I heard about this book on a podcast sometime in the past year. While on a bus one time, the person sitting next to me was reading it, and when asked how it was, said, “It’s good but some parts are tough.” I agree with that assessment, but ultimately I found the push through the... Continue Reading →
Trio, by William Boyd. Pub 2021
There was much praise and hype about this book in the past few years, and after my enjoyment of Any Human Heart, and a few of Boyd's other novels read as audiobooks (Solo, Love is Blind, Sweet Caress, Restless), I bought this one last year and got around to it now. Briefly, the story follows a... Continue Reading →
World of Trouble, by Ben H. Winters. Pub 2014
This is the third and final part of the Last Policeman series, and we pick-up almost immediately after the end of part 2. SPOILER: Hank, along with a fellow member of Police House (the retreat in the country where a group of police have set-up for the end of the world), set out to find... Continue Reading →
Olive, Again, by Elizabeth Strout. Pub 2019
I feel like I’m playing catch-up on the Elizabeth Strout oeuvre, and that I’m way behind the rest of the world in recognizing the considerable talent of this author. I first read her best known work, Olive Kitteridge, just last year, and am glad that was somewhat fresh in my mind for this book. We... Continue Reading →
All My Friends are Superheroes, by Andrew Kaufman. Pub 2003. Tenth anniversary edition, Pub 2013.
I picked this book up last year as a possible Christmas present for my cousin's son. It came up in a book search as one of those, "other customers also bought..." suggestions when I was picking something else for him, and the idea sounded interesting. As I was heading up to visit the family for the weekend,... Continue Reading →
Countdown City, by Ben H. Winters. Pub 2013
This is the second part of the Last Policeman series, and we pick-up a few months after where we left off in book 1. Hank Palace is no longer officially a policeman, as the force continues to downsize the superfluous elements like investigation and missing persons and beef-up the more hardcore elements of riot squads... Continue Reading →
Maus, by Art Spiegelman. Published between 1973-1991. The Complete Maus, pub 2003.
I hadn't had any interest in this until recently. My prior experience with graphic novels was less than engaging, and the glimpses I'd had of this one did not make it appealing - dark and violent, with animals in clothes. However, in 2022, a school board in Tennessee decided to ban the book (the day... Continue Reading →
Followed by the Lark, by Helen Humphreys. Pub 2024
To me, a hallmark of a good book is one that I get so caught up in that I finish it in a day. Helen Humphreys usually does that for me. In Followed by the Lark, Humphreys novelizes the life of naturalist and philosopher, Henry David Thoreau. Based on his many writings and extensive journal, Humphreys... Continue Reading →
The Memory Police, by Yōko Ogawa. Pub 1994. Translation by Stephen Synder. Pub 2019
This was an impulse purchase in my post-Christmas bookshop binge, chosen from the "we recommend" shelves at my local shop. Having read and enjoyed previous Japanese novels (e.g., There's No Such Thing as an Easy Job) last year, I was interested to explore something more substantial, and this "speculative fiction" appealed. I was not disappointed. SPOILER:... Continue Reading →
The Gunslinger, by Stephen King. Pub 1982
This series is a favourite of my husband's, but I've never ventured into it before. I've only read two other Stephen King books before - Thinner which scared the heck out of me, complete with nightmares, and Different Seasons, a collection of short stories, two of which were the basis for the films Stand By Me and The Shawshank Redemption.... Continue Reading →