Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Sunday, May 26, 2024

The May Roundup - lots of reading and a few tornadoes

Weather woes

πŸ‘‡ This cool VTOMAN Generator came in very handy when the Tallahassee area had severe storms and tornadoes two weeks ago.  Much thanks to Les at Coastal Horizons for posting about these generators.  We promptly bought two, a large one and small one. Hurricane season is around the corner for us so it's that time of year to prep.  Little did we know we'd be using those generators within a week from purchase. We were able to have a lamp on, make coffee and charge our phones/tablets.



Reading so far this month

The DNF this month was Barbara Kingsolver's Unsheltered. Two strikes on an author and I don't generally seek out more of their work.

πŸ“šπŸ“š   Books read  πŸ“šπŸ“š



The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud

The Rachel Incident by Caroline O'Donoghue

The Will by Rebecca Reid


May book travel took me to Boston, Panama, Barbados, Norfolk, London and Cork Ireland.

That's it for the May round up.   Looking forward to good reading in June and may link up with The Twenty Books of Summer hosted at 746 Books. 

Thanks to Susan at The Cue Card for the inspiration to join in.  It has been fun starting my list so we will see how dedicated I can be.

 Hope life is good for you all :-)

Sharing with:

πŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“šπŸ“š

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Messud's The Woman Upstairs and Henriquez' The Great Divide

 The Great Divide


This story set in 1907 explores how the Panama Canal  was built.  There are too many story lines, in my opinion, attempting to show how it affected a diverse group of people.  An intriguing premise but not enough in depth character development for me to get invested in the individual stories. 

There were the fishermen and locals, many of whom were against the Americans and big companies coming in and changing their way of life.  There were two different standards for pay and work for blacks and whites; the American workers and local workers called Gold and Silver for payment and living conditions.

The most interesting story to me was about Ada, the girl who traveled from Barbados to find work.  She had a sick sister who needed an operation so Ada was hellbent to send money back home.  Then it would jump to another story about a doctor from Tennessee who was there for research, a bully of a foreman who took advantage of the local workers, a village of people who were about to be displaced by flooding of their homes for a dam to be built.

It was hard to empathize with any one person or situation as you couldn't get to know them well before we went off to another storyline.  3 stars.


The Woman Upstairs by Claire Messud


I have bookmarked so many passages in this book on my Kindle; where would I start to explain the raw emotions and thoughts of Nora Eldridge. She's an elementary school teacher with regrets, as all of us have I'm sure, about choices not made. The road not traveled. Dutiful daughter, dependable Nora, the quiet lady upstairs. Not the great artist with a passionate love life as she'd imagined.

Nora's mother Bella was Italian, an artist, creative and intelligent.  She desperately wanted Nora to go do more, follow her dreams and not be "trapped" in a marriage and dependent on anyone. 

"I always understood that the great dilemma of my mother's life had been to glimpse freedom too late, at too high a price."

In the beginning Nora is talking to us and she is angry.  A barely controlled anger where she spits out her thoughts, regrets, grievances with a fuck you to the world. Not a spoiler, but this dovetails neatly into the end as we learn about her life, assumptions made by her and others and a great betrayal.

Nora falls in love with a family.  Arriving late into her third grade class is Reza Shahid, an adorable little boy Nora comes to love.  She is also enamoured with Reza's mother Sirena and his Lebanese father, a scholar named Skandar.  She is slowly enveloped in their lives, sharing friendship and family time with them - all together and sometimes alone with only Sirena in a shared art studio or Skandar as he walks her home evenings she stays for dinner. They talk as they walk… well actually Skandar does most of the talking about history, philosophy and life. 

Nora and Sirena talk and share their thoughts and goals for their art. Close relationships between all of the Shahid family and Nora. What could go wrong. 

This is a literary fiction I enjoyed very much and will seek out more of Claire Messud's work. 5 stars.........keep me reading :-)


Friday, August 9, 2019

The Huntress by Kate Quinn


huntress 


Once again, Kate Quinn has written a story with compelling characters.  Quinn’s previous novel, The Alice Network, was hard to put down and she’s done it again with The Huntress.  We have several unique points of view telling their stories about WW II.

Ian Graham was a war correspondent but he’s burnt out after witnessing so much horror.  Currently Ian and his partner Tony are Nazi hunters.  The big score would be the elusive Die JΓ€gerin – a female killer (the Huntress) who mercilessly killed anyone in her path, including women and children. Ian Graham has a personal interest in her as she is evidently responsible for his young soldier brother’s death.

Nina is a Russian aviator with quite an interesting back story. She is a Siberian “night witch” who flies with her all female comrades in WW II.  I really felt for Nina, all she endured, yet she’s the toughest of the bunch. Dangerous, skillful, sexy and extremely driven.  Our author did her homework about the Russian female aviators.  There really was a “night witch” group who served their country.

Last and certainly not least is Jordan McBride.  She's a young woman living with her widowed father in Boston.  She has a passion for photography, her dream job would be a photographic journalist, traveling the world.   In the 1950's a career is not encouraged, as much as sh'd love to attend college her father doesn't approve.  When dad meets a young German widow his life changes, as does Jordan's life.  Her story dovetails with the other three mentioned above.does Jordan’s life. 

I enjoyed every story line, every perspective and can recommend this to anyone who enjoyed The Alice Network.  Once again Kate Quinn hits it out of the park.

Foodie references weren’t abundant but Nina could tuck into a hamburger with such gusto that Ian enjoyed watching her enthusiasm. She had a style of putting jam in tea (I’m not trying that) and there were mentions of borscht, a Thanksgiving dinner and 1950/60’s comfort food from the McBride’s kitchen.

Thanks to LibraryThing for the advanced readers copy of this book.

A list of books within Crooked Heart and V for Victory by Lissa Evans

Book titles mentioned within a novel: I have a couple of books which I classify as comfort reads. Despite the fact that I rarely reread book...