Showing posts sorted by date for query ferrante. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query ferrante. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Italian drama and Typhoid Mary

 Happy Tuesday!  I thought I would take some time to catch up on the blog for tv and book chat. Here a few I finished.

Finished a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card - The Story of a New Name by Elena  Ferrante. This is book two in the series. I rounded up to 4 stars.  The characters are complicated and you want to read more about the interactions between Lila and Elena but wow, what a vile bunch of characters surrounding them.  

Elena and Lila have been friends since they were very young and always had a tempetuous relationship.  At times they are fiercely loyal to one another and other times, barely controlling their jealousy with sharp comments or snubs.  Definitely a different friendship than any I have ever experienced.  They are young women now, Lila married at 16 to the overbearing Stefano.  He beats her, he buys her the best of everything but he will never break her spirit.  Sadly, Lila realizes too late she should have not married him.

Elena continues with her studies and excels with her educational pursuits. While she has a bit of envy about Lila's financial stabilty and standing in their community, Lila in turn has some envy about Elena being able to continue school and escaping the life in the neighborhood.

Jealousy, barbed comments, love and more in this novel.

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I also finished Fever by Mary Beth Keane.


This is a historical fiction relying heavy on facts about Mary Mallon,  an Irish woman, also known as Typhoid Mary.  She was arrested in 1907 because she was suspected of spreading disease.  The story details historical facts about her incarceration, testing ad nauseum, her employers and more. After her arrest she was held at a hospital for medical testing then moved to North Brother Island where she remained in quarantine for decades.
It's quite an interesting story and the author keeps you engaged with the personal details about Mary's life. 

Other books I have read by Keane are Ask Again, Yes and The Half Moon.  Looking forward to The Walking People.


As for watching, we have finished season one of Landman and Billy Bob Thorton is fantastic in the lead role.


It's spin time at the Classics Club so I will get my spin post up or scheduled before the weekend. I'm hoping for one of the British authors such as Graham Greene, Ann Bronte, Forester or Hardy.  We will see.

As I write we have two more nights in our home and then off to a hotel with Loki, then closing on the new place. Catch up with you later :-)

Sharing with:

Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Joy for British Isles Friday


Friday, May 30, 2025

Some good reading this month

The end of May already....wow. Nothing new here except catching up on some emails and errands. We finished watching the series Firefly and I sure wish they had continued it. Next week is my birthday so we will get a pizza and watch The Martian that evening. Loki has been looking a bit unhappy about the lack of furniture in the house these days but that will all change soon.

On to book chat.  I have been very behind in writing anything or linking up.

I read Rick Steves On the Hippie Trail but never linked up. Review in the link.

I also finished Where the Forest Meets the River.   This picks up five years after the first book with all the same characters and I loved it.  Can't wait for her to publish the last one in this series because I need to know what happens with Greg, Rose, Nate, Richard and ...well, all of the characters in this small town.  There have been some revelations, some closure and lots of hope but she sure left us with a few cliff hangers!


Most recently there was The Distance Between Us by Maggie O'Farrell, a recommendation by Les at Coastal Horizons.   As with any O'Farrell book I've read this one grabbed me straight away.  There isn't a lot of dialogue, especially in the beginning chapters, but the descriptive writing drops you right into the middle of Jake's Hong Kong new year celebration and resulting tragedy.  The other storyline, which will eventually merge, takes us into Stella and Nina's world in London, Wales and Scotland. All three of our main characters have big secrets.


Next up will be a roundup for Elena Ferrante and Rosamunde Pilcher books.

I hope you have gotten some good reading in this May.  Thinking of Shelleyrae at Book'd Out where she is dealing with severe flooding.  Thoughts are with you!

Armchair travel for May has taken me to Maine, Scotland, England, Hong Kong, Italy and Ireland.

Sharing with Joy's Book Blog for British Isles Friday and Deb at Readerbuzz  for Sunday Salon.

 

Friday, May 16, 2025

Boxing and Reading

Hello fellow book bloggers. The whirlwind of putting the house on the market, selling in two days and getting in contract for another put my head in a spin. While I had finished two books prior I've yet to get it together for reviews.  Those two are coming up next week as I have to have a goal.  And I need some fun time that doesn't involve boxes, bubble wrap and labels  😊

Currently reading Elena Ferrante's book The Story of a New Name, the second in the trilogy, with Susan as a buddy read. I like it better than the first book and the story picks up where book one left off.



I had finished The Book Club by Roisin Meaney and couldn't remember if I posted it so...here it is.


