship. It becomes apparent however that this circumstance contains more of self interest than devotion to his late brother. Madame de la Rougierre whose early appearance in the novel is interrupted by the shift in action from Maud's ancestral home to Silas's Bartram Haugh reappears as the novel begins to plunge towards its shockingly violent climax and brings with her a final word on the mysteries of Uncle Silas and its brilliant compelling expansion of Mrs. Radcliffe's tropes. I won't reveal much more in the way of story but Le Fanu is successful in that many times we can see exactly where Uncle Silas is heading and yet we are still surprised with exactly where we have wound up.

Of all the foundational works of the gothic, Uncle Silas remains one of the most accessible for modern audiences and one of the most intriguing. One can see its influence on everything from The Turn of the Screw to Rebecca and it is perhaps fitting that Le Fanu's greatest novel is a variation on a theme and on an entire genre and has itself been reimagined and reworked by modern writers of the Gothic.

170Tess_W
Ott 15, 2016, 6:33 pm

Some great reviews!

Also, could you post your gothic review in my gothic novels group? http://www.librarything.com/groups/gothicnovels

171rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 10:58 am



80. The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe; (with criticism); (4*); acquired prior to L/T; gothic/horror; poetry; classic

172rainpebble
Ott 19, 2016, 2:51 pm

>170 Tess_W:
Of course, Tess. I could do that. I was concerned about posting too much over there. :-)

173rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 10:58 am



81. WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN by LIONEL SHRIVER; (5*); acquired 01/05/2012; MAR; Orange/Baileys; ROOT;

This was a 5 star read for me. I think it was written brilliantly. I've had many a movie have me on the edge of my seat but this is the first book I can recall putting me literally on the edge of my seat and holding my breath even though I had figured it out a few pages in, with the exception of the daughter.
I've not been able to write a review on it yet, but will throw one up soon.
BRILLIANT, JUST BRILLIANT!

174rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 10:58 am



82. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy; (4 1/2*); acquired prior to L/T; classics; MAR; BFB;

Tolstoy is a wonderful author and the translation I have by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, I could not have been happier with. It is a lovely translation.
The story begins with duplicity and ends with a man finding himself, the reason for his life and his life's work.
The tragedy of Anna Karinina was, for me, almost a backdrop for the rest of the book. I liked how the author built her character and toward the end showed how a person, through their search for the ultimate happiness of self, can literally become so filled with anxiety, angst, and depression that they lose their grip on reality and destroy themselves.
The writing is such that I came to know the characters in this novel and I thought that they and their behavior was understandable and within their characterizations. I must admit that the politics of it totally confused me but did not disturb the storyline for me. I liked how the author went back and forth with the different character's stories and I found it quite easy to follow.
Although the title of the book is Anna Karinina, for myself the main character of the book and the one I cared the most about was Levin. For me it was his story with all of these subplots written behind it. He is the one I related to, cared the most about, and wanted to know more about. He is the one I found to be the most mulitfaceted character and there were many layers to him. I also enjoyed Kitty's character. Anna, on the other hand, was very shallow and altogether a rather boring, though beautiful, character. Her demise was almost anticlimactic, but with it Vronsky finally became a man.
I loved the last part of the book where Levin really challenged himself and thought the ending quite beautiful.
This was my third or fourth reading of the book within 50 years and I am sure I won't wait so long for the next reading. It read very differently this time around. I highly recommend this classic. I find it to be a beautifully and calmly written novel. Tolstoy was indeed masterful with the pen.

175rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 10:59 am



83. THE DOUBLE BIND by CHRIS BOHJALIAN; (5*); acquired 03/22/2009; MAR;

This one had me from the beginning. College student, Laurel, who loves to bike in her spare time and for exercise is biking on a back wood road one day when she is come upon by two men in a van who jump out, attempt to drag her off her bike and rape her. Finally other cyclists, hearing her screams, abort the attempt. Laurel is left with a shattered collarbone, a broken finger, her left breast so badly bruised as to take months to heal and so traumatized that she retreats from school, friends, society and returns to her family home on Long Island to recuperate and recover; not to return to school until mid term. The two men are apprehended and sent to prison.
Laurel was raised on Long Island and she and her friends learned to swim, sail, play tennis, etc at the country club which had once been the home of Jay Gatsby and was right across the way from the home of Daisy and Tom Buchanan.
Laurel takes up swimming to replace biking in her life and begins to volunteer at a homeless shelter. After her schooling is completed she goes to work there full time and meets an older gentleman named Bobbie whose most prized possessions are a box of photographs that Laurel deduces he took himself. When Bobbie suddenly passes away the collection of photos is given to Laurel in the hope that she might put together something from them that could raise some money to aid the shelter. Within this collection of photos, among others are snaps of the Gatsby home and pool, the Buchanan home and the Buchanan children. But most puzzling of all is that there are pictures of Laurel biking on that back wood road.
Laurel begins obsessing about these photos. How could this Bobbie have been on that isolated back road at the same time she was and why. Her life begins to focus on Bobbie, his family, and the pictures, even as the people around her struggle to keep her involved in her day to day life.
Laurel's journey through the "photo land" and her search for understanding is the beginning of a novel with twists and turns and at the end leaves you with your mouth open. Bohjalian's skill with the pen is nothing short of a shocking marvel with this novel. His characters are very believable, their manner of reaction and behavior I found to be realistic to the storyline. I don't think this book is for a "day at the beach read". I think it is more of a sit down and get 'er done type of read simply for the fact that I couldn't put it down until my eyes shut. It was interesting, plausible, riveting; simply everything that I like in a novel. It comes highly recommended.

176rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:01 am



84. JANE EYRE by CHARLOTTE BRONTE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T; VMC; classics; MAR;

One of THE best books I have ever read or in this case reread.

Jane is a poor orphan fobbed off at a very early age on a nice uncle & a bitchy aunt who have 3 abominable children. The uncle dies but makes his wife promise to always keep & care for Jane. That lasts a few miserable years until the aunt, through correspondence, finds a poorly run boarding school for Jane that will keep her holidays as well. She wants never to see her again.
So Jane goes to the boarding school where she works hard, learns well, is always hungry & often cold. She remains there, studies hard & becomes a teacher for an additional 2 years at which time she posts an advertisement for a position as governess.
She is hired by a Mrs Fairfax of Thornfield to become governess to a young girl, Adelle, who is a ward of the owner of Thornfield but the Master is rarely there. Jane is very happy in her new position but when the Master returns home she cannot help falling in love with him. She keeps this close to her vest. Little does she know that he has fallen in love with her as well.
In her room at night, Jane begins to hear strange cries, howls & noises from overhead. She knows that there is someone up on the 3rd floor but is told that it is a servant who keeps mainly to herself and indeed she does see Mrs. Poole occasionally going to & from that floor carrying items.
When Jane learns who is actually living in that upper abode she is heartbroken and feels she cannot remain. So the girl takes the poor things she arrived with and the few pennies she has and leaves, catching a coach that will take her as far away as her funds will allow. As she is let off the coach she forgets her little bundle and now all she has are the clothes on her back.
Jane walks & forages for food for about 3 days. She looks for work, finding only rejection. She begs food and is given bread crumbs. Finally one stormy night when she is so poorly she feels she can go no further she sees a light in the distance. She follows the light and comes upon a cottage in the wood where as she looks through the window she sees 2 young ladies that she is sure are sisters, for they look so much alike, and an elderly lady that she assumes is their mother, guardian or servant. She knocks on the door, is turned away & the door shut upon her. Jane is so ill, weak & weary that she collapses on the stoop.
The next thing she is aware of is a gentleman coming upon her, & helping her into the warm kitchen where now she is fed some warm milk & bread & is taken up to a warm bedroom, changed into dry sleeping clothes and put to bed where she remains ill & out of her head for several days. She is cared for by all of the inhabitants of the house. As she begins to get stronger she is allowed to sit up and eventually she feels well enough to get up, dressed & go downstairs where she joins the servant in the snug, warm kitchen.
She is accepted by this family and kept there for some time. The gentleman, who is a brother to the girls, finds work teaching for her along with a wee cottage of her own.
She lives thus for some time.
I will stop here, dear reader, for to go on would tell you more than you would wish to hear at this point.
This is one of the best books I have ever read and I very highly recommend it to young and old alike.

177rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:01 am



85. And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie; (4*); acquired 09/24/2007; MAR; mystery;

Mystery at its very finest; taut, compelling, absorbing. Ten people are brought to an island under rather odd circumstances. They're welcomed in the absence of owner, U.K. Owen, and after their shock at the playing of an audio recording accusing each of them of murder, one of them dies. Then another. Then another. The remaining survivors do their best to defend themselves and identify the person killing them by addressing the issue of whether it's one of them or someone hidden on the island. The rapid fire beginning introduction of characters is supplemented well by their words and actions on the island so they become clear. The clues are there but this reader found them subtle enough to miss sometimes and only obvious in the retrospect of the ending revelations. It is different than the modern mysteries I enjoy, but it simply shines as the epitome of the mystery genre. Yes, I found it a bit unnerving but it is amazingly well constructed. A complete pleasure to read and this one works as well today as when it was written.

178rainpebble
Ott 19, 2016, 3:22 pm

So far I have read 10 ROOTs for October and will be continuing forth:

THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES by NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T; gothic;
The Woman in Black: A Ghost Story by Susan Hill; (3 1/2*); acquired 08/13/2014; gothic;
Empire Falls by Richard Russo; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/05/2009; American lit; Pulitzer Prize winner
UNCLE SILAS: A TALE OF BARTRAM-HAUGH by JOSEPH SHERIDAN LE FANU; (5*); gothic; acquired prior to L/T;
The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe; (with criticism); (4*); acquired prior to L/T; poetry; gothic/horror;
WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN by LIONEL SHRIVER; (5*); acquired 01/05/2012; MAR;
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy; (4 1/2*); acquired prior to L/T; classics; BFB
THE DOUBLE BIND by CHRIS BOHJALIAN; (5*); acquired 03/22/2009; MAR;
JANE EYRE by CHARLOTTE BRONTE; (5*); acquired prior to L/T; classics; MAR;
And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie; (4*); acquired 09/24/2007; MAR; mystery;

179rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:12 am



86. The Long Walk: The True Story of a Trek to Freedom by Slavomir Rawicz; (4 1/2*); acquired 08/10/2015;

The story told in this book did not actually occur as told. The BBC, along with an American researcher, revealed that they have found records in the former Soviet Union that conclusively prove that Slavomir Rawicz, while imprisoned in Siberia, did not escape. But rather he, like so many other Polish prisoners, was released by the Soviets after the German invasion and was sent to a refugee camp in Iran. The documents that prove this are written by and bear the signature of Slavomir Rawicz.
While this book was the subject of debate for many years we now know that it is a work of fiction, albeit a fascinating tale and I would venture to say that a great deal of it is based on factual happenings, whether they occurred to Slavomir Rawicz, or any number of prisoners. And I would not let this dissuade you from reading this work.
Those who found the book inspiring should take heart in understanding that even though this man did not walk from Siberia to India, he still suffered terribly in the Gulag and he lived through a painful experience that was no less heroic than the story written here.
It is also important to understand that some parts of the book are very likely to be true or to have grains of truth in them. Rawicz was a Polish solider and he was arrested by the NKVD. He was in prison camps in the Soviet Union. He actually did join the Free Polish Army after he left the Soviet Union and he did serve in Palestine and Britain during the war. It is even quite possible that a 'long walk' to India actually happened but with others, as yet unidentified taking part, it causes to story to be a bit confusing as to the true events & the dramatization of factual events.
The world now knows that Rawicz did not make the long walk. But this still may not be the end of the story. Even though the book is, strictly speaking not entirely & factually true, that does not mean that this is not an important story. As a story, I found it to be very inspirational and it stands as a tribute of sorts to the hundreds of thousands who passed through the Gulag and lived amazing stories that will never be told nor heard.

180rainpebble
Modificato: Ott 27, 2016, 11:15 am



87. Carmilla: a Vampyre Tale by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu; (4*); acquired 09/14/2009

This was a wonderful but sorrowful novella. The classic approach to vampires is one that never grows old though the center focus on two women is something the reader almost never finds in old literature. This gives it a nice change up from other vampire tales.
I found that I quite liked the character of the first person, the victim, who is telling the tale. I also found the villainess to be a well rounded & thoroughly readable character.
Sheridan Le Fanu pays much attention to detail and imagery. I could envision events unfolding in my mind with no effort. I love when that happens as I read.
I enjoyed this book very much and think it would come highly recommended to those who enjoy a bit of a creepy tale.

181avanders
Nov 2, 2016, 11:33 am

>165 rainpebble: you're kicking butt!

