Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Obituaries for Nikki Giovanni, MJ Rose, Nickel Boys Becomes A Movie, Quote of the Day, The Last Heir to Blackwood Library by Hester Fox, and the Protector Guild Volumes 1-3 by Gray Holborn

It's almost Christmas, bibliophiles! Here's hoping that your stocking is stuffed with bookish presents and that there's a bunch of tomes under the tree to fill out your TBR! Meanwhile, though, things have looked kind of grim in the world of books, as we have lost a couple of my favorite wordsmiths, which makes me sad. Millions of readers mourn your loss to the world of literature. Rest in peace, Nikki and MJ. Your legacy of poems and novels will live on through the centuries. 
 
 I've been in love with Nikki G's wonderful poems since I was a teenager, and I'm not surprised that the world mourns her loss. 
 
Obituary Note: Nikki Giovanni
Nikki Giovanni,"the charismatic and iconoclastic poet, activist, children's book author and professor who wrote, irresistibly and sensuously, about race,
politics, gender, sex and love," died yesterday at age 81, according to
the New York Times.

As the Times noted, Giovanni was "a prolific star of the Black Arts
movement," but was also independent of it. She was "a celebrity poet and
public intellectual who appeared on television and toured the country.
She was a riveting performer, diminutive at just 105 pounds--as
reporters never failed to point out--her cadence inflected by the jazz
and blues music she loved, with the timing of a comedian or a Baptist
preacher who drew crowds wherever she appeared throughout her life. She
said her best audiences were college students and prison inmates." She
appeared regularly on Soul!, the Black culture program that aired on
public television from 1967 to 1972.

Giovanni wrote more than two dozen books, including volumes of poetry,
illustrated children's books, and three collections of essays. Her early
poetry included Black Feeling, Black Talk (1968), Black Judgement
(1968), and Re: Creation (1970). In 1971, she published the memoir
Gemini: An Extended Autobiographical Statement on My First Twenty-Five
Years of Being a Black Poet. Her other poetry collections include The
Selected Poems of Nikki Giovanni (1996), Blues: For All the Changes
(1999), The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni: 1968-1998 (2003), and
Bicycles: Love Poems (2009).

Her 2007 children's picture book Rosa, focused on Rosa Parks, won a
Caldecott Honor Award, and its illustrator, Brian Collier, won a Coretta
Scott King Award. Among Giovanni's many awards and honors were multiple NAACP Image Awards, the Langston Hughes Award, and the Rosa Parks Women of Courage Award.

Several indie booksellers paid tribute to Giovanni on social media,
including Baldwin & Co. New Orleans, La., which posted, in part: "Nikki Giovanni taught us to see ourselves, to honor our stories, and to speak truth to power with
grace and boldness. She dared us to dream beyond boundaries and loved
our culture fiercely through her poetry, essays, and presence. As we
reflect on her life and legacy, let us honor her by continuing to
create, to write, and to uplift one another. Rest in power, Nikki
Giovanni. You will forever be missed, but your words will live on in our
hearts."

MahoganyBooks,
Oxon Hill, Md., Noted: "Dearest Nikki Giovanni. Rest well.
Our prayer is that you knew how much so many of us loved you. That you
felt it without one piece of doubt. Knew that we felt seen by your words
so deftly written on each page and your imagination of what 'Us' could
be. Whew! We were just with you in February and we chuckled at the
shirts we wore... unplanned and all reveling in our continued boldness
to celebrate our history, our books that others... think necessary to
ban. Your light will remain lit for a lifetime."

I'm gutted at the unexpected loss of the wonderful MJ Rose, whose works I've been reading and loving for decades. I think I've read most of her works, but I'm particularly fond of her "daughters of La Lune" series, which was beautifully written paranormal romance. Rest in Peace dear author.
 
Obituary Note: M.J. Rose
Very sad, shocking news. M.J. Rose (Melisse Shapiro), author, marketer,
Author Buzz founder, a founder of International Thriller Writers,
co-owner of 1,001 Dark Nights, died suddenly yesterday (editor's note: No one is saying what she died of that made it so sudden, but I'm hoping that it wasn't something like suicide).

She was a remarkable person, always full of ideas, sharp, challenging,
warm, a striking personality, and a true friend to so many authors and
others in the book world. As Jenn Risko, co-founder and publisher
emerita of Shelf Awareness, said, "M.J. Rose was a much-loved author,
publisher, and force of excellence and innovation for our industry. She
started Author Buzz when we started the Shelf and she quickly became
known to us as the patron saint of authors, tirelessly working with
those who wanted better marketing. She had more ideas on how to do it
better than anyone, and was constantly searching for the new ones. She
was a huge and dear friend to us all and will be greatly missed."

And Shelf publisher Matt Baldacci said: "I first met Melisse in 1999
when we at St. Martin's published her prescient book How to Publish and
Promote On-Line. The very title and timing of that book speaks volumes
about how she thought and how she helped people. She has been a
confidante and friend since that time, and will be greatly missed."

M.J. was always busy, seemed always to be writing, and exploring a
variety of genres, and creating her own genres. Altogether she wrote 19
novels and three books on marketing, her first career. (With Doug Clegg,
she wrote Buzz Your Book.) Lip Service was her first novel, which she
self-published in 1998. As she proudly noted on her website, it was "the first e-book and first self-published novel chosen by the LiteraryGuild/Doubleday Book Club as well as the first e-book to go on to be published by a mainstream New York publishing house."

She also wrote the thrillers In Fidelity, Flesh Tones, and Sheet Music.
She introduced Dr. Morgan Snow, a sex therapist, in the Butterfield
Institute Series, which included The Halo Effect, The Delilah Complex,
and The Venus Fix. The Reincarnationist, which the Fox TV show Past
Lives was based on, was part of a series of books focused on
reincarnation, including The Memoirist, The Hypnotist, and The Book of
Lost Fragrances. Her more recent work included Forgetting to Remember,
The Jeweler of Stolen Dreams, The Last Tiara, and Cartier's Hope.

With partners Liz Berry and Jillian Stein, she ran 1,001 Dark Nights, which began producing series of novellas based on the Arabian Nights but retold through paranormal romance, contemporary romance, and erotic romance stories.
Author Buzz, the marketing service that puts authors directly in touch
readers, reading groups, booksellers, and librarians, has been
instrumental in the careers of so many writers.
We will miss you, M.J.!

I'm looking forward to seeing this movie when it comes out, as Colson Whitehead became something of a literary star for the book version.
 
Movie: Nickel Boys
A new trailer has been released for Nickel Boys
based on Colson Whitehead's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. IndieWire
reported that writer/director RaMell Ross (Hale County This Morning,
This Evening) "has already been toasted as a filmmaker to watch this
awards season" for his adaptation. Nickel Boys premiered December 13 in
select theaters in New York, with a Los Angeles debut coming December
20. It will expand nationwide in January.

Ross, who co-wrote the script with Joslyn Barnes, received the Auteur
Award at the 2024 IndieWire Honors event, where he said, "The film is
not looking at the Black community, it's looking from the Black
community. And that's a perspective I wasn't seeing often.
Alternatively, I think this film and Colson Whitehead's novel is about
justice on some level, not only visual justice but another justice, one
for the young men of the Dozier School for Boys and their families. And
this is really, really deeply true, we owe those young men for their
stories not to be buried right next to them. It's such a tragedy, such a
horrible story. At a time when we want to forget and ignore the ugly
parts of American history, I wanted to create a loving and experiential
monument to the [real life] Dozier School boys."

So true!
 
Quotation of the Day

"[The bookstore experience is about] discovery and a social space. You
come out of it feeling good... You need to create lovely spaces.
Bookstores have to be friendly. They have to be open. And if you have
them beautifully presented, they're never going away... What really
matters is we have physical stores, which are each a little bit
different, have a real personality, and they're fun to be in."

