Welcome to my 1,000th post on this book review blog, started way back in 2005 during the SuperBowl (which I found boring, so my husband recommended that I start a book blog, and the rest is history). It has been a long road, and not all smooth, either, with complaints and publisher's buying my page to promote their newest author's work, and times when I wasn't able to even sit up and blog due to my chronic Crohn's Disease and/or other ailments, like pneumonia or COVID. But I never gave up, and here we are, a thousand posts in. Of course, now that I am a 65 year old widow, I'm re-evaluating whether or not to keep the blog going, as its a lot of work and my health struggles are only going to take center stage more often as I grow older. Still, this is the last vestige of my writing career, and I'm loathe to give it up. So, for now at least, onward!
The Secret Garden is one of those classic children's tales that, once you read it or have it read to you, you never forget it...it's life changing. I'm heartened to see that this many years on from publication, people are still interested in adapting the story to stage and screen. I really wish that I could go to Europe and see this musical version of the story.
On Stage: The Secret Garden
New production photos are offering a first look at Tony-winning director John Doyle's new actor-musician revival of Marsha Norman and Lucy Simon's 1991 musical
The Secret Garden at York Theatre Royal," Playbill reported. Adapted from Frances Hodgson Burnett's classic children's book, the production opens March 19, and continues through April 4.
Estella Evans (The Book Thief, Matilda) and Poppy Jason (Les Misérables) share the role of Mary Lennox, joined by Catrin Mai Edwards as Martha, Joanna Hickman as Lily, Henry Jenkinson as Archibald, Elliot Mackenzie as Dickon, Ann Marcuson as Mrs. Winthrop, Elizabeth Marsh as Mrs. Medlock, André Refig as Neville, and Steve Simmonds as Ben, with Cristian Buttaci and Dexter Pulling sharing the role of Colin. The cast also includes Stephanie Cremona, Matthew James Hinchliffe, Lara Lewis and Melinda Orengo.
I loved the Book Thief, and how delightful that Mr Zusak is celebrating the 20th anniversary of this incredible novel with in-person events! I wish that I had been there to see him and ask questions during the Q&A.
Image of the day: Markus Zusak at Rakestraw Books
Rakestraw Books, Danville, Calif., celebrated the 20th anniversary of Markus Zusak's The Book Thief (Knopf Books for Young Readers) with a sold-out event--including one fan who came all the way from Chicago. Zusak discussed the book, its origins, and the impact it has had a generation of readers, and took questions from the audience.
What a great wish from Ms Lowman, and how exciting to see it all unfold! Getting a book published is no mean feat these days, so great job on the wish and making the world a better place, one book at a time!
Image of the Day: Bookstore Makes a Wish Happen
The Well-Read Moose in Coeur d'Alene and Make-A-Wish Idaho teamed up to grant 15-year-old Mariah Lowman's wish: she wanted to be a published author and to celebrate with a book signing at her favorite bookstore. Her debut novel, Dragon Slayers, is the first part of the Golden Heir series.
Make-A-Wish Idaho's director of mission delivery Matt Dahlgran said this was the first time Make-A-Wish has helped get a book published in the U.S. Liz Burkwist of the Well-Read Moose reported, "The day was filled with joy, emotion, and a deep sense of community as Mariah held her book in her hands for the very first time and shared it with close family and friends. As booksellers, it was incredibly meaningful to witness not just the launch of a new fantasy series, and being chosen as the setting for such a milestone moment is something we will never forget."
1918. Orcas Island, Washington.
Lucy Nowhere has spent her eighteen years working on the vast estate of the eccentric shipbuilder who took her in after she washed ashore in a green canoe as a baby. But she has long wished for a life off the island, and in a matter of days, she is set to leave for college—and, for the first time, choose her own future.
Then she finds her employer’s severed head on the beach. Rumors swirl that a mischievous spirit and its minions, the sea wolves, have struck again. Lucy doesn’t believe in myths. She knows that a human—a human murderer—killed him. And when she is unexpectedly named heiress to the estate, she understands the next target is her.
Her closest friend, the estate’s vigilant young guard, begs her to escape while she can. But Lucy knows the only way she can discover who she is, and free the island of its curse, is to find the real killer—before she becomes the next victim.
Though I wasn't fond of Lucy's suitors (Koa was a bully and a rough, pushy jerk, and Nash was the "civilized" version of Koa, trying to get in Lucy's pants for his own ends, and brawling jealously with Koa at every opportunity...grow up, for heaven's sake!), I liked that she truly wanted to retain her independence as a woman, and that she didn't want to be a leader, but when forced to become one, she really stepped up to the plate. I also liked her ability to get herself out of critical situations by being smart. I've read two of Stacey Lee's other novels, and they were both well-written and riveting, as was this one. I appreciate Lee's own ties to the PNW, and I revel in her mastery of prose that is light and airy without being insubstantial. Her plots are, as I've said, riveting and suspenseful, and her characters fascinating. I'd give this book a well deserved A, and recommend it to anyone who is interested in stories of extraordinary women around the turn of the 20th century.