>166 rainpebble: Ooooh, I bought that when I was visiting Salem, Mass and now I'm even more excited to read it!

>167 rainpebble: I enjoyed that one too... and then bought the movie so I could see it. Book was better, but movie is entertaining :)

>173 rainpebble: huh. This keeps popping up on my radar... I ... may have to actually check it out, despite loathing her book, Big Brother. I've heard that that makes sense, though... that Big Brother is bad but Kevin is good......

and >174 rainpebble: to >180 rainpebble: and continued WOW -- you are reading a lot of books.. and a lot of really GOOD books!
Yay!

And looking back at >1 rainpebble: ... i LOVE that your goal was 10 but you have read 87 ROOTs so far this year ;)

182rainpebble
Nov 2, 2016, 2:50 pm

Thank you Ava! You made my day. :-)

183rainpebble
Nov 2, 2016, 2:53 pm

I read 12 ROOTs in October. WOOT WOOT!~!

184avanders
Nov 2, 2016, 4:20 pm

185MissWatson
Nov 3, 2016, 4:13 am

>183 rainpebble: I am so impressed!

186Tess_W
Nov 3, 2016, 12:15 pm

12 in one month--just WOW!

187rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 1, 2016, 12:23 pm



NOVEMBER ROOTS:

88. Winterwood by Dorothy Eden; (4*); gothic romance; hardcopy; acquired 10/22/2011
89. THE COLOR PURPLE by ALICE WALKER; (5*); MAR; acquired prior to L/T; American lit
90. MARJORIE'S VACATION by CAROLYN WELLS; (5*); Y/A; Kindle; acquired 03/08/2014

________________________________________________________

While I got a lot of reading done in November, only 3 of my reads were ROOTs.

188avanders
Dic 1, 2016, 4:35 pm

>187 rainpebble: It was a rough ROOT month for me too... ;p (rougher than yours I think..)

189rainpebble
Dic 2, 2016, 2:47 pm

>188 avanders:
But we SHALL ENDURE TO THE END, Ava, right?

190avanders
Dic 5, 2016, 10:49 am

191rainpebble
Dic 5, 2016, 1:06 pm

LOVE IT, Ava!~!

192avanders
Dic 7, 2016, 10:58 am

:D (me too ;))

193rainpebble
Dic 8, 2016, 12:54 pm



88. Winterwood by Dorothy Eden; (4*); gothic romance; hardcopy; acquired 10/22/2011

The night was dark and the wind rustled through the branches of the trees and pressed them against the old house at Winterwood. The house itself creaked and moaned protesting the winds blowing though the loose window casings. Lavinia was alone in the dark and each time she attempted to light her candle, the moving air would blow it out. Her nerves were shattered and she began to feel that there was movement in the old house.

******* not really, I just thought I would throw that in ******** hee hee

Winterwood is a throwback to the old Gothic Romances and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Lavinia is a young lady who has had the good life and through unkind circumstances, is now one who must make her own way in the world. She becomes a guardian/governess to a young girl in a wheelchair who has two brothers. One of them is away at school and the younger one spends his time being petted by his mother, when not having one of her migraines, and the rest of the time up to no good. The father is an estate owner, (Winterwood), and is kept busy with the property.
There is an old aunt who is dying and plans to leave her inheritance to charities. The wife and a 'friend' of hers plot to get this inheritance. And in thus the story lies.
It's an old story and things turn our perfect for everyone. But coming back to this type of story is so relaxing and makes one wonder why we think we must have all of the fast talk and action and goings on that are in the more contemporary works. I will be reading more of this type of novel. They are perfect for fall, winter and a wet spring.

194rainpebble
Dic 8, 2016, 12:57 pm



89. THE COLOR PURPLE by ALICE WALKER; (5+ *); MAR; acquired prior to L/T; American lit

I find The Color Purple to be as beautifully written today as it was when I read it for the first time upon it's release. Alice Walker was given a gift to put onto paper for the rest of the world to share with her.

"I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it."
(Shug to Celie)

"What I love best bout Shug is what she been through, I say. When you look in Shug's eyes you know she been where she been, seen what she seen, did what she did. And now she know."
(Celie to Mr.)

The Color Purple is a pure example of great and wonderful literature. Alice Walker proves the hardship of life for those less fortunate. The painful and hard things that Celie had to go through make you feel total compassion for the character.