--James Daunt, Barnes & Noble CEO, on CNBC's Squawk Box


The Last Heir to Blackwood Library by Hester Fox is a mystery/paranormal romance about a woman in the early 1920s whose life is changed by an unexpected inheritance. Here's the blurb: In postWorld War I England, a young woman inherits a mysterious library and must untangle its powerful secrets.

With the stroke of a pen, twenty-three-year-old Ivy Radcliffe becomes Lady Hayworth, owner of a sprawling estate on the Yorkshire moors. Ivy has never heard of Blackwood Abbey, or of the ancient bloodline from which she’s descended. With nothing to keep her in London since losing her brother in the Great War, she warily makes her way to her new home.

The abbey is foreboding, the servants reserved and suspicious. But there is a treasure waiting behind locked doors: a magnificent library. Despite cryptic warnings from the staff, Ivy feels irresistibly drawn to its dusty shelves, where familiar works mingle with strange, esoteric texts. And she senses something else in the library too, a presence that seems to have a will of its own.

Rumors swirl in the village about the abbey’s previous owners, about ghosts and curses, and an enigmatic manuscript at the center of it all. And as events grow more sinister, it will be up to Ivy to uncover the library’s mysteries in order to reclaim her own story—before it vanishes forever.
 
There are a lot of tropes and cliches to unpack in this novel, including the "angelic nun vs the evil monk" and the "poor but lovely" young woman who is thrown into a dangerous situation with no one to help her but a handsome chauffer/groundskeeper/staff member (who inevitably rescues her and she falls in love with him). Of course Ivy's naive and a bit stupid about anything but books, so she continually puts her foot in it and has to be rescued by the staff, who keep trying to get her to leave, not realizing that she doesn't have anywhere else to go in her impoverished state. I found it unbelieveable that Ivy allowed herself to be tricked into an engagement with an evil lord who was only after her rare magical manuscript....he was so obviously a moustache-twirling bad guy...I mean he leers, he's verbally abusive and manipulative, he tries to force her into submission by locking her up and treating her like a prisoner, and  he makes it pretty clear that after he marries her, she will be dead soon after. While it has a rapidly paced plot and hearty prose, I felt the HEA was rushed, and therefore I'd give this slender volume a B, and recommend it to anyone who likes willowy and somewhat demure heroines who are lucky enough to make it out of bad situations with their skin intact.
 
The Protector Guild, Volumes 1-3 omnibus by Gray Holborn is a YA fantasy/polyamory romance with some LGBTQ themes, including gender non binary and gay couples woven throughout the narrative. That said, the spice is fairly mild, with only one actual sex scene and lots of blushes, frissons and enigmatic attractions woven throughout each chapter...these are "horny teenagers" after all, though some of them are werewolves and others are part incubus or sucubus by heritage. Here's the blurb: They don't want to want her, but they do...

In the shadows of the human world, a secret society of demon hunters fights to keep humanity from the supernatural forces that threaten to tear it apart.

But for Max Bentley, a rookie hunter struggling to find her place amongst her kind, the biggest threat might just be the four brooding, enigmatic members of the most elite team of hunters - all of whom seem to have taken a special, antagonistic interest in her.

She quickly discovers that their past is as dark and complicated as her own. As she is drawn deeper into the mysterious world of demon hunting, she finds herself torn between her duty to her people and her growing attraction to her team.
It's more than her heart on the line, it's the very fabric of our world.

This set includes the first THREE full novels:
Academy of Protectors
Forging the Guild
Dreams of Hell
 
 
Just an FYI...Since this omnibus is actually a compendium of three novels, I consider it as counting me having read four books for the purpose of this post to my review blog. 
This book series started out with a cliche of what a teenage girl is, including lustful descriptions of how "petite" she is an yet how sexualized, as if the books were written by a pedophile or some gross old man who oogles young women half his age. Shudder. My initial thoughts were that Max was such a mess, that I wanted to slap her upside the head. Rudeness and the total lack of tact that Max displays are NOT at all "refreshing," they indicators of being spoiled and selfish and infantilized by the men around her, including her old male guardian (who taught her how to fight but didn't somehow teach her about the beings she is supposed to kill and the dangers of just blindly trusting the young men around her). While certain types of "honest" outbursts are cute in young children (those who are anywhere from 2-6 years old), there is nothing "cute" about a teenage girl with no filter who says whatever comes into her head and continually, selfishly, puts everyone around her in grave danger because she can't seem to understand that the bad guys, ie vampires and werewolves and soforth, see humans and protectors as food, to be killed and eaten without remorse or a second thought. Max is awful, and reckless and ignorant, which is always a dangerous combination. Then there's her mysterious "power" to attract anyone and everyone and somehow hold them in a sexual thrall. It seems obvious to me that she's a hellspawn of some kind, probably descended from the former angel Lucifer himself, and that's what has everyone salivating over her. But the author leaves us hanging at the end of book 3, not knowing anything concrete about Max's powers. So I plan on reading book 4 on my kindle to see if there are any revelations. The prose in these books is bright and strong, and the plot swift as an owl chasing down a mouse. I'd give this collection a solid B, and recommend it to anyone who likes paranormal romance with a bit of spice and a lot of teenage idiocy.
 

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Quote of the Day, Climbing in Heels Comes to TV, Reading with Stephen Fry, RIP Nikki Giovanni, The Study of Fire by Maria V Snyder, Grimstone and Monarch by Sophie Lark, Bloodguard by Cecy Robson, and Mrs Quinn's Rise To Fame by Olivia Ford

Hurrah! It's my birthday week (Thursday) and I've already received some books as gifts from my friend in Iowa, along with some legal pads and a bunch of new nightgowns and shirts from Woman Within that should get here by Friday...so with new cozy PJs and some good books and tea, I will be all set to spend my day reading and enjoying myself. Meanwhile, I have a lot of tidbits, and five book reviews on offer. Take a break from all that Christmas prep and read on!
 
Quotation of the Day

McNally Jackson at 20: 'It Has Been a Joy'
"It has been the joy and pride of my life to open public places
dedicated to books in New York, to deepen the experience of our streets,
to push into the streetscape and claim spaces for the life of the mind.
Our first bookstore had been a mob front, our second a steel factory,
our third an Ann Taylor, our fourth fallow and vacant since it was
built, our fifth a bank, and the new SoHo store had been a parking
garage. Small victories won by readers and booksellers. Writers make it
possible, writers living and passed. Sappho helps us pay the rent.
Solzhenitsyn helps us pay our booksellers. It's an extraordinary
industry, everyone in it has a debt of gratitude to the body of work
that in its totality is something called books. Bound pages, one of the
most enduring technologies. The interior voice, disembodied and shared,
one of the most extraordinary innovations.

It has been a joy. Thanks for keeping us going."

--Sarah McNally, in part, in a letter to customers today celebrating the
20th anniversary of McNally Jackson in New York City.

This sounds like a fascinating series that I can look forward to in the new year.

TV: Climbing in Heels
Emily in Paris creator Darren Star and Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas will
co-write and executive produce a series for Universal Television based
on the latter Goldsmith-Thomas's debut novel, Climbing in Heels https://www.shelfawareness.com/ct/x/pjJscVfcwe8I6a1ndU92GQ~k1yJoKXv-hs8x6mQDsCnpoMLg-gVdw, Deadline reported. The studio preemptively acquired the rights to the book, which will be published next April.

"I am thrilled to be partnering with Darren Star and Universal
Television to bring life to these complicated, colorful women who
refused to be sidelined or silenced," Goldsmith-Thomas said.
Star added: "I'm excited to team up with Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas to
bring Climbing in Heels--her addictive fictional account of Hollywood in
the 1980s through a female lens--to the screen. It's the ballsy and
bawdy love child of Mad Men and Sex and the City. I can't wait for
audiences everywhere to meet this indomitable ensemble of female
characters who broke all the rules to make their own."

