The pick for my Classic Club Spin was Agnes Grey and while it was one on my classics bucket list, I didn't love it. That said, I completed the book.
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Agnes Grey by Anne Bronte
(Classics Club Spin)
Friday, November 29, 2024
November Reading Roundup
I can't believe I am getting my November reading round up posted in November! I read four books this month and made plans for some great challenges next year. Looking forward to more buddy reads, classics and nonfiction....but for now let's get this short post started.
📚📚 Books read 📚
The Woman Behind the Door by Roddy Doyle
My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante
The Wedding People by Alison Espach
November book travel took me to Rhode Island, Ireland and Italy.
📚 Currently Reading 📚
Thursday, August 18, 2022
The Last Girl to Die by Helen Fields
My introduction to Helen Fields' books were through the D.I. Callanach series and I was instantly hooked. If you like police procedurals and mysteries which are gritty and bold, this is your author.
The Last Girl to Die is a stand alone novel with charcaters you'd not be familar with if you were a fan of the aforementioned series. This one is a page turner.
The setting is Mull, a small island off the coast of Scotland. Our main character is Sadie Levesque, a Canadian private investigator hired by the Clark family to find their missing daughter. The Clarks are from California and when 17 year old Adriana suddenly disappears, they seek help from outside the community. The local townspeople are close knit and outsiders aren't welcomed with open arms. The police chief isn't helpful and tells the parents she's probably off partying in Glasgow.
Sadie doggedly pursues her investigation despite the hostile environment and lack of cooperation / info sharing from the police. Secrets are uncovered about the Clark family and a few locals, violence is threatened and carried out and the ending - just wow. I was so astounded how this ended. I went back a chapter to reread it. If Fields comes out with any new books I will purchase them.
Publication date September 1, 2022 by Avon Books U.K. Genre: General Fiction Adult.
Thank you to Netgalley for the advanced reader's copy of this book. I was not compensated for the review, all opinions are mine.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Thursday, July 28, 2022
Walking Through History
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Friday, July 22, 2022
How to Stop Time by Matt Haig
In his long life Tom has met F. Scott Fitzgerald, Captain Cook and Shakespeare among other historical figures. The book is divided by time periods and places. Recently I read Benedict Cumberbatch has acquired film rights to star in the production. For what it's worth, I prefered The Midnight Library to this book but I never considered abandoning the book.
Matt Haig was born in Sheffield England. His website may be found HERE.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and Marg the Intrepid Reader for the 2022 Historical Fiction challenge.
Monday, July 18, 2022
Ashton Hall by Lauren Belfer
This book is a historical fiction based on the real Ashton Hall built in 1856 in Lancashire England.
Hannah Larson is researching her doctoral dissertation and the subject matter of Ashton Hall plays in. There is a dark history about the house and a mystery about a skeleton which was found in a locked room. You will eventually discover who that person was. The backstory on that and the house history is revealed at the end. This is not a ghost story and just about all of the book is set and present time.
Hannah's life is basically a dumpster fire with a marriage in trouble and her son Nicky having emotional difficulties. I don’t mean he’s unruly or acting up, but more like a medical condition which causes him to become unpredictably violent. Yet he is bright and it's Nicky who discovers the skeletal remains.
Hannah's research brings the Elizabethan era to life as she goes through old account ledgers and diaries.
Publication date is June 7, 2022 by Random House Publishing - Ballantine Books. Genre: General Fiction, Historical Fiction, Mysteries and Thrillers.
Thank you to Netgalley for the advanced reader's copy of this book. I was not compensated for the review, all opinions are mine.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and Marg at The Intrepid Reader for the Historical Fiction Readng Challenge.
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Paul McCartney is 80!
{Sharing my experience at a Wings concert and Beatle memorabilia}
I have always been a fan of the Beatles but am too young to have been to one of their concerts. My first experience with them was their appearance on the Ed Sullivan show.
Magazines seem to be a thing of the past these days when you can access just about anything online but I had to have these two publications.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
The Janus Stone by Elly Griffiths
I like the archaeology topics which are an important part of the plot but I am wondering how many old bones can be discovered in this part of the world. The series has 14 books so I am looking forward to reading more.
Colleagues from the Archaeolgy department at Norfolk University have been digging on a hill for days. They have uncovered not only evidence of a Roman villa but also earlier Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements.
The other side story is about a wealthy family with plans to demolish an old children’s home to build luxury apartments. A child’s skeleton is found beneath a doorway which halts all work. An excavation team is brought in to remove the skeletal remains. It’s discovered the head is missing so this is looking more like a scarification from an early age. Or is it?!
