Daily e-book deal

My earlier review of this title:

As soon as I finish reading a Ruth Galloway mystery, I long for the next one to come out.  I very highly recommend the series.  The characters are quirky, the relationships complicated, the settings well described and…the mysteries are good too.

In this latest novel, Ruth, a forensic archaeologist, travels to Italy.  She is accompanied by her friend Shona, Shona’s son and Ruth’s daughter, Kate.  Nelson, a police inspector and Cathbad, a Druid (yes!) eventually travel to Italy as well. The Italian town setting is eerily described.

Ruth has come to Italy to offer an opinion on ancient bones but bones from WW II also come to light.  There is intrigue and murder.  All is eventually solved.

Best of all, there are the relationships; Ruth and Nelson, Nelson and Michelle, Michelle and Tim, for the adults and other relationships between parents and their children including Ruth and Kate, Nelson and Kate and Michelle and Laura.

While the mysteries are good, it is quirky, eccentric Ruth and her relationship with Nelson that I most eagerly follow.  If you have read the series, rejoice in this latest entry and, if you haven’t, start from the beginning and rejoice in discovering a fine series.

#TheDarkAngel #NetGalley

Love between generations: Ojiichan’s Gift

This is a lovely, elegaic story about the love between a young girl and her grandfather. The illustrations complement the story beautifully.

Mayumi visits her grandfather in Japan every summer. The two share a love for the rock garden that the grandfather has created. Each year, Mayumi can do more in the garden. The two enjoy working together and then sitting on a bench to share their bento box.

One summer Mayumi’s grandfather has grown older and can no longer care for his garden. What does Mayumi do for him? How does she create a memory for herself? These two questions are answered in this lovely story about the connection between the grandparent/grandchild generation.

This sweet story will be a good resource for children whose relatives are aging.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for this advance copy which I have received in exchange for an honest review.

Learning to Share: Mine. Yours.

This story book has amusing, whimsical illustrations and a simple text.  The young Panda is learning about what he can and cannot have.  There is an adventure with a kite and a chance to move away from mine and yours to ours.  At the back of the book, there are notes about the animal breeds that are featured in the story.  It will be a cute addition for a young child’s bookshelf.

A book for siblings: Welcome Baby

This picture book has very sweet and tender illustrations.  In the story, a boy and his dog welcome a baby girl. They learn more about how to relate to a baby and a baby’s needs.  It is a nice story.

Caveat:  This one is published by a Christian publishing house and refers to Jesus and God in the text.  If you are not Christian, you may want to consider this.  At the end of the book, there is acknowledgment that children come to families in different ways (birth, foster care adoption).  There is again reference to God in this section.  This book will therefore most likely appeal to those who share the faith of the authors.

#ReagandoodleAndLittleBuddyWelcomeBaby #NetGalley

One that I am excited about: The Gown by Robson

The Gown: A Novel of the Royal Wedding by [Robson, Jennifer]Fans of The Crown rejoice!  This book is published today and although I have only read a bit,  I am quite excited.  This novel, set in post WWII England, is a story about the women who made Princess Elizabeth’s wedding gown.  Part of the story takes place in 1940s Britain while there is also a modern thread (no pun intended).  I think that this will be an absorbing and fun read. Start the year right with this one.  (Full review to follow)

“Robson deftly weaves issues of class, trauma, romance, and female friendship with satisfying details of Ann and Miriam’s craft. This unique take on the royal wedding will be an easy sell to fans of Netflix’s The Crown and a sure bet for readers of women-centered historical fiction.” (Booklist (starred review))

“Robson vividly brings to life these three women’s struggles. Historical details about fabric, embroidery, and the royal family are well incorporated into their stories, with light romance rounding out this charming work of historical fiction.”   (Library Journal)

“Robson’s novel shifts deftly between… Toronto to London in 2016… giving meticulous attention to the historical detail of post–World War II London. A fascinating glimpse into the world of design, the healing power of art, and the importance of women’s friendships.”
(Kirkus Reviews)

A couple of e-book bargains

A Great Deliverance

This is the first novel in the author’s Inspector Lynley series.  It is an absorbing and dark read.  I have since read every novel by this author.  If you start the series, you might too!

From the deals page:

“Meet Scotland Yard Inspector Thomas Lynley, the eighth earl of Asherton. In this series debut, he and his new partner, the working-class Detective-Sergeant Barbara Havers, are called to Keldale, a small Yorkshire town. That’s where teenager Roberta Teys confessed to the Lizzie Borden-esque crime of beheading her father William with an axe and slitting the family dog’s throat. But the now-catatonic Roberta’s crime is only the tip of the iceberg; the mismatched investigative duo learn that Keldale is full of dark secrets involving physical, sexual, and emotional abuse. The Washington Post Book World calls the novel, “pure entertainment from its insidious beginning to its gripping end.” The BBC adapted the series for television, starring Nathaniel Parker as Lynley and Sharon Small as Havers; it was shown in the U.S. as part of Masterpiece Mystery! on PBS.”

Biography

“Elizabeth George is the New York Times bestselling author of fourteen novels of psychological suspense, one book of nonfiction, and two short-story collections. Her work has been honored with the Anthony and Agatha awards, the Grand Prix de LittÉrature PoliciÈre, and the MIMI, Germany’s prestigious prize for suspense fiction. She lives in Washington State.”
The Cat Who Turned On and Off (Cat Who... Book 3)I read all of the books in this light series many years ago.  If you like cozy mysteries and cats, you will most likely enjoy this.