I've been a fan of Stephen Fry's since I saw him on reruns (during the 90s) of A Bit of Fry and Laurie, which was a brilliant sketch comedy program that was hilarious.
He's since done a great deal of work on TV and movies, and I've adored him in everything he's done. He's a Renaissance man for the ages.

Reading with... Stephen Fry
actor, presenter, and director. He rose to fame alongside Hugh Laurie in
A Bit of Fry and Laurie (which he co-wrote with Laurie) and Jeeves and
Wooster, and he was unforgettable as General Melchett in Blackadder. He
hosted more than 180 episodes of QI and has narrated all seven of the
Harry Potter novels for the audiobook recordings. He is the bestselling
author of the Mythos series, which includes the most recent Mythos: The
Illustrated Edition (Chronicle Books), where he draws out the humor and
pathos in each story and reveals its deep resonance with our own lives.
He also wrote four novels and three volumes of autobiography.

On your nightstand now:

Someone recommended Simon Mason, so I picked up A Killing in November, a crime novel set in Oxford. Astonishingly good writing. Brilliant, not "cosy."

Favorite book when you were a child:

Favourite Greek Myths by Lilian Stoughton Hyde. She started my love
affair with it all.

Your top five authors:
Really? Crumbs.

Charles Dickens
Oscar Wilde
James Joyce
Anton Chekhov
P.G. Wodehouse

Book you've faked reading:

Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, Women in Love by D.H.
Lawrence, the U.S.A. trilogy by John Dos Passos, Moll Flanders by Daniel
Defoe, The Ambassadors by Henry James.

Book you're an evangelist for:
Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry.

Book you've bought for the cover:
Thomas Mann's Little Herr Friedermann and Other Stories in Penguin
Modern Classics with its George Grosz portrait on the front. What a
cover!

Book you hid from your parents:
Querelle of Brest by Jean Genet. The cover, Panther Books if I recall
aright, was a little too...

Book that changed your life:
Escape from the Shadows by Robin Maugham. A story of growing up gay that so mirrored my own experience.

Favorite line from a book:
"He was born with a gift of laughter and a sense that the world was
mad," from the epigraph to Scaramouche by Rafael Sabatini.

Five books you'll never part with:
The Complete Works of Shakespeare (obv.), the Complete Works of Oscar
Wilde, The Jeeves Omnibus by P.G. Wodehouse, Decline and Fall by Evelyn Waugh, The Oxford Book of English Verse edited by Arthur Quiller-Couch.

Book you most want to read again for the first time:
Bleak House by Charles Dickens.

Your favorite Greek god:
I sometimes reply Athena, because she is wise and strong and powerful. I
do admire her enormously, but in the end it has to be Hermes: god of
liars, story-tellers, thieves, rascals, and travelers. He was charming,
but impertinent and cheerful. These are all aspects and qualities that
mean a lot to me.

I developed a love for Giovanni's poetry in college, and I'm gutted that she's gone from this earth. Her wonderful poems will live on, however, which is a grand legacy to have.

Groundbreaking Poet Nikki Giovanni Dies at 81
Beloved poet Nikki Giovanni has died at the age of 81. Giovanni made her name as a standout of the Black Arts Movement and became the rarest of things: a famous poet. Known for her powerful performances, Giovanni was also often invited to comment on politics, current events, and issues of race and gender. If you’ve never had the pleasure of hearing Giovanni read her work, here is one wonderful example, though if you’re going to consumer one piece of Giovanni-related media, it really should be this conversation she had with James Baldwin in 1971, well worth two hours of your time. Fare thee well, Ms. Giovanni.

The Study of Fire (Book 3 in Valek's Adventures) by Maria V Snyder is a romantic fantasy adventure novel that tells the story of Fire Study from the male protagonist's (Valek) point of view. It's like getting a second read of a favorite book, but looking at everything that happened in a different way, which is delightful. Here's the blurb:
“What happens if he returns to our world?”
“It will burn.”

There's just no rest for Valek, Ixia’s Chief of Security. Challenges are constant and new problems arrive daily, including a request to help Castletown’s watch solve the mystery of a string of nighttime disturbances, and keeping a close eye on the Commander’s food taster as she schemes her way back into business. As if that isn't enough, the Commander’s life is threatened.

Is the assassination attempt on the Commander a declaration of war by the Sitian Council, or is it a ruse by an unknown party to incite a war between Ixia and Sitia? Valek is sent to Sitia to discover the answer and deal with the threat.

Unfortunately, the problem turns out to be much bigger than even the council and the master magicians can handle. An unsanctioned clan with powerful warpers is plotting to take over both countries. As the danger heats up, Valek and Yelena must reunite and stop the group before they can set their entire world on fire.

A companion novel to Fire Study, The Study of Fire reveals Valek’s side of the story. Find out what problems Valek tackles in Ixia before he joins Yelena in fighting against a unstoppable enemy.
Because I loved the original "Study" series, it's no surprise that this new POV series is a real delight to read, full of "ah ha" moments and sighs when you recall how Yelena reacted to events in the original series. Snyder's prose sparkles and her plots fly on gilded wings, without any plot holes or slow downs, until you're surprised that you've reached the end...it's just that good. I'd give this book (and the other Valek POV books) an A, and recommend them to anyone who read the original series and wants to enjoy visiting that world again.
 
Grimstone and Monarch by Sophie Lark are billed as "romantic thrillers" when what they are is horror/romance novels that have a lot of pornographic scenes in them, enough so that to call them both "spicy" is like calling the Pacific Ocean wet. A gross understatement, and while I do enjoy a bit of spice in my romantasy books, these two novels go into graphic detail on both the torture/horror front and the sexual scenes with an unseemly gusto that can leave some readers nauseous (or in my case, I just skimmed the sexual descriptions and tried to focus on the plot). I was also not a fan of the illustrations, which were grotesque and overblown enough that they resembled the Frazetta illustrations to old 70s science fiction/fantasy novels, with men that are huge and rippling with muscle and women whose breasts and butts are enormous, as are their weirdly snubbed noses, huge cheekbones and puffy lips (but of course they still have tiny waists and delicate hands and feet, blonde hair and long legs). Here's the blurbs:

Grimstone: Remi Hayes is beginning to think she’s cursed—her fiancé cheated on her, her brother Jude is a major pain in her ass, and the moldering mansion she inherited from her uncle might just be haunted.

Flipping Blackleaf Manor already feels impossible, even before Remi is blackmailed by Dane Covett, the dangerously hot doctor-next-door, and Grimstone’s most eligible bachelor—if you can ignore the fact that everyone in town thinks he murdered his wife.

Remi doesn’t want to believe it, especially after Dane sews up a gash in her thigh and steals a kiss in payment—a kiss that makes it hard to walk for reasons that have nothing to do with an injured leg.

But as the renovation takes a strange and violent turn, Remi must decide if Dane is the one haunting her nights, or if he’s trying to protect her from something much worse…

Lark Notes:
Halloween is my favorite! I get such a thrill out of writing a spooky, dark book at this time of year. Remi and Dane are two deeply damaged people with skeletons in their closets. It’s only when they meet each other that they finally find the connection and acceptance that allows them to move on from their dark pasts. I fell in love with the gothic beach town of Grimstone, and will be writing a dark romance set there each autumn. – Sophie

Monarch: From USA Today bestselling author Sophie Lark comes a brand new romantic thriller series in the Gothic, secretive beach town of Grimstone.

In a desperate bid to get out of town, twenty-seven-year-old virgin and bookstore nerd Elena Zelenska becomes the world's most unlikely mail-order bride. Her gamble pays off when she's swept off her feet by Lorne Ronson, handsome single father and (gasp!) actual published author. Elena's new fiancé seems almost too good to be true. Her life is turning into a fairytale, especially once Lorne starts building her a castle in the woods. But when Elena arrives in Grimstone, her fairytale turns darker.