The Book Club by Roisin Meaney grabbed me by the name of the book as well as the setting. A book club and it's in Ireland - yes, please. Just about all of it takes place in Ireland with some London memories thrown in. I enjoyed the mentions of Doolin, Cliffs of Moher and Nenagh, all places we have visited years past.


The main characters are listed in the front so I bookmarked that page for reference as I read. A makeshift library was created by Beth Sullivan as the town didn't have a library for the residents and the book club met in this cozy book filled cabin. The location was near the Sullivan home off a cliff with ocean views. That might be a deal breaker for me - moving to a town without a library. Good for Beth creating an impressive collection for the readers in town.

Beth is a 72 year old retired widow who has had her share of tragedy. Her only daughter, son-in-law and a granddaughter were killed in a car accident. Immediately after the accident her other granddaughter named Lil dropped out of college, stopped speaking then then moved in with her grandmother. This is important to the entire story line.

The story weaves in and out with several characters overlapping each other's lives. Not one single unlikable character in the book. Next door to Beth we have Tom, the newest addition to the community who has moved from Dublin to the Kerry coast. He is renting a house from Beth located next to hers. The empty house was her deceased daugher's so you know there will be emotional moments over that. Tom also has a secret and he doesn't reveal that to his new community.

The characters are well developed so I had a good mental picture of them and the dialogue was smooth. A coastal Kerry setting, a book club, a pub, a gift shop and nice people made this a feel-good book. While I wasn't tempted to abandon the book there were things that I wish had panned out differently near the end.

For instance, we eventually learn what Tom was hiding but it doesn't come up until near the end of the book. It's something people may not be comfortable with had they known about it without understanding the circumstances. Also Lil's constant writing in a notebook to communicate, as it's evident she has no medical reason to remain silent, got a little contrived. Things wrap up quite neatly but so quickly at the very end...meaning a few pages from the end. All the secrets and turmoil could have been introduced earlier, in my opinion, instead of a rushed ending. It leaves the reader to come up with their own conclusions to what happens to certain characters.

That said, I would read another of Irish author Roisin Meany's books as I was kept interested and love the setting. 3.5 stars

Loki

Last but not least - have a look at unbridled joy.  Loki rolling in the sunshine.






Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon and Joy for British Isles Friday.

Monday, April 28, 2025

Moving and Shaking

I am very behind on my posting and yet I have many books to share and compare.  Hoping this week I can finish writing up the Brideshead Revisited review for my Classics Club list and then I will be very sporadic posting.

The reason for my preoccupation is we have sold our house.  Yea! But that also means the clock is ticking on closing and finalizing the purchase/contract of another house so we have been busy. My week has been a mission of finding boxes and packing things I don't need now such as puzzles, winter clothing, photo albums, etc.

That said, I need the mental escape of reading (even if it's not as much as I usually read) and I'm still on for planned buddy reads for Ferrante and Pilcher upcoming.  📚

I may be slow answering comments but be assured I will.  Love my book buddies and keeping up so I'll see you when I see you!

I leave you with photo of Loki enjoying his dental treat.  He tends to hold them upright to get maximum chew.



Chat with you later...........


Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon.

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  📚

 


Bullfighting by Roddy Doyle

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 📚


That's it for the November round up.   Looking forward to more good reading in December. I'd love to know what books you favored this month and what reading goals you may have for next year.  Hope life is good for you all :-)

Here’s a snap of Loki soaking up the sunshine.



Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon. and Joy's Book Blog for Britsh Isles Friday.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Roddy Doyle and Elena Ferrante
{Armchair travel to Ireland and Italy}

When it rains I end up inside reading quite a bit.  No complaints about that!  First up is a trip to Ireland with Roddy Doyle's book of short stories titled Bullfighting.


In this collection of short stories the meandering stream of consciousness of an older man dominates the narrative.  I can see things from the female point of view when he wonders at what point in time did his wife move to another room.  When did certain things occur when he was, apparently, not paying attention.

The stories take you into a middle aged man's life in Ireland.

Getting older wasn’t too bad. The baldness suited Martin. Everyone said it. He’d had to change his trouser size from 34 to 36. It was a bit of a shock, but it was kind of nice wearing loose trousers again, hitching them up when he stood up to go to the jacks, or whatever. He was fooling himself; he knew that. But that was the point—he was fooling himself. He’d put on weight but felt a bit thinner.

The story Bullfighting is about four male friends in Spain and their honest conversations.  They are all middle aged and facing the realities that life is half over for them.  Admitting loneliness and being honest...for once.

