I subscribe to this author’s newsletter so had been hearing about The Lost and Found Bookshop for months before it was published. I entered a number of giveaways in my enthusiasm, did not win the book and eventually got it from the library.
The story is about Natalie who suffers some losses from which she must recover. The reader encounters those with whom Natalie is involved as she moves from a high powered, but unsatisfying career, to become the proprietor of her family’s bookshop. There is Peach, clearly to be a romantic interest; a popular author who wines and dines Natalie; Dorothy, the precocious daughter of Peach; Grandy, who is slowly sinking into dementia and others.
Ms. Wiggs love of bookstores and what they offer to people and communities come across clearly. The city of San Francisco is also painted by someone who is fond of both its history and what it offers now to those who live there.
The resolution of the story is satisfying but…somehow I had hoped for a little more from this novel. Its insights were not unique although they were true.
If you enjoy women’s fiction, I recommend this title. However, there are books by this author that I have enjoyed more including the Lakeshore Chronicles series, Map of the Heart and Just Breathe, to name a few.
Have you read this book? What did you think?










So many historical fiction titles on WWII have been published. I think that this has to do with many important anniversaries and commemorations and perhaps also because it was a war in which the right thing seemed clear. As a result, it seems that some look back on the war almost nostalgically even while noting and recalling its enormous tragedies.
Recently I blogged about a book called Everything Love Is. If that book seemed like your kind of book, I am pretty certain that you would like to read Nina George’s novels. I adored The Little Paris Bookshop with its story of how one can become isolated and yet have a richer and more meaningful life when moving beyond that unsatisfying safety. From Amazon: “Monsieur Perdu calls himself a literary apothecary. (INTERJECTION BY ME…WHAT COULD BE BETTER?) From his floating bookstore in a barge on the Seine, he prescribes novels for the hardships of life. Using his intuitive feel for the exact book a reader needs, Perdu mends broken hearts and souls. The only person he can’t seem to heal through literature is himself; he’s still haunted by heartbreak after his great love disappeared. She left him with only a letter, which he has never opened.” Will Perdu open the letter? If he does, what will this mean to him? Find out in this lovely book.