The castle in the woods is a macabre labyrinth of hidden chambers, and Lorne is no Prince Charming. In fact, he might just be a monster.

Isolated far from home, Elena's only ally is Atlas Covett, the owner of the Monarch hotel. Massive and stern, even Atlas' employees are terrified of him. He becomes Elena's unexpected protector, offering solace and sanctuary from the darkness that threatens to consume her.

As Elena's bond with Atlas deepens, her jealous fiancé exerts his control in increasingly twisted ways. Elena must find a way out before the castle he's building becomes a prison she'll never escape.

The Covett brothers are both huge, muscular and manly, and of course grumpy and rude/mean until they meet the young women of their dreams, and have a lot of sex, which turns them both into nice, protective guys who must rescue their damsels in distress. UGH....cliches and tropes abound in these horrific pornographic novels that wouldn't have enough of a plot to publish if it weren't for all the descriptions of oral sex in nearly every chapter. I was disappointed that there wasn't more of a story here, just nightmares and very descriptive sex scenes, which isn't what I look for in a novel at all. If you're going to write "dark" (just a jingoistic word for horror) fantasy porn, call it what it is and leave the regular romantasy readers out of it, please. We're not looking for serial killers and torturers and rapists in our reading, thanks. Though the books are beautifully created with colored edges and such, I'd give them both a C+ and only recommend them to those who don't mind the misogyny of cis gendered porn and horror. 
 
Bloodguard by Cecy Robson is a romantasy action/adventure (swords and sorcery) novel that takes all the battles of films like The 300 and Gladiator and marries them with the elves of Tolkien (only more bloody-minded) and a sprinkling of witty banter in a fast-moving plot. Here's the blurb:
Limited first print run―featuring spray-painted edges with stenciled ivy, as well as gorgeously detailed endpapers and foiled case stamping.
One hundred years. Tens of thousands of gladiators. And today, only one will rise…

Everything in the Kingdom of Arrow is a lie.
Leith of Grey thought coming to this new land and volunteering to fight in the gladiator arena―vicious, bloodthirsty tournaments where only the strongest survive―would earn him enough gold to save his dying sister. He thought there was nothing left to lose.

He was wrong―and they took
everything. His hope. His freedom. His very humanity.

All Leith has left is his battle-scarred body, fueled by rage and hardened from years of fighting for the right to live another day.

Then Leith meets Maeve, an elven royal who is everything he despises. Everything he should hate. Until the alluring princess offers him the one thing he needs most: a chance to win the coveted title of Bloodguard―and his freedom.

But in a kingdom built on secrets and lies, hope doesn’t come cheap. Nor will his ultimate revenge.
Though bloody books are not my strong suit, I found myself riveted to Leith and Maeve's story, and their struggles to survive in this Romanesque world of battles and bloodshed. I couldn't put this book down, and read it all in one day. The prose is sleek and stunning and the plot cuts like a fine blade through silk. I was crushed (though not surprised) when it was discovered that Leith's sister and entire family had died years before he was made aware of it, so it would seem all of his attempts at sending them money for food and helping them get medical care was all in vain. But Leith gets his revenge, and there's a hint of how things will change for the better under the new regime. This book is gorgeous to look at, with it's white embossed cover and red/white endpapers, so I would give it an A-, and recommend it to booklovers and book collectors alike.
 
Mrs. Quinn's Rise to Fame by Olivia Ford is a "coming of old age" cozy novel with a mystery/secret at it's heart that doesn't detract from the beauty of the prose or the delicious plot that will have you running to the kitchen to bake up something for tea. Here's the blurb: A huge-hearted, redemptive coming-of-old-age tale, a love story, and an ode to good food

Nothing could be more out of character, but after fifty-nine years of marriage, as her husband Bernard’s health declines, and her friends' lives become focused on their grandchildren—which Jenny never had—Jenny decides she wants a little something for herself. So she secretly applies to be a contestant on the prime-time TV show
Britain Bakes.

Whisked into an unfamiliar world of cameras and timed challenges, Jenny delights in a new-found independence. But that independence, and the stress of the competition, starts to unearth memories buried decades ago. Chocolate teacakes remind her of a furtive errand involving a wedding ring; sugared doughnuts call up a stranger’s kind act; a simple cottage loaf brings back the moment her life changed forever.

With her baking star rising, Jenny struggles to keep a lid on that first secret—a long-concealed deceit that threatens to shatter the very foundations of her marriage. It’s the only time in six decades that she’s kept something from Bernard. By putting herself in the limelight, has Jenny created a recipe for disaster?
  
Because this story was based in England, the characters (particularly the women) are self-effacing and insecure, and in Jenny's case, nearly spineless in her fear of not telling her husband of almost 60 years about the baby she had to give up when she was a teenager. Why there's still such hierarchical misogyny in modern England, I don't know, but it lent the whole story a waft of bitterness, at least from my POV, that women aren't allowed to enjoy their successes and must still wait on their men like slaves. That seems pitiful to me, especially in someone Jenny's age, 77, who should know her own worth at this point. Still, I loved her tale of baking and love and persistence, so I'd give this beautiful baked good of a novel a B+, and recommend it to anyone who watches The Great British Bake Off avidly.
 

Tuesday, December 03, 2024

NYT's Most Notable Books of 2024, French Booksellers Furious at Amazon, Vroman's Celebrates 130th Anniversary, Split Rocks Books Abortion Rights Collab, Third Place Books Storm Recovery, Reese's December Book Pick, Glorious Exploits Wins Wodehouse Prize, The Echo of Of Books by Barbara Davis, Wayward Devils by Devon Monk, The Courting of Bristol Keats by Mary E Pearson, For She is Wrath by Emily Varga

Happy Holidays to all my fellow readers and book dragons! December, my favorite month of the year, is upon us, and it's time to start making Christmas lists of books you want to read in 2025, that will hopefully be coming on Santa's sleigh. I also have a birthday this month (next week on the 12th) so I'm looking forward to kitting out my TBR in style. Meanwhile, here's some serious tidbits and four reviews. I believe that I've read anywhere from 170 to 200 books this year, and reviewed them here on this blog, so I'm hoping for an equally banner year in 2025. 

 These end of the year lists always fascinate me, and none are more scrutinized than the NYT bestseller/most notable list. Though I think its been taken over by folks who are keen to put authors of color and authors from other countries, whose books are obscure to American audiences, on the top of the list (and make everyone who doesn't know these authors feel out of touch or stupid), there are still authors on the list with some decent fiction, though rarely is it the kind of fiction (or genre) that I enjoy. There's also a paywall that you have to pay the troll of commerce to get past that makes this list not so accessible to regular people who don't have a lot of expendable income, like myself. So the Gray Lady gets an automatic caste system going, which is problematic. I have to say that when I went through the list, I only recognized about 5-7 of the books listed and on reading the synopsis, found that I would not want to read 90 percent of the others listed. But, as with everything, YMMV.

It’s the Most Notable Time of the Year

The New York Times‘s annual list of 100 notable books of the year is, for my money, the very best of the end-of-year offerings. Evenly divided between fiction and nonfiction, it has a diversity of genres, subjects, and tones; a healthy mix of popular, commercially successful titles and under-the-radar gems; enough books to be useful as you select your next read or shop for the book lovers in your life but not so many as to be overwhelming. If you read widely and pay attention to the bookish zeitgeist during the other eleven months of the year, you’re likely to find validation for some of your faves alongside new-to-you picks and reminders of the “Oh, I’ve been meaning to read that!” variety. This time around, there are also boxes to tick to indicate whether you’ve read a book or want to read it. I’ve notched 23 of the 100 so far, and I’m proud to report that Jeff and I scored 11 out of the 15 titles we identified as shoo-ins when we predicted the list on a recent episode of the Book Riot Podcast.