The romantic subplot is fine so far, in my opinion, but I am hoping it won't eventually dominate the mystery and investigative side of the stories. I liked the first book more than this one but will read the next in the series so I can see where our characters are developing.
I am a series addict and love getting to know characters and seeing how they grow personally and professionally.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Friday, June 24, 2022
James Herriot's World via books and television
If you are a fan of BBC or Masterpiece Theater you may have watched a season or two of All Creatures Great and Small. The wholesome G-rated shows were inspired by James Herriot’s books. I have read all of his books and enjoyed each and every one. He brought the story to life and I could clearly picture the scenes in Yorkshire as he dealt with his patients – cows, sheep, bulls, dogs and you name it.
While I enjoyed the original series with Christopher Timothy and Carol Drinkwater more than the latest adaption, this is still good entertainment. Love the scenery and the animal stories.
James Herriot's Yorkshire
This book – James Herriot’s Yorkshire – is written by James Herriot (his real name is James Alfred Wight) and it is a wonderful compilation of photos and stories about the Yorkshire dales. The town of Darrowby in his fictional works is actually Thirsk. That is where he practiced veterinary medicine along with Sigried and Tristan Farnon (Donald and Brian Sinclair). Herriot may be surprised that his books are still so popular today as well as the number of visitors he attracted to the area.
This book is copyrighted 1979 and is one of the original printings purchased in England. I treasure this book. I’ve read that people who travel to Yorkshire with the specific intent of visiting the area Herriot lived bring this book along and it’s an invaluable asset. If you like rural areas and have a plan to hike about in Yorkshire, this book is for you. Flip through and enjoy stories and photos about small villages, ruins and history.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths
I wish I could remember who blogged about the Elly Griffiths' books because I'd like to thank you. Please leave me a comment if you've recently reviewed the Dr Ruth Galloway series!
British author Elly Griffiths has moved to the top of my list of books I'll be reading in June and July. Love the style, the plot, character development and the Norfolk England coastal setting.
Bones are found near an ancient henge off Norfolk's coastline. The saltmarshes can be dangerous to negotiate as the sands will swallow you up if you take a wrong turn. When bones are discovered DI Harry Nelson contacts Dr Ruth Galloway to ascertain if the bones are ancient or the remains of missing child from ten years prior. Dr Ruth Galloway is a forensic archaeologist, university professor and lecturer.
One of Ruth's discoveries is from the Iron Age but a cold case quickly becomes a murder investigation as more information surfaces. I enjoyed reading about Ruth and the growing friendship with DI Nelson. Planning on reading the next in the series titled The Janus Stone. I'm just hoping the Galloway/Nelson relationship doesn't turn romantic as I love the detective work and mystery parts best.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Friday, June 3, 2022
The Seagull and The Rising Tide by Ann Cleeves
It's been a week of cathcing up with the latest Ann Cleeves book about Inspector Vera Stanhope.
Thursday, February 17, 2022
The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O'Farrell
This is a tragic story, full of twists and revelations, made all the more sad as the story’s inspiration comes from historical records. In the 1930s era women could be locked in an insane asylum just for wandering off on long walks, or for keeping their hair long. Your liberty was at the whim of your parents or husband.
The story starts in Scotland when two sisters are sitting at a dance. It’s but a glimpse of two important characters. Then the detailed background story begins in India where these same two sisters are young; you are allowed a look into their early lives and how they interact with their parents. There is a baby brother born, Hugo, and Esme loves to play with him. While Kitty is the more serious of the two and minds the rules, Esme is the polar opposite. She makes excuses to leave her tutoring session and wanders off to visit her little brother. She walks barefooted to the horror of her prim and proper mother, she won’t be molded into the quiet citizen her mother desires her to be. I like her.
The story flashes between the girl’s childhood in India, then their move to Scotland and then advances to present day with Kitty’s granddaughter Iris.
Iris is a single young woman who owns a vintage clothing shop. She is quite possibly in love with her step brother Alex. It’s not as creepy as it sounds when you read their back story. Her life turns on end when a phone call reveals there is an elderly aunt who has been housed at an asylum for over 60 years, and Iris is the family contact. She’s never heard of Esme Lennox. Iris visits her Alzheimer afflicted grandmother, Kitty Lockhart, who is in and out of hazy thought but does confirm Esme is her sister. So what does Iris do now? Move a possibly crazed old woman, a stranger, into her flat? More importantly, why was Esme’s existence kept a secret all these years.
