Bookworm Musings
Lost and Wanted
Lost and Wanted, by Nell Freudenberger This book knocked my socks off. I read Freudenberger's first book, a collection of short stories when it first came out. While I'm sure portions of her book reflect actual people she knows or situations that she's been in, she...
The Invisible Bridge
The Invisible Bridge Julie Orringer. This tome reminded me a bit of Gone with the Wind: a love story set with the backdrop of a war, in this case WWII. A good pat of schmaltz. Most of the main characters make it through the war although statistically (according to...
Not in the Club
The Club, by Takis Würger. This is a quick story about a poor orphaned German young man with an aunt in Cambridge. She uses him to infiltrate a secret Cambridge club to seek revenge against the Patriarchy, the upper crust, the Old Boys Club. Not the best book of 2019,...
Seven Sackings
Rome: A History of Seven Sackings, by Matthew Kneale This book seemed like a fabulous idea - how Rome’s been changed by invaders and wars - what it looked like before the invasion; what society was like, and how it was changed by seven invasions. The author stated...
All the news
Truth in Our Times: Inside the Fight for Press Freedom in the Age of Alternative Facts, David E McCraw While still in the preface, I was so upset by McCraw’s questions about the fate of the US, I almost put the book down. I’m glad I persevered because the New York...
Madame Foucade
Madame Foucade’s Secret War, by Lynne Olson I picked this book up after reading the New York Times’ review of it, which used words like “fast-paced” and “gripping” as well as “impressively researched.” I wasn’t so gripped (more later), but definitely intrigued enough...
Small Fry, by Lisa Brennan-Jobs
All I can say is TMI on Steve Jobs. Yes, he's an interesting character...but I didn't realize that he'd appear on every other page of this memoir. Next time, a book more about actual small fry or French fries or who Lisa Brennan Jobs is without her dad.
Savage
The Savage Detectives, by Roberto Bolaño, a fantastic counterpoint to Asymmetry, by Lisa Halliday. Both in 3 parts. Both about the process of writing, dialogs/beefs/paeans to other writers, and both set in a variety of locales. While Bolaño is, at times, coarse &...
Hark, by Sam Lipsyte
I wonder if I would have enjoyed this book better had someone other than Sam Lipsyte read it. I can understand an author wanting the extra royalty, and so committing to read a work to be published as an audiobook. Maybe some have told Lipsyte that he’s a great...
Le Mystere Henri Pick
A quick little book about reading, writing, and love…is there more to life? Le Mystere Henri Pick, par David Foenkinos (yup, read it in French), is set largely in contemporary Brittany, a young woman editor is searching for a book to publish that is going to establish...
To Kill a Mockingbird
Admittedly, I’m late to the party. If anyone read To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, in Spencerport, NY during the 1970s, he or she wasn’t assigned it in my English classes. In February 2019, I got the opportunity to see the Aaron Sorkin remake of the play, To...
Erik Larson Fan – Devil in White City, Finally
I think I've now read the last of Erik Larson's books written to date. I'd put off The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair That Changed America for quite a while because I'm not so big into gore & I knew this was a tale of a serial...
Ghost Wall
Ghost Wall, by Sarah Moss. On Maureen Corrigan’s review, I began Ghost Wall, a story of a teenager and her family joining an academic “experimental archeology” field course in the North of England. Wikipedia describes Experimental Archeology as “a field of study which...
Artemisia
Blood, Water, Paint, by Joy Mccullough. I picked up this book because it was about Artemesia Gentileschi & I thought I’d be re-reading a book that I read a decade ago about her. No, that book,The Passion of Artemesia, by Susan Vreeland, had a different span and...
Assymmetry, by Lisa Halliday
Happy Spring Solstice! The full moon was huge this morning. Ozzie and I had a lovely walk. I've been reading (which is mainly listening to audio books as I walk Ozzie) but my "writing time" has largely been "work time" or "entertaining time" or "traveling time." As...
On Sunset
Kathryn Harrison has been on my "to read" list for years. Glad I picked up this slim volume (quick audiobook). Among her ancestors were Jewish merchants from Baghdad who became British citizens and then Americans. Some of her relatives peddled opium in pre-Communist...
A Tale of Love & Darkness
Amos Oz’s memoir starts in pre-independence Jerusalem and ebbs and flows back to Oz’s parents birth countries in Eastern Europe and Russia. Nu, what? Is is Oz’s grandfather’s standard greeting. He’s deeply skeptical of the socialist bent of Zionist, as he worries...
N. K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy
N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth Trilogy The Fifth Season (August 2015) The Obelisk Gate (August 2016) The Stone Sky (August 2017) I probably read this trilogy over the course of six months as I waited for each (popular!) audiobook to become available from the library. I...
Tracy K Smith: Wade in the Water
The author, US Poet Laureate in 2017/2018, reads her poems: What a treat! She speaks softly and precisely as if to one of her children. About half the poems are about family and children. The other half are historical re-imaginings. One poem, Watershed, is about...
Lots ‘o Philip Roth
The 2018/2019 Roth review continues for me. To date American Pastoral is my fave, but stay tuned: American Pastoral (1997) I Married a Communist (1998) The Ghost Writer (1979) Zuckerman Unbound (1981) The Anatomy Lesson (1983) The Human Stain (2000) The Plot Against...
2 by Terry McMillan
Terry McMillan's I Almost Forgot About You and Who Asked You? Ok - you can forget aboutI Almost Forgot About You. It’s about revisiting relationships with Ex’es. It’s funny, but not all that deep. On the other hand,Who Asked You? is a good slice-of-life about the...
Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass, by David Blight. Reading this book, I was reminded of the fact that biographies are not my cup of tea. Not really all that interested in anecdote after anecdote from boyhood. And Douglass' childhood was brutal. He was born a slave on the Eastern...
The Wife
The Wife by Meg Wolitzer. Full disclosure: I didn’t read the book. I saw the movie with Glenn Close. What an interesting story. The Glenn Close character is a gifted young writer at Smith. She falls for her (married) writing teacher, who at this point is young and...
Why Audiobooks?
6. I’m no longer in college and if I miss a detail, I won’t fail the test. And I don't have to write a paper or book report. 5. I can listen in the car, when I walk my dog, or need to relax from work. 4. Many narrators are terrific. For instance Robin Miles (the N.K....