Alas, Jeff Bezos is trying to mess with French booksellers about free delivery (he wants Amazon to be the only retailer to have it) and they're not on board with this, at all...though I had to laugh at their insult about "cowboy behavior," I assume not realizing that to most Americans, who lionize cowboys, this is a compliment, not an insult.


French Booksellers Furious at Amazon

Booksellers in France are accusing Amazon of trying for a second time to circumvent laws banning online retailers from offering free book deliveries, the Bookseller reported, adding that the first attempt was in 2014, "when parliament banned free deliveries to people's homes and Amazon introduced a delivery fee of one cent. In 2021, the Darcos law fixed a sliding scale of delivery fees, starting at 3 Euros [about $3.15], in line with those for other products, but exempted orders retrieved in bookshops."

"Amazon is seizing power to interpret laws in its favor and to trample on a bill voted into law by a sovereign parliament," said an op-ed in LeMonde that was signed by the heads of the French Booksellers Association, the Cultural Product Distributors Association (Syndicat des Distributeurs de Loisirs Culturels), and the leading cultural products chain Fnac-Darty.

The op-ed was a reaction to Amazon's recent announcement that it would provide free book deliveries to more than 2,500 pick-up points across France in shops that "notably sell books." The pick-up points are primarily lockers in shopping malls where large supermarkets are located, the op-ed noted, adding: "Amazon is pursuing its 'strategy of predation' and 'cowboy behavior.' It is engaged in a cultural battle [and] we expect the authorities to put an immediate halt to this cultural public disorder."

Happy 130th to Vroman's, a legendary California book store. I hope they're around for another century or so.

Vroman's 130th Anniversary Celebration

This past weekend Vroman's Bookstore https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJscVePwusI6a1nIUp2GQ~k1yJoKXv-hs8x6mQXcOjpoMLg-gVdw in Pasadena, Calif., celebrated its 130th anniversary. The day began with the induction of the newest writer into the Vroman's Walk of Fame: Lian Dolan (Helen of Pasadena; The Sweeney Sisters). Dolan has been a huge supporter of the store throughout her career, and her handprints are now "cemented" alongside those of Walter Mosley, Leigh Bardugo, and Naomi Hirahara on the store's Walk of Fame.

Following the ceremony, the store hosted a party to celebrate its customers. The event included wine tastings at the 1894 Wine Bar, a memory wall, and a raffle for exclusive 130th-anniversary merch.

I love that Ms Bender is trying to help women denied reproductive rights through her bookstore. I hope that her efforts are successful, and that others follow her lead.

Split Rock Books Looking for Booksellers Interested in Abortion Rights Collaboration

Heidi Bender, co-owner of Split Rock Books in Cold Spring, N.Y., is looking to find independent booksellers interested in taking part in a collaboration with abortion rights organizations like Plan C and the American Society for Emergency Contraception. Bender is currently working with ASEC to install an emergency contraceptive vending machine in-store, and she has had a brainstorming session with Imani Askew-Shabazz, the partnerships and engagement manager for Plan C. Though they discussed things like distributing information and doing a day of action, no definitive plans were made, and with the holiday season at hand, Bender will focus on finding like-minded booksellers prior to scheduling another meeting with Plan C in January.

"This is one way to take concrete action in a way that feels useful," Bender said. She noted that at a time when there are "so many things tocare about," the important thing is to "pick one and do something."

I mentioned how devastating this storm was to our home in MV, where we went 4.5 days without power, and had to search far and wide for a hotel room with power and heat. Though we made it through without too much damage (we did have to clean out the refrigerator/freezer, which was an expensive waste of food) there were many in our housing complex whose homes were damaged and who went weeks without power. Here's how to help Third Place Books, which suffered loss of custom during and after the storm.

Seattle's Third Place Books: How to Help After the Storm

Last Tuesday's bomb cyclone storm in the Seattle, Wash., area caused widespread damage and power outages for many thousands, including the Third Place Books store in Lake Forest, where power was finally restored Saturday afternoon.

Powerless booksellers at Third Place: "No phone, no Internet, but thousands of books."

In response to requests from customers asking how they might help, ThirdPlace owner Robert Sindelar posted his reaction on the bookstore's social media sites yesterday, writing: "Like many of us in the greater Seattle area, our Lake Forest Park store lost power last week after the powerful bomb cyclone that swept through Western Washington. We had to close for almost four days during a critical season for retailers-bookstores in particular. Those lost sales are always tough. But at this time of year, when holiday shopping is kicking into gear, losing those four days is devastating to a local business.

Some customers and friends of the store have asked if there are ways to help. Here's what you can do." Sindelar's suggestions included buying a gift card, making a donation to the store's Books to Students Fund, or simply coming to the store to shop. "Also, if there are other local stores that you love and care about that lost power for days this past week, please consider supporting them with gift card purchases as well," he added.

"As we all reflect on things we are thankful for this week, I will be thinking about how lucky I am to work and live with such an amazing community of readers. All the best to our Third Place Community."


I'm thrilled for the debut of this new book, as it sounds interesting. Reese has transformed the lives of many authors by promoting their work and by getting their books adapted into movies or streaming shows.

Reese's December Book Club Pick: City of Night Birds

City of Night Birds by Juhea Kim (Ecco) is the December pick for Reese's Book Club https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJscVfbkbkI6a1nd0t-Sw~k1yJoKXv-hs8x6mQCZDxpoMLg-gVdw, which described the book this way: "When a devastating accident stalls Natalia Leonova's professional ballet career, she returns home to St. Petersburg with a choice: return to the demanding world of Russian dance that nearly broke her or walk away for good. City of Night Birds explores the fierce and beautiful world of ballet and what it means to be an artist." Reese wrote: "This story left me thinking about the ways we overcome setbacks and redefine what truly matters."

This is another book that I will be on the lookout for. I miss PG Wodehouse's fabulous wit and stylish prose. I think it's hilarious that the prize for this work of comedic fiction includes champagne and a pig.

Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction Goes to Glorious Exploits

Glorious Exploits by Ferdia Lennon has won the 2024 Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for Comic Fiction. Chair of judges Peter Florence called the novel, published in the U.S. by Holt, "a delightful mash of contemporary Irish comedy and classical Athenian tragedy. It's a caper, a buddy story, and it had us all laughing and cheering Ferdia Lennon's comic spirit." Lennon receives a jeroboam of Bollinger Special Cuve, a case of Bollinger La Grande Anne, the complete set of the Everyman's Library P.G. Wodehouse collection, and a pig named after his winning book.


The Echo of Old Books by Barbara Davis is a romantic mystery with a touch of magic realism that will keep readers glued to the page. Here's the blurb:

A novel about the magical lure of books and summoning the courage to rewrite our stories by the Amazon Charts bestselling author of The Keeper of Happy Endings and The Last of the Moon Girls.
Rare-book dealer Ashlyn Greer’s affinity for books extends beyond the intoxicating scent of old paper, ink, and leather. She can feel the echoes of the books’ previous owners―an emotional fingerprint only she can read. When Ashlyn discovers a pair of beautifully bound volumes that appear to have never been published, her gift quickly becomes an obsession. Not only is each inscribed with a startling incrimination, but the authors, Hemi and Belle, tell conflicting sides of a tragic romance.
With no trace of how these mysterious books came into the world, Ashlyn is caught up in a decades-old literary mystery, beckoned by two hearts in ruins, whoever they were, wherever they are. Determined to learn the truth behind the doomed lovers’ tale, she reads on, following a trail of broken promises and seemingly unforgivable betrayals. The more Ashlyn learns about Hemi and Belle, the nearer she comes to bringing closure to their love story―and to the unfinished chapters of her own life.

