Showing posts with label Ten Books of Summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ten Books of Summer. Show all posts

Monday, September 2, 2024

My Books of Summer List

 I joined up with Cathy at 746 Books for her summer reading challenge and while I didn't complete my orginal list, I did read ten books.  I had a DNF with North Woods by Daniel Mason, substituted The Girl Returned by Donatella Di Pietrantonio for Women in Translation Month and couldn't get my hands on Long Island or The Alternatives on time.



The longest book was September at 613 pages and most others averaged 325 pages+

  1. The Night of the Flood by Zoe Somerville (352 pages)
  2. Ask Again, Yes by Mary Beth Keane (388 pages)
  3. A Time Remembered by Olga Gruhzit-Hoyt
  4. September by Rosamunde Pilcher (613 pages) - buddy read!
  5. Dear Edward by Ann Napolitano (340 pages)
  6. Whale Fall by Elizabeth O'Conner (224 pages)
  7. Forgotten on Sunday by Valerie Perrin (316 pages)
  8. Long Island by Colm Toibin
  9. The Alternatives by Caoilinn Hughes
  10. Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson (379 pages)
  11. North Woods by Daniel M
  12. The Girl Returned by Donatella Di Pietrantonio (167 pages)
  13. Trust Her by Flynn Berry (304 pages)
  14. The Half Moon by Mary Beth Keane (304 pages)

My favorites were September, and Ask Again, Yes.  Excellent stories. It was fun to enjoy a buddy read with JoAnn and Les for September :-)

My fall reading list includes the couple I did not get to as well as many other titles.  It was fun to make a list and I had some great reading! Please click on the titles/hyperlink if you'd like to read a review.  I never give spoilers.

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon and Cathy at 746 Books


Friday, August 16, 2024

A Girl Returned by Donatella Di Pietrantonio #WIT

I just finished my first book this month for the Women in Translation project.  I'd hoped to read another translated book but I did not plan well.  Here is my reading buddy Loki keeping me company.


A Girl Returned is a heartfelt story about a thirteen year old girl who suddenly finds out her mother is actually her aunt.  It gets worse when she is deposited in a run down home, introduced with zero fanfare to her birth mother and natural siblings.

Apparently she had been living with her aunt since she was an infant, believing this to be her natural mother.  She had a good life near the sea, friends at school, activities, love  and solitude. Her new home is hectic and financially insecure.  Her first meal at a table with her mother, father, two brothers and a sister was chaos as hands were flying across the table to grab food. Talk about culture shock.

Her sister Adriana was a blessing to her as they became devoted to one another.

I felt very sorry for her when she bought herself a birthday pastry and a little candle, then secreted herself in a room and quietly sang happy birthday. No one remembered, no one knew. 

A great revelation near the end as to why her aunt gave her up then returned her back to her birth mother came as a surprise.  This story is told roughly twenty years in the future by the girl who is never called by name. 

This book was first published in 2017 in Italian and is now available translated by Ann Goldstein.  I read this for the Women in Translation August event.  I have rounded to 3.5 stars and would read more by this author.  Adding it to my summer reading list as well.


I'm with Jinjer, I wish there was a Linky party to join in for the Women in Translation month.  Perhaps next year someone will do that.  I have never been able to figure out the link parties setup or I would volunteer to host :-)  

How is your summer reading going?  My list has fluctuated from my original list but I will get to those titles this year.

Friday, August 2, 2024

The July Roundup and Turtle Eggs!

Something unusual - we see turtles now and then in the field but this time, we saw one laying eggs!  I looked up the approximate time period for hatching so perhaps I can share turtle baby photos in the future .


Hopefully crows, possums or coyotes don't discover the eggs.  So far no disturbances. 🀞


July reading was quite varied in location and genres. I  had a DNF with Daniel Mason's latest book North Woods.  

Nope πŸ–“


Still trying to read This Strange Eventful History by Claire Messud but it's slow going.  A host of characters and events happening all at once in the first part of the book.




πŸ“šπŸ“š   Books read  πŸ“š







July book travel took me to New York, Norfolk England, Algeria, France and Greece.

 That's it for the July round up.   Looking forward to more good reading in August and a buddy read of September by Rosamunde Pilcher. I'd love to know what books you favored this month.  Hope life is good for you all :-)

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.