Now we flashback to Kitty and Esme Lennox as teenagers who are being introduced to the social circle. Kitty is the older sister and all about propriety and appearance. Esme is not confined to conventional social mores and continues to upset her parents. Surprisingly, the young man they hoped would be interested in Kitty is actually besotted with Esme. Later events will change everything in Esme’s life.
I am upset for Esme that her life was stolen from her. For no good reason she is swept out of her parents’ home at the age of 16 and then left to rot in an asylum. She is asked at one point how long it was since she had last seen her sister. Her reply: “Sixty-one years, five months and 6 days” and fact is, if the hospital had not been closing down, she would have ended her days there.
This is the second book I have read by this author and I like this one as much as the first. It’s sad and it leaves you with much to think about. I like having some things unresolved where you think about potential outcomes. Excellent writing. Well done Ms. O’Farrell.
A quote that sums up the lives of the patients…and when you ponder it, the everyday rituals we all move through.
“It is always the meaningless tasks that endure: the washing, the cooking, the clearing, the cleaning. Never anything majestic or significant, just the tiny rituals that hold together the seams of life.”
This is another paragraph I like. Esme is reflecting on Iris sitting on the beach. It’s perfect – as someone who enjoys genealogy this last part really spoke to me, thinking about my ancestors.
“From all her family – her and Kitty and Hugo and all the other babies and her parents – from all of them, there is only this girl. She is the only one left. They have all narrowed down to this black-haired girl sitting on the sand, who has no idea that her hands and her eyes and the tilt of her head and the fall of her hair belong to Esme’s mother.
We are all, Esme decides, just vessels through which identities are pass: we are lent features, gestures, habits then we hand them on. Nothing is our own. We begin the world as anagrams of our ancestors.” I think that was a marvelous bit of prose.
Sharing with
Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday.
Marg at The Intrepid Reader for the 2022 Historical Fiction Challenge.
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
" Between life and death there is a library," she said. "And within that library, the shelves go on forever. Every book provides the chance to try another life you could have lived. To see how things would have been if you'd made other choices....Would you have done anything different, if you had a chance to undo your regrets?"
Nora Seed is an extremely intelligent young woman but she is very depressed. Life didn't turn out as she thought and she decides to end her life. She "wakes up" in a library at midnight and the librarian from her childhood school is there. The librarian was always kind to her and becomes her guide assisting with choices.
There is a book of regrets she has Nora read through and the more she reads, the more upset she becomes. Now she has a chance to drop in on a life she regrets losing. Perhaps that will be the perfect life for Nora. You don't go back in time but join the life you would have if you'd taken that path.
Nora wishes she'd married Dan and pursued his dream of opening a pub in the English countryside. She visits many lives she could have had because each choice we make in life would take us on a different path. She can become the olympic swimmer, a married woman with children, a successful musician, a dog walker and it goes on and on.
It's not the type of book I had thought it would be and yet I was loving every single chapter. This is a marvelous book and reminds you the grass isn't always greener. No life choice is perfect and you aren't guaranteed of smooth sailing with zero heart ache.
It turned out well, loved the ending chapters and I can recommend this book as a very enjoyable read. It's emotional and uplifting.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday. as it's set in England. Author Matt Haig is an English novelist.
Note: Netgalley provided me with a bookclub kit for this book. Alas, I wasn't able to view the kit/verbage as it was "faded" - can't think of another way to describe it. Couldn't see it.
Sunday, January 16, 2022
Once Upon a Wardrobe by Patti Callahan
This story will be enjoyed by those who loved C.S. Lewis' books about Narnia and The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe. As someone who hasn't read those books in decades I realized you didn't need the background to be entertained by this narrative.
The story begins in 1950, location Worcester and Oxford England. Young George Devonshire is a frail little boy with a heart condition. He is completely besotted with Lewis' book The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe and wants desperately to know if Narnia is real. He will occassionaly climb into the wardrobe in his room and sit, imaging the world outside and a life he'll never have chance to know.
His older sister Megs is a mathmatics and physics student in Oxford and doesn't think beyond mathmatical probabilities - it's either right or wrong. Fantasy and imagination never cross her mind with any serious thought.
One thing for sure, Megs loves her little brother very much and rushes home from college to be with him each weekend and break. As she is reading to him one day George asks if she will approach Mr. Lewis and ask where the stories about Narnia came from. Is it real? Where did the inspiration come from? Megs has been to a lecture of Mr. Lewis but is reluctant to approach him with this request. Loving George so much she risks it as it's his dying wish. From there - what a wonderful story this becomes.