I was fascinated by Ashlyn's psychometric powers with books, and her affinity for both sides of this love story that all came down to miscommunications. Unfortunately, you have to wait until the final 1/3rd of the book for there to be any big reveals on the character's lives, so you have to exercise patience with this novel. The "real" names and the nicknames of the characters got kind of confusing toward the end, too, but the ending did tie everything up fairly well, into an HFN if not a complete HEA. I'd give this book a B, and recommend it to romance lovers who enjoy a good book mystery about relationships.

Wayward Devils (Souls of the Road book 4) by Devon Monk is a gripping romantic fantasy with gods and monsters aplenty. Here's the blurb: Cursed to follow Route 66 for nearly a hundred years, Brogan and Lula Gauge have made a deal with Cupid to find the spellbook of the gods—a book powerful enough to destroy the world.

But they aren’t the only ones looking for it.
The evil goddess, Atë, has already tried to kill them once for the book, and now Brogan and Lula must race to find it before Atë finds them and finishes the job.

Luckily, a coven of honkytonk witches in Shamrock, Texas claims to know where the book is hidden. But their information comes at a great price. Brogan and Lula must help the witches kill an ancient monster. To do so, they will have to form an alliance with an old enemy who wants the Gauges dead.

Brogan and Lula’s luck is turning, but whether it’s good or bad teeters on a knife’s edge: trust the devils they know, or go all in with the wayward devils they’ve just met.
 

It's always Brogan and Lula against the world of gods and monsters in Monks compulsive and engaging Souls of the Road series, and this book is no exception. I found the POV of Brogan telling the story refreshing, however, and though he's something of a possessive sexist guy, his love for Lula is eternal and has seen them both through many deadly circumstances. I was glad to see the addition of Raven the trickster god from the Ordinary Oregon series make an appearance here, and the mention of the Delaney sisters and their ability to deal with all the crazy stuff the gods get up to leads me to wonder if the next book will have Brogan and Lula meeting the sisters and enjoying some time together free from running for their lives. I'd give this enthralling novel an A, and recommend it to anyone who has read the other Souls of the Road books.

The Courting of Bristol Keats by Mary E. Pearson is an epic romantasy about fae folk and their magical intrigue, coupled with a human who is trying to find answers about her family. Here's the blurb: This is a Limited Edition printing with Stenciled edges.
From author Mary E. Pearson comes a thrilling romantic fantasy full of dangerous fae, dark secrets, and addictive romance―the first book in a duology.
After losing both of their parents, Bristol Keats and her sisters struggle to stay afloat in their small, quiet town of Bowskeep. When Bristol begins to receive letters from an aunt she’s never heard of who promises she can help, she reluctantly agrees to meet―and discovers that everything she thought she knew about her family is a lie. Her father might even still be alive, not killed but kidnapped by terrifying creatures and taken to a whole other realm―the one he is from.

Desperate to save her father and find the truth, Bristol journeys to a land of gods and fae and monsters. Pulled into a dangerous world of magic and intrigue, she makes a deadly bargain with a fae leader, Tyghan. But what she doesn't know is that he's the one who drove her parents to live a life on the run. And he is just as determined as she is to find her father―dead or alive.
 
 
Pearson's prose is delicious and juicy, and her plot dances on a cloud of fae legends that has few stops or hesitations. However, as usual, I found it hard to believe that Bristol was so instantly enamored of Tyghan that she loves and forgives him for making her parents lives and her own difficult. Tyghan gets a free pass way too soon, but romantasy authors seem to have a crush on "love conquors all" mentality at the moment that tells them that handsome "bad boys" are to be given second and third chances no matter what. Ugh. Still, it was a fun read that kept me up until all hours, plowing through all 540 pages. I'd give this book a B+ and recommend it to fans of Sarah J Maas's fae romance novels.
 
For She is Wrath by Emily Varga is a YA fantasy romance/adventure tale full of djin (or genies as we call them here) and magical bargains and revenge. There's some hair raising moments in this book that will leave you gasping for breath. Here's the blurb: A sweeping, Pakistani romantic fantasy reimagining of The Count of Monte Cristo, where one girl seeks revenge against those who betrayed her―including the boy she used to love.

Three hundred and sixty-four days.
Framed for a crime she didn't commit, Dania counts down her days in prison until she can exact revenge on Mazin, the boy responsible for her downfall, the boy she once loved―and still can't forget. When she discovers a fellow prisoner may have the key to exacting that vengeance--a stolen djinn treasure--they execute a daring escape together and search for the hidden treasure.

Armed with dark magic and a new identity, Dania enacts a plan to bring down those who betrayed her and her family, even though Mazin stands in her way. But seeking revenge becomes a complicated game of cat and mouse, especially when an undeniable fire still burns between them, and the power to destroy her enemies has a price. As Dania falls deeper into her web of traps and lies, she risks losing her humanity to her fight for vengeance--and her heart to the only boy she's ever loved.
 
 
Though I normally love a Count of Monte Cristo prison escape and long-term revenge, I found a lot of the latter part of this book to be implausible. Just as with the book above, the male romantic lead gets off scot-free for his crimes, because of the all mighty power of love, even though he's the cause of all of Dania's pain and grief and heartache. So Mazin, who sells out Dania to let her be tortured and starved for an entire year in a hellish prison gets another chance at love because he makes puppy eyes at Dania and says he's "Sorry"??? Really? Her family died and her life became nothing but horrific pain, grief and a desperate need for revenge because of Mazin, which I think is the definition of unforgivable, but somehow her love/lust for this douchebag is so overwhelming all is forgiven after a couple of short paragraphs where he tries to explain that he "had no choice" but to totally tank her entire life. UGH. Misogyny rules this culture, though the women do defeat the bad guys (or mostly defeat them) in the end. I still hated Mazin by the end, and if I had my way, Dania would have run him through with one of her father's fancy scimitars. Manipulative bastard didn't deserve a second chance, IMO. Anyway, the prose was rich and evocative and the plot flew along like a galloping horse to the splashy but unsatisfying ending. I'd give this book a C+ and only recommend it to die hard fans of Indian genie tales.
 

Monday, November 25, 2024

Martin Scorcese Adapts Home, Murder Before Evensong Comes to TV, HBO Supports JKRowling's Transphobia, Verity Movie, Obituaries for Frommer, Gilbert and Barbara Taylor Bradford, The Cinnamon Bun Book Store by Laurie Gilmore, A Pirate's Life For Tea by Rebecca Thorne, and Eleven Houses by Colleen Oakes

Hello Book Dragons! It's chilly and wet and we just had a horrific wind/rain storm last week that knocked out the power in our town and the others around it, so while my husband was in the hospital with a broken hip, my son and I spent hours trying to find a hotel room somewhere nearby, and discovered that most everywhere was booked solid, until we found a room in Puyallup, WA, which is 45 minutes to an hour away from Maple Valley, but their newly renovated Best Western was a dream! Nice big beds, full free breakfast, warmth from the room heater and lots of outlets for the CPAP and nebulizer machines. There were even FREE snacks and warm cookies 24/7!  The only problem with the room was that the bathroom (they said they're going to renovate them soon) was teeny tiny and the shower had low pressure and the water never got truly hot. But warmish water is better than cold water in a freezing cold, dark house with no power, so we were happy with what we got. Now that everything's back to normal, and my husband is home, though he's using a walker and can't stand for long or get himself up off the couch, we're looking toward celebrating my son's 25th birthday on Wednesday, and Thanksgiving on Thursday. A good meal and a roster of new fall books on my TBR, and I'm a happy woman! Anyway, here's a ton of tidbits and a few reviews.
 
I read Gilead several years ago, and I thought it was boring, and not at all as insightful as I'd been lead to believe. Then there were three books after that, and I just couldn't put myself through the slow agony of reading them, so now I'm wondering WHY Scorcese (one of NYC's favorite directors) wants to produce a film adaptation of one of these dreary novels...not to say that I don't love a good Iowa story from my native state, but there are some books that don't adapt well to the screen. This is one of them, I fear.
 