One of the best qualities of a writer is being able to make the reader feel what the characters are feeling and in writing this book Alice Walker did just that.

I love this book & very highly recommend it.

195rainpebble
Dic 8, 2016, 12:59 pm



90. MARJORIE'S VACATION by CAROLYN WELLS; (5*); Y/A; Kindle; acquired 03/08/2014

196rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 26, 2016, 3:22 pm



DECEMBER ROOTS:

91. Coromandel Sea Change by Rumer Godden; (4*); acquired hardcopy 12/21/2014;
92. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens; (5*); MAR; acquired prior to L/T;

197rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 26, 2016, 3:25 pm



91. Coromandel Sea Change by Rumer Godden; (4*); acquired hardcopy 12/21/2014;

This is a wonderfully delightful little story, as I find all of Rumer Godden's work to be. Is is set in an hotel on the Coromandel coast of India and is chock full of interesting characters.
Aunt Sani runs the hotel. Her manager is a girl from the local orphanage. The hotel is filled with guests this week owing to the upcoming election. The Root and Flower party is using the hotel as a base for their campaign. The party seems unable to contain their candidate, Krishnan Pange. Among the guests are Sir John & Lady Fisher and the newlyweds, the Browns, who are there on their honeymoon. She, the young English newlywed, is an innocent, naive woman who adores India and becomes enmeshed in the local politics. He is a wannabe diplomat who is very self important and in fact a complete bore. You will love the doctor and his sidekick as they are truly funny.
Take these guests, along with the others and add in a journalist, a mystery and you have yourself an interesting little party for all. Not all of the characters are who or what they seem. But you will enjoy them all along with their adventures, especially the new bride's confrontation of the reality of her marriage.
I enjoyed this book a great deal and it has made me want to drag more of my Rumer Goddens off the shelves.

198avanders
Dic 15, 2016, 1:54 pm

>193 rainpebble: lol I like your addition ;)

>196 rainpebble: great December ROOT!

199avanders
Dic 23, 2016, 9:20 am

200Tess_W
Dic 23, 2016, 10:29 pm

201rainpebble
Dic 26, 2016, 12:17 pm

>198 avanders:
You caught me out, didn't you. I must have either been sleepy when I made that post or it was simply a Sr. moment. lol Thank you all the same.
hugs,

202rainpebble
Modificato: Dic 26, 2016, 12:30 pm

>199 avanders: >200 Tess_W:
Ava & Tess; you two have made my day. What brilliant Christmas cards. I love them. Thank you so much, the both of you and I hope your Christmases were wonderful.
warm & gentle hugs to you both............

203rainpebble
Dic 26, 2016, 3:31 pm



92. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens; (5*); MAR; acquired early on in my childhood in the 1950s far prior to L/T;

Charles Dickens is one of our greatest writers of all time. And I find myself to be hard put to not like almost any timeless piece of classic literature.
In A Christmas Carol, Dickens took the time & care (as always) to firmly flesh out all of his characters so the reader feels as if he knows and understands them from Scrooge to the ghosts of Christmases, Past, Present & Future down to Tiny Tim.
I love this work and read it each year at Christmas time. Christmas simply not be right without reading this little book. My siblings and I read A Christmas Carol aloud to one another each year on Christmas Eve and I continued the tradition with my children, grandchildren and now my three little great grandchildren. If I only read one book at Christmas time it is always..............but ALWAYS A Christmas Carol!

204Tess_W
Dic 26, 2016, 6:52 pm

>203 rainpebble:, What a wonderful tradition, Belva!

205avanders
Dic 27, 2016, 12:31 pm

>201 rainpebble: lol well I appreciated the moment ;)

>203 rainpebble: oh I love reading that at Christmas... unfortunately, I wasn't able to do so this year, but I at least watched 2 versions of the tale as movies!
I love that you and your siblings read it aloud to each other!

206Jackie_K
Gen 3, 2017, 6:42 am

That is a lovely tradition! I have a friend who reads The Christmas Mystery every day in December (there are 24 chapters) with her kids, and I'm very tempted to do that too.

207avanders
Gen 3, 2017, 12:14 pm

>206 Jackie_K: oooh another fun tradition! it's an ADVENT READING tradition. I LOVE advent stuff ;)

208rainpebble
Gen 16, 2017, 3:58 pm

>206 Jackie_K:
That one is now on my WIISHLIST!