Not my favorite book by Doyle by a longshot but a nice respite to read something short between anything else I am currently doing.  Themes of aging and loneliness with some humor and a great deal of Irish culture. 

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Next up we visit Naples Italy in the 1950's with My Brillant Friend by Elena Ferrante.  This was an enjoyable buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card.


This book starts off in Turin Italy, present time with Elena getting a frantic phone call from Rino, her best friend Lila's son.  His mother is missing. Lila and Elena had been friends for over 60 years and more than 30 years ago, Lila had confessed to Elena she wanted to disappear one day.  Leave without a trace. Apparently this is what happened.

The book is about Elena's account of friendship with Lila growing up in 1950's poverty stricken Naples. Lila was from a poor family, her father a shoemaker with little money to spare on a girl's eduaction...or anything else.  She was very intelligent and headstrong, teaching herself to read and educate herself  despite being held back by her family and financial standing.  That said, she never let anything dampen her spirit for life and learning.

Elena and Lila crossed paths in school at a young age but it wasn't an immediate or tender friendship. In the era described, their lives were filled with misogeny and violence, something they didn't find appalling as it was predominent in their culture and upbringing.  It was just life.

I think each girl challenged the other to do better.  Possibly from Elena's point of view she was motivated by Lila's  strong will and refusal to conform to the norms of their society.  Lila was intrigued by Elena's stubbornness and her refusal to capitulate to her bullying.  Not many stood up to Lila's strong personality.  That is my opinion on the ongoing relationship.

If you have read the synopsis this won't be a spoiler - it ends with Lila's wedding.  I was half expecting it to end with her appearance in the story, finding out where the 66 year old went and some resolution to her disappearance.  Book 2 will no doubt continue the story and I am looking forward to that eventually.

This would make a good series of books to read in August for the Women in Translation month/project but I can't wait that long to tackle books 2 and 3.

Currently I am working on a list of bookish goals for next year and hope to post about that next week. Happy reading to you all!

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon. and Joy's Book Blog for Britsh Isles Friday for Long Island and The Life Impossible.

Friday, November 8, 2024

October round up

First off, a big shout out to Shelleyrae at Book'd Out.  I was so happy to see her posting again and hope to join her for an event next year :-)

The election - I am glad it's over and frankly, I was surprised by the results. I remember way back in the day when things were civil between people, regardless of which party you supported.  If your candiate lost you'd say, oh well...maybe next time, and life went on.

Not so much anymore.  The outward gloating with new yard signs here is unbelievable. 

Reading and travel - Last month I didn't get much reading done because of travel but staying in a hotel we were able to watch two games of the World Series!  

Here is Loki balancing on a chair while he watches me, him on the bed while we watch the baseball game and a photo of delicious fish tacos and black beans from  Bahama Breeze restaurant.

He was kenneled for a day while we toured houses and had a meal out.



October reading
 consists of only two books but no DNF this time.  One book was on my fall reading.

📚📚   Books read  📚

The Woman Behind the Door by Roddy Doyle


Within Arm's Reach by Ann Napolitano


October book travel took me to New Jersey and Ireland.  Currently reading My Brillant Friend with Susan at The Cue Card so I am immersed in an Italian town.

Currently doing a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card.  We are immersed in 1950's Italian culture with My Brilliant Friend by  Elena Ferrante.



 That's it for the round up.   Looking forward to more good reading in November. I'd love to know what books you favored this month.

Sharing with Deb at Readerbuzz for Sunday Salon

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Fall reading and list making

First off, a shout out to ShelleyRae at Book'd Out.  I haven't seen you post in a while, you've been in my thoughts and I miss you. 

Let's talk fall reading.  Or Spring reading if you are in the southern hemisphere :-)

I enjoy making lists as it keeps me focused.  Sometimes I deviate but overall, it's helpful. Here's what I have so far but some could get swapped out depending on interest.


Trust by Herman Diaz (currently reading)

Sipsworth by Simon Van Booy (currently reading) #BriFri

Long Island by Colm Toibin  #BriFri

The Life Impossible by Matt Haig #BriFri

My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante  (a buddy read with Susan at The Cue Card)

I Cheerfully Refuse by Leif Enger 

The Woman Behind the Door by Roddy Doyle #BriFri

This is a list in progress so I welcome suggestions and comments on any of these you have enjoyed.  Four of my books will be linked with Joy's British Isles Friday.  Love my U.K. authors :-)

 Sharing with:


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Classics Club Spin time

It's time for the Classic Club Spin !   ðŸ‘ˆ Check that out through the link and join in if you'd like.  It took me years to finally j...