Martin Scorcese to Adapt Marilynne Robinson’s Home?
This is a weird one. Martin Scorcese, the legendary director of films mostly set in gritty New York milieus, has said there is a “very strong possibility” that, barring a scheduling a conflict, he will adapt Marilynne Robinson’s novel Home. Hard to imagine a vibe further from Scorcese’s usual fare than Robinson’s quiet, contemplative story set in a small town in Iowa in the 1950s. Home is the second book in Robinson’s Gilead quadrilogy, which follows the family lives of two aging pastors who are lifelong friends. Gilead, which came in at #10 on the New York Times’s list of the 100 best books of the century , is undeniably the star of the series, but I can see why a filmmaker would be drawn to Home first. While Gilead is one of my five favorite books and a pretty perfect novel, not much happens. Additionally, it is told in letters from 76-year-old Reverend Ames to his young son, the product of a surprising, late-in-life marriage. Home has more action, mostly family drama, and is told in the third person. I’m honestly not sure what to hope for here.

This series, on the other hand, looks awesome. But you never know these days which shows will be a hit and which ones will be complete duds.
 
TV: Murder Before Evensong
Acorn TV and Paramount's Channel 5 are co-producing an adaptation of
Reverend Richard Coles' bestselling novel Murder Before Evensong
https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJscVeKl-oI6a4xIR8nEw~k1yJoKXv-hs8x6mQWJaipoMLg-gVdw.Deadline reported that Acorn has been developing the series for around two years alongside Sky Studios-backed producer the Lighthouse.

Murder Before Evensong was published in 2022 and introduces Canon Daniel Clement, a rector of Champton who becomes embroiled in a murder case. He has gone on to feature in three other of Coles's "cozy crime" novels,
including Murder at the Monastery and A Death in the Parish.


This is just despicable of HBO and their CEO...Rowling's anti-trans stance is unforgivable, and I agree with the author of this tidbit that this is just as bad as racism. FOR SHAME HBO! BOOOO

HBO Doubles Down on Support of Rowling
As HBO prepares to begin production of its planned decade-long Harry Potter reboot TV series, CEO Casey Bloys is doubling down on the network’s partnership with and support of J.K. Rowling, who has a long and well-documented history of transphobic remarks and is being sued for cyberbullying boxer Imane Khelif during this year’s summer olympics. As Variety notes, when Rowling first aired her belief “that transgender women are men and transgender men are women” in 2020, HBO parent company Warner Bros. released a usefully vague statement reiterating that “a diverse and inclusive culture has never been more important to our company and to our audiences around the world.”
At the time, the statement read as the network’s attempt to protect itself from reputational guilt-by-association. If comments Bloys made this week that “J.K. Rowling has a right to express her personal views” are any indication, though, reputational harm is either no longer a concern, or, more likely, HBO has decided that the potential cost of distancing itself from Rowling outweighs the cost of aligning itself with anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric. Let’s be clear: Bloys is not wrong that Rowling has a right to her views, but that right does not include freedom from criticism or consequences. HBO is choosing to support Rowling, and that choice sends a powerful and disappointing message. It’s hard to imagine that HBO would have been willing to continue its association with Rowling if the personal views she expressed were racist in nature, and the response to transphobia should be no different. 
 
 This also looks like a winner for streamers and movie-goers alike, though I agree It Ends With Us was a stinker.
 
Verity Heads to the Big Screen
Anne Hathaway has been cast to star in Amazon MGM’s forthcoming adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s Verity. Hathaway will play the titular character, well-known writer Verity Crawford, who was injured in mysterious accident and needs someone to step in and finish the remaining books in her successful series. Verity’s husband hires a struggling writer named Lowen Ashleigh to do the job, and lo and behold (Lowen behold? Sorry.), when she begins sorting through the papers in Verity’s office, she finds the manuscript for an autobiography that reveals all manner of secrets. Will it be good? That question seems beside the point, as this year’s Blake Lively-led adaptation of It Ends With Us was quite bad (we saw it so you don’t have to) and still cleared $300 million at the box office.

These three obituaries made me so sad, as I used to love Frommer's guides, and Gilbert's feminist writing, and Barbara Taylor Bradford's Woman of Substance. Though all lead full lives, I still think that bookshelves everywhere will be less delightful without them. RIP authors.
 
Obituary Note: Arthur Frommer  
"who expanded the horizons of postwar Americans and virtually invented
the low-budget travel industry with his seminal guidebook, Europe on 5
Dollars a Day: A Guide to Inexpensive Travel, which introduced millions
to an experience once considered the exclusive domain of the wealthy,"
died November 18, the New York Times reported. He was 95.

First published in 1957, Europe on 5 Dollars a Day sold millions of
copies and was updated until 2007, when its name was Europe from $95 a
Day. Frommer built on the book's success by offering other guidebooks,
package tours, hotel deals, and more."His earnest prose, alternately lyrical and artless but always compulsively informative, conveyed a near-missionary zeal for travel and elevated Frommer's from the how-to genre to the kind of book that could
change a person's worldview," the Times wrote.

"This is a book," he wrote, "for American tourists who a) own no oil
wells in Texas, b) are unrelated to the Aga Khan, c) have never struck
it rich in Las Vegas and who still want to enjoy a wonderful European
vacation."

Frommer considered budget travelers better U.S. ambassadors to Europeans
and likely learned more and had a more enjoyable time than affluent
travelers. He had a few simple rules:

"Never travel first class. (If going by boat, consider freighters.) Pack
lightly enough to be free from porters, taxi drivers and bellhops. Stay
in pensions; take the room without the bath. Eat in restaurants
patronized by locals. Try to engage locals in conversation. Study maps.
Take public transportation. Buy a Eurail pass."
 
In 2013, eight months after it was sold, Frommer bought the Frommer
brand name back from Google and announced plans to publish a new series
of guidebooks--both digitally and on paper--under a new company name,
FrommerMedia, which continues to operate.

Roger Dow, the former CEO of the United States Travel Association, said
in an interview that "before him, the average American just did not go
to Europe, or much of anywhere else overseas. This guy single-handedly
opened up that prospect to a huge new population."

Obituary Note: Sandra Gilbert

Sandra M. Gilbert https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJscVeMwusI6a4xKhpwHA~k1yJoKXv-hs8x6mQXsOjpoMLg-gVdw, a critic, scholar, poet and co-author of The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination, "a groundbreaking work of literary criticism that became a feminist classic," died November 10, the New York Times reported. She was 87.

Written by Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic was
published in 1979 and became a bestseller. "With gusto, scholarly rigor
and flashes of humor, the authors dug into the macho ethos that had long
dominated literature," the Times wrote, adding, "Their breakthrough was
to uncover the narrative strategies that Mary Shelley, Jane Austen,
Charlotte Bronte, Emily Dickinson and others deployed to gain
literary autonomy and to protest an oppressive literary patriarchy."

Gilbert, whose specialty was 20th-century literature, and Gubar, an
18th-century specialist, met as new English professors at Indiana
University in 1973. They decided to teach classics by women of the 19th
and 20th centuries in a course called "The Madwoman in the Attic."

"It felt like discovering an uncharted country," Gubar recalled.

In 1985, they co-edited The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women, a
2,457-page work spanning seven centuries, and a year later Ms. magazine
named them Women of the Year. Gilbert and Gubar edited the three-volume
No Man's Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century,
whose final volume appeared in 1994.

Their most recent book, Still Mad: American Women Writers and the
Feminist Imagination (2021), was written after Hillary Clinton's loss to
Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election. "If the culture is still
changing," they wrote in the introduction, "why are we and so many of
our friends still mad?... Maybe if you shatter glass ceilings, you have
to walk on broken glass. Maybe if you lean in, you topple over."