 

 

 

There are still more good e-book bargains

Sally Field’s autobiography has gotten excellent reviews.  This actress, who at times was underestimated due to her roles as Gidget and The Flying Nun, went on to win Oscars.  She writes of her life in all of its complexities and with its many difficulties.

CIRCE (#1 New York Times bestseller)The author’s first novel, The Song of Achilles, was enthusiastically received.  Circe has also gotten excellent reviews for being a

“A bold and subversive retelling of the goddess’s story,” this #1 New York Times bestseller manages to be both epic and intimate in its scope, recasting the most infamous female figure from the Odyssey as a hero in her own right” (Alexandra Alter, The New York Times).

The Paris SeamstressI have wanted to get this book for a while so, as an e-book bargain, this was clearly the day.  This is a story that takes place both during WWII and in the present.

“This rich, memorable novel unfolds beautifully from start to finish.” —Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

A New York Times Top Ten Book of the Year and National Book Award finalist, Pachinko is an “extraordinary epic” of four generations of a poor Korean immigrant family as they fight to control their destiny in 20th-century Japan (San Francisco Chronicle).

NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF 2017 * A USA TODAY TOP TEN OF 2017 * JULY PICK FOR THE PBS NEWSHOUR-NEW YORK TIMES BOOK CLUB NOW READ THIS * FINALIST FOR THE 2018 DAYTON LITERARY PEACE PRIZE* WINNER OF THE MEDICI BOOK CLUB PRIZE

This is in my TBR pile.  Everyone that I know who has read this novel has recommended it highly.

 

A Poetry Anthology: There Are Girls Like Lions

The title of this book comes from one of the poems inside, called Here are Girls Like Lions by Elisabeth Hewer.  A quote:

Here are girls like lions,

here are girls like howling wolves…

Here are girls who can’t breathe air, only fire.

Here are girls who carry kindness…

You’ve got to help them rise.

This anthology of poems about and for women includes authors that I both know and those who are new to me.  A partial list includes Emily Dickinson, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Sandra Cisneros, Sappho and Mary Oliver whom I know and Mary Jo Bang, Naomi Shihab Nye and Jean Valentine whom I did not.  If you are looking for an interesting, thoughtful anthology with an excellent introduction by Cole Swenson, I  recomment this one.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for this e-galley which I was given in exchange for an honest review.

 

 

Some more e-book bargains

How to Walk Away: A Novel

Praise for How to Walk Away:

“A heartbreak of a novel that celebrates resilience and strength.” —Jill Santopolo, bestselling author of The Light We Lost

“If you just read one book this year, read How to Walk Away.” —Nina George, New York Times bestselling author of The Little Paris Bookshop

“Warm, witty, and wonderfully observed.” —Emily Giffin, New York Times bestselling author of First Comes Love

“Sympathetic and refreshing!” —Elinor Lipman, bestselling author of The Family Man

“I can’t think of a blurb good enough for this novel…poignant, funny, heartbreaking.” —Jenny Lawson, bestselling author of Furiously Happy

The Hazel Wood: A Novel

From School Library Journal

Gr 9 Up—Alice Proserpine’s mother Ella was raised on fairy tales amid the cultlike fandom surrounding the release of Tales from the Hinterland, a collection of grim fairy tales that, in the 1980s, briefly made Alice’s grandmother Althea Proserpine a celebrity. Instead of fairy tales, Alice has highways as she and her mother constantly move around hoping to outrun their eerie bad luck—something that seems much more likely when they learn that Althea has died alone on her estate known as The Hazel Wood. Everything isn’t as it seems, and soon after, Alice’s mother is kidnapped, leaving nothing except a warning for Alice to stay away from The Hazel Wood. The teen reluctantly enlists her classmate and not-so-secret Hinterland fan Ellery Finch, who may or may not have ulterior motives for helping, to share his expertise on the fairy tales. The path to the Hazel Wood leads Alice straight into the story of her family’s mysterious past. Albert’s standalone fantasy debut has a narration in the vein of a world-weary noir detective who happens to be a teenage girl. Resourceful, whip-smart, and incredibly impulsive, Alice also struggles with her barely contained rage as circumstances spiral out of her control. Her singular personality largely excuses the lack of context for much of her knowledge and cultural references that hearken more to a jaded adult than a modern teen. The lilting structure and deliberate tone bring to mind fairy tales both new and retold while also hinting at the teeth this story will bear in the form of murder, mayhem, and violence both in the Hinterland tales and in Alice’s reality. VERDICT An aggressive lack of romance and characters transcending their plots make this story an empowering read that will be especially popular with fans of fairy-tale retellings.—Emma Carbone, Brooklyn Public Library
Before and Again: A NovelMy review:
Before and Again…how does what happens, mistakes that we have made, impact our view of the past, our present and our belief in the future? These big issues are fictionally brought to life in Barbara Delinsky’s newest novel.
Early on in the book, the reader learns that a moment of inattention led to the death of the protagonist’s daughter, Lily. Any parent can, but does not want to, imagine what this could mean. The reader watches as Maggie tries to move on and start fresh but…can/should the past be denied? A concurrent theme involves Grace who has secrets and stories of her own. In addition, Grace’s son is accused of computer hacking and the consequences of his act may impact his future, just as Maggie and Grace are impacted by their pasts.
I found the characters to be sympathetically drawn and would recommend this book to readers of women’s fiction.