Saturday, June 29, 2024

June books and flowers

 Reading and plants

The caladiums were a surprise in two ways.  Last year they were stunning but died off when we had temps below 40 F/3C.  Honestly, I thought they were gone and Doug was going to plant bushes when they were - suddenly they emerged. Also did not know they blossomed with pods.  There other photo is a Strawberry Candy Day Lily. That one was expected.



June reading was quite varied in location and genres. This month I did not have a single DNF and completed five books.  Yea!

Here's Loki, my reading buddy πŸ•


πŸ“šπŸ“š   Books read  πŸ“šπŸ“š




Dear Edward by Ann Napolitano

I enjoyed The Flight of Gemma Hardy much more than this one by Livesey


June book travel took me to New Jersey, Manhattan, England, Wales, Scotland and France.

 That's it for the June round up.   Looking forward to more good reading in July. I'd love to know what books you favored this month.  Hope life is good for you all :-)

Sharing with:

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Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Forgotten on Sunday by ValΓ©rie Perrin



Let's start with this - I would like to say that if you plan on reading one of Perrin's novels, my opinion is to start with Fresh Water for Flowers or Three.  I liked those books much better but that's my personal opinion. Links for those books take you to my Goodreads page.

For a great review check out the NPR link HERE.

What I didn't know, and it came as a complete surprise to me, is this is her first published novel.  It came out in 2015!   Last year I particpated in August's event Women in Translation and read Fresh Water for Flowers.  That was my introduction to Perrin. When I saw Forgotten on Sunday was to be published in June I assumed this was a brand new novel. So I preordered it.  * It was newly translated by Hildegarde Serle.

There are two main stories here which go back and forth between present day and WW II. The setting is mostly Milly France.

Here's the run down without spoilers.

 Justine Neige is the narrator; she works at a care home as an assistant, taking care of the old people.  She and her cousin Jules live with their grandparents as their parents died in an automoble accident when they were only 4 years old. (revealtions about that later)  Jules is about to leave for Paris and attend university.  Twenty-one year old Justine prefers to work at the old folks home and listen to the stories the residents share with her instead of seeking other employment, escaping the small town of Milly.

The WW II time period features the story of HΓ©lΓ¨ne and Lucian and I liked that timeline/story very much.  In present day Justine takes care of the almost 100 year old HΓ©lΓ¨ne and loves hearing her stories, especially the ones about Lucian as a young man and how their life progressed.

There is quite a bit going on and in the last 20% of the book, things coming together in both time periods.


Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Dear Edward and Major Pettigrew

What's new here is...not much.  Our quest to find a good pizza to bring home for takeaway night is proving fruitless. There is one more place to try and then...guess I will make it here at home. My 68th birthday was good and uneventful - as I like it. The pizza wasn't great but the movie Chef was fabulous.  Great foodie movie.


North Florida heat has me settled in most afternoons so I am getting reading done.   I have read two of the books on my summer reading list.  Off to a good start :-)


I loved Napolitano's book Hello Beautiful and she does not disappoint with this novel. Wonderful writing. It was hard for me to put this down and I liked how she let us get into Edward's thought process while he responded to people about how he was doing.


How does one express their feelings and thoughts to someone who has zero point of reference? While everyone wanted to help Edward there are some things in life that you just can't "fix".

This book was inspired and loosely based on a Afriqiyah Airlines flight which crashed and had one survivor -a nine year old boy. I wonder what that boy is doing now? The fictional boy Edward was the only survivor of a crash taking the lives of 191 people. This is a study of how he tries to handle grief, survivor's guilt and a completely upturned life.

I know it sounds like it would be depressing but it's not. You get some back story on other passengers and crew interspersed in this book. It was interesting.

What a delightful book. Reading this I found Major Pettigrew to be one of my all time favorite characters and I would love to be his friend.  The setting is a small English village where widower Ernest Pettigrew develops a charming friendship with Mrs. Ali, owner of the Pakistani run grocery store.

Prejudices and gossip run deep with some of the characters ( I didn't care for them as much) but the overall interactions are marvelous. There is quite a bit of humor and an edgy situation near the end which shows a clash of cultures. It has a good ending and if a sequel was written I would most certainly read it.


So that's two for two and I haven't had a DNF from my list so far.  Would love to know what you are reading and any challenge plans you may have.

Sharing with:


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