Obituary Note: Barbara Taylor Bradford

40 novels that have sold more than 91 million copies worldwide, died
yesterday at age 91.

Her first novel, A Woman of Substance, was published in 1979 and was an
immediate hit, staying on the New York Times bestseller list for 43
weeks. The book set the style for Bradford's many blockbusters: it and
six successive titles told a multi-generational saga about the intrigues
of a wealthy, glamorous family, headed by a woman with a modest
background who had built a retail empire. As Bradford said, "I write
about mostly ordinary women who go on to achieve the extraordinary."

Bradford began writing fiction at age seven and sold a short story to a
magazine when was 10. At age 15, she joined the typing pool at the
Yorkshire Evening Post. A year later, she became a reporter on the paper
and, aged 18, its first woman's editor. Two years later, she moved to
London and worked as a columnist and editor on Fleet Street.

Jennifer Enderlin, president and publisher of St. Martin's Press, said:
"I have worked with Barbara Taylor Bradford as her U.S. publisher and
editor for almost 25 years. She was a legend in so many ways, but chief
among them was her utmost professionalism and dedication to her craft.
She never missed a deadline and if she said she was going to deliver her
book on a Thursday, that's when it would arrive. Before she embarked on
a new novel, we would invariably have a delicious lunch at one of her
favorite spots: La Grenouille or Doubles in the Sherry Netherland hotel.
And there, we would discuss the plot, the 'what ifs' of the book, and
the arcs of the various characters. She truly loved
writing and creating her unforgettable worlds--whether that world was
Yorkshire at the turn of the 20th century, or the glamorous watering
holes of London in the present day. Barbara's novels would always
transport you. She was the definition of A Woman of Substance."

Charlie Redmayne, CEO of HarperCollins, Bradford's U.K. publisher, said:
"Barbara Taylor Bradford was a truly exceptional writer whose first
book, the international bestseller A Woman of Substance changed the
lives of so many who read it--and still does to this day. She was a
natural storyteller, deeply proud of her Yorkshire roots--she would
regale us of her time working on the Yorkshire Evening Post with fellow
reporter Keith Waterhouse and trainee photographer Peter O'Toole, the
dawn of the Soho cafe; society, and the many happy years shared
with the love of her life, her husband, Bob. For 45 years, she was a
huge part of our company and a great, great friend--we will miss her so
much--but there is some solace in the knowledge that she is now, once
again, alongside her beloved Bob. A life well-lived...."
In lieu of flowers, Bradford asked that donations to be made to two
organizations she was proud to support throughout her career: the



The Cinnamon Bun Book Store by Laurie Gilmore is a delightful cozy romance that is rife with sugar, spice and everything nice, perfect for fall reading. Here's the blurb: 
A charming break from realityPublishers Weekly
When a secret message turns up hidden in a book in the Cinnamon Bun Bookstore, Hazel can't understand it. As more secret codes appear between the pages, she decides to follow the trail of clues… she just needs someone to help her out.
Gorgeous and outgoing fisherman, Noah, is always up for an adventure. And a scavenger hunt sounds like a lot of fun. Even better that the cute bookseller he's been crushing on for months is the one who wants his help!
Hazel didn’t go looking for romance, but as the treasure hunt leads her and Noah around Dream Harbor, their undeniable chemistry might be just as hot as the fresh-out-of-the-oven cinnamon buns the bookstore sells.
 
This sexy, fun romp of a romance takes place in a small town that lends itself to gossip and good food, as the two main characters banter back and forth with chemistry aplenty. The book's zingy prose makes it a page turner, along with the slick plot and intriguing treasure hunt among the books. The HEA was nicely done, and I was so glad to finally read a romance that didn't center around horribly confused and angsty teenagers and their overblown hormones that I nearly wept with relief. I'd give this book an A-, and recommend it to adults who like their romances rife with spicy sex scenes without a teenager in sight.
 
A Pirate's Life For Tea by Rebecca Thorne is yet another cozy Sapphic (Lesbian) romance/adventure novel that takes place on the high seas and has plenty of tea and terror in equal measure. Here's the blurb: This is a gorgeous paperback edition featuring vivid orange sprayed edges, a beautiful color illustration, and a never-before-seen bonus short story!

Bookshops & Bonedust meets Our Flag Means Death in this cozy fantasy on the low seas, where lesbian pirates find out if enemies actually can become lovers!

Kianthe and Reyna are on the hunt for dragon eggs to save their hometown—but it requires making a deal with Diarn Arlon, lord of the legendary Nacean River. Simply capture the river pirate Serina, who’s been plaguing Arlon's supply chains, and bring her in for justice. Easy peasy.

Begrudgingly, the couple joins forces with Bobbie, one of Arlon’s constables determined to capture the pirate. Except Bobbie and Serina have a more complicated history than anyone realized, and it might jeopardize everything.

While Kianthe and Reyna watch this relation-shipwreck from afar, it quickly becomes apparent that these disaster lesbians need all the help they can get. Luckily, matchmaking is Reyna’s favorite pastime. The dragon eggs may have to wait.
 
 
Though I enjoyed this sweet and salty tale I felt it was redundant and focused too much on the couples falling in love and chasing one another instead of working on the adventure and finding the dragon eggs. Intrigue on the high seas should have more layers for readers to become engrossed in, vs all the canoodling and denial of feelings for one another. The HEA was satisfying, and there was an extra spicy (sex) short story at the end that will leave you hot and bothered, regardless of your sexual orientation. I'd give this book a B, and recommend it to anyone who liked (as I did) Bookshops and Bonedust.
 
Eleven Houses by Colleen Oakes is a deeply profound fantasy romance (they call it romantasy nowadays) that deals with grief and loss and duty in a unique way. It's also engrossing and so well written that you won't notice the nearly 400 pages going by until you're at the end. Here's the blurb: This is an epic romantic tale of a mysterious island and the houses who have stood for centuries to guard against the dreaded nightmare of ghostly beings waiting to strike from the ocean’s depths.

On a forgotten part of Nova Scotia, there lies an island.
On that island are Eleven Houses.
In those houses sit eleven ancient families.
And they are waiting…

Mabel is one of the last surviving members of House Beuvry, one of the eleven houses on the haunted island of Weymouth. Her days, like all the other teens on the island, are spent readying her house for The Storm: a once-a-decade event that pummels the island with hurricane-level wind, water, and waves. But that’s not all the Storm brings with it—because Weymouth Island is a gate between the world of the living and the dead.

When Miles Cabot arrives on Weymouth Island after the death of his mother, he realizes quickly it isn’t like other places—and Mabel Beuvry isn’t like other teenagers. There’s an intense chemistry between Miles and Mabel that both feel, yet neither understand—nor the deadly consequences that will come with it.

With the suspicious death of an island elder, a strained dynamic with her younger sister Hali, and the greatest Storm in years edging ever closer, Mabel’s life is becoming as chaotic as the weather. One thing becomes clear: if the fortified houses of Weymouth Island can’t stand against the dead, then she—and everyone she loves—will pay the price.

Fares Well the House That’s Ready.
 
 
There's something almost Shakespearean (in a Romeo and Juliet type of way) in the mythological tragedy of the 11 unique houses and all the ritual protections they must complete daily in order to ward off the great storm...and in the way that the star-crossed lovers of Miles and Mabel must put aside their own desires to secure the houses against ghostly onslaught and protect the mainland. The duty of family are paramount here, and I was fascinated by how each generation leaves behind instructions and warnings to the next to protect them in their service as guardians. The prose was prismatic and the plot rushed along like a stormy ocean, making this a page turner for the ages. I appreciated the insight into Nova Scotia (Canada) culture and legends, so much so that I found myself longing to visit this small Island. I'd give this book an A, and recommend it to anyone who likes fantasy based on ancient legends.