Viola Bowen has the chance of a lifetime: to design a video game based on her all-time favorite book series. The only problem? Her co-lead is Jesse F-ing Andrews, aka her archnemesis. Jesse has made it abundantly clear over the years that he wants nothing to do with her—and Viola has no idea why.
When their bosses insist a wintery retreat is the perfect team-building exercise, Viola can’t think of anything worse. Being freezing cold in a remote mountain lodge knowing Jesse is right next door? No, thank you.
But as the snow piles on, Viola discovers there’s more to Jesse than she knew, and heat builds in more ways than one.
The prose was snappy and the plot zingy, and there was some mid-level sexual spice that appeared 2/3rds of the way through the book that was surprising in its intensity. Though I didn't like the fact that Viola was written as an almost typical romance heroine, petite and shy and always cold, so she seeks the "warmth" of a big male to stave off hypothermia, I did like that she was smart and creative and never tried to hide her light so as to attract a guy. I loved that she could collaborate with Jesse because they both loved the same book series, too...there's nothing like two bookworms in love! I'd give this entrancing novella a B, and recommend it to anyone who is a female in the gaming industry.
Kitty Hart has become internet famous as the Kitty Whisperer for her expertise on all things feline, and as a result, her cat-sitting business is booming. But lately, she has a terrible feeling that maybe her life isn’t quite going where it’s supposed to—especially after falling face-first into her newest client. Not exactly the best first impression.
Fortunately, Miles Thorn is just as bad at first impressions. Strike one: he doesn’t like cats, especially Prince Francis, the haughty and mischievous Sphynx his mom left in his care. Strike two: tackling Kitty to the floor in a misguided attempt to save the pet he continually calls “the gremlin.”
As awkwardness slides into attraction and things start to turn purr-sonal, will these two complete opposites ever be able to find their furry-tail ending?
Hunting's prose is sterling, witty and delightful, and her plot races along on greased wheels, so don't be surprised if you end up reading until the wee hours of the morning on this one. The cover design really pops, and the structure of the book was created to allow the reader to stop and attend to other things and then pick it back up where it left off with no trouble at all. I laughed all the way to the lovely HEA. Because I love cats, too, I was riveted by tales of how each member of Kitty's feline family was doing. I'd give this sweet and fluffy novel an A-, and recommend it to those who love funny romances and cats...lots of cats.
By midlife, Becca enjoyed predictable days and laundry that behaved itself. What she did not want were peculiar powers staining everything she touched, especially the sort that misfired, sparkled at the wrong moments, and attracted far too much attention.
When the Lammas blessing goes spectacularly wrong and Hardingstone’s crops begin to act strangely, Becca’s long-dormant magic bursts into life with all the subtlety of a runaway pig. Before she can ignore it and hope it will pass, she’s roped into a coven of mysterious elder witches and saddled with a sarcastic talking dog called Bran. As if her life wasn’t already turned upside down, she’s then confronted by Fairfax, an infuriating and stranded sailor, who arrives with chaos rigged.
Worse, she’s informed her unpredictable new powers are vital to saving the village and harvest through an ancient ritual. With an All Hallows deadline looming, Becca must learn to live with magic she never asked for - and the well-intentioned friends who won’t let her face it alone.
Can the coven save Hardingstone before the source of the stink exposes them all? And will Becca, Fairfax, and Bran ever settle the age-old question of which is better — a bacon or a sausage sandwich?
Cosy, chaotic, and full of charm, As Above, So Below is a feel-good Elizabethan historical fantasy romp about late-blooming magic, village mishaps, and discovering that found family has a habit of turning up uninvited and refusing to leave, no matter how purple or flatulent things become.
This short and lively novel was quite the sweet read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I laughed at all of Beccas unintended magical escapades, especially turning the laundry and her hands purple, and her bread pink (I wouldn't have allowed anyone to feed it to the pigs...I would have eaten the whole loaf myself!) I was saddened by how disrespectfully everyone treated her, and I kept hoping that she'd gain control of her powers and blast them all to another corner of the world. Still, it was an interesting personal journey, and I'd give it a B, and recommend it to anyone interested in magical small towns and the eccentric people who live in them.
The decision has been made. Jessie has taken the magic, and all the weird that goes with it. Including wings. There's only one problem - she can't figure out how to access them.
Through a series of terrible decisions, Jessie realizes she must ask for help. Gargoyle help.
But she could've never predicted who answers her call - he's an excellent flier, incredibly patient, and a good trainer. He's also incredibly handsome. And interested. Maybe flying isn't the only thing she needs help with. Maybe she needs help getting back on that saddle, too, emerging into the dating pool.
Except, the new gargoyle is also an alpha, just like Austin, and the town isn't big enough for two.
Turns out, flying is the least of her problems.
If I were Jessie, I would have told everyone to F-off and then gone to get magical training ASAP. But between her running away from gargoyles trying to force their stone boners on her, and dealing with alpha battles for her hand, she never seems to go far in her quest to 'earn' her wings. Most of the book was a repeat of that theme, enough so that it became boring and pedantic pretty fast. I'd give this disappointing novel a C, and only recommend it to completeists.