Megs is invited into the home called The Kilns, the residence of Warnie and Jack Lewis. (Jack is C.S. Lewis) and the story unfolds from there. It's a nesting doll of stories
There is saddness in this story but it's also wonderfully rich with details aout Lewis' life from boyhood to present. Adventure seen through a child's eyes and some very imaginative adults.
I want to thank Katherine at I Wish I Lived in a Library for recommending this book. It was one her favorites from 2021
Monday, January 10, 2022
Stonehenge: The Story of a Sacred Landscape by Francis Pryor
This book about Stonehenge caught my attention at the library and it's been an interesting narrative overall. I won't lie, there are some dry parts to this book but the stories I found interesting are the discoveries of grave sites, historical excavations and carbon dating.
Stonehenge has been a fascination of mine since I was a teen. My husband, son and I were fortunate enough to take a vacation over a decade ago and visited Stonehenge twice. Highlight of the trip!
Friday, November 26, 2021
Castles of Britain and Ireland
This one of King John's Castle in Limerick Ireland is where our family spent some time. I wish I could find the photo of my son on the bridge with the town in the background, a great trip for us all.
Tuesday, August 24, 2021
Northern Spy by Flynn Berry
"It's difficult to know how scared to be. The threat level is severe but then has been for years."
Bodies can still be found in bogs, searches are conducted to find informers the IRA had disappeared, at certain funerals, men in ski masks would suddenly appear in the cortage, chamber their handguns and fire shots over the coffin. This is how many people lived in the Belfast area, wondering daily if there was a credible threat.
The story focuses on two sisters. Marian and Tessa. Marian is not married and has been a paramedic for over six years. Her face is always so open and bemused while her sister Tessa's expression tends to be more grave, her having to reassure people she's not worried about anything.
Tessa is divorced and mother of a 6 month old boy named Finn. She works at the BBC in Belfast and is asked by some friends how she can work for the English. She went to university at Trinity College is a program reporter, working with political guests.
We start with Tessa narrating and learn Marian is on a vacation to swim and explore caves in the north. Neither Tessa or her mother can get ahold of Marian but they assume she's in cellular dead zone or simply having fun exploring.
Then a robbery and raid happen at a local gas station the news anchor asks for help identifying those responsible. Tessa stares at the images of the terrorists and suddenly sees her sister's face on screen, Marian pulling a black ski mask over her face. Tessa's world dissolves.
The only negative in this narrative is the description of The Troubles as if it's a current situation. Perhaps I missed the time frame in this book but it had the feel of being set in present time or a few years earlier. The plot appears to be during the height of the violence and near the peace agreement which would put it around 1994, right? That being said, I loved the book and couldn't put it down.
I see why this is a best seller with over 3,400 four star ratings. I plan to read all of Flynn Berry's novels in the near future.
Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday. and Marg at The Intrepid Reader for the 2021 Historical Fiction Challenge.
Friday, July 9, 2021
The Green Road by Anne Enright
This is the story about the Madigan family and told from the different perspectives of the four children over a course of time. The opening chapter tells of adult son Dan sharing his decision to become a priest and his mother’s reaction of horror. This is from the 10 year old Hanna's perspective in 1980 in their county Clare home. The
We read about Dan and his personal problems and predicament a decade later. He is living in New York and his life as a gay man is written about fairly graphically.
The other siblings are Emmet who becomes a UNICEF worker in Africa. His was my least favorite story and had I started with it, I’d have ditched the book.
Hanna's adult story involves an issue with alcohol.
Constance storyline starts as the third chapter in 1997 at Durty Nellie’s in Bunratty, county Limerick. We were fortunate enough to visit around Limerick and saw Durty Nellie’s but didn’t go in. The description of the area brought back memories. As in much Irish literature, there is tragedy in her story.
The mother is Rosealeen and it's interesting to read how each of her children view her and the relationship they have with their mother. A lovely Irish setting for the most part and a story of an ordinary family and everyday life.
Marg at The Intrepid Reader for the 2021 Historical Reader Challenge
Joy at Joy's Book Bog for British Isles Friday.
Last day of February<br><i>...the monthly update on reading and watching</i></br>
Well this month went by fast. I had some good reading, good walking, time fiddling with my plants which did not freeze to death this month.....
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Two families, one heart and the medical miracle that saved a child’s life A girl from Devon and a boy from Cheshire became intertwined by t...
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Wild Dark Shore. I was hooked on this story after the first chapter. A woman, close to death by drowning and hyperthermia, washes up on t...


































