Fiction by Tom Hanks
I couldn't get interested in this book for some reason.
Fiction by Tom Hanks
I couldn't get interested in this book for some reason.
Fiction by Emma Cline
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Amazon Prime Kindle Fiction by Susanne Pari
Mitra Jahani feels like she gave up a lot to save her younger sister Ana. When their controlling Iranian-American father refused to let Ana get married until Mitra agreed to marry also (to a suitable Iranian boy chosen by her father, of course), Mitra acquiesced to the wedding but backed out at the last minute in a dramatic fashion: she had sterilization surgery and rendered herself unmarriageable.
But then Ana died suddenly, and since her death Mitra has struggled to find a purpose for herself in this world where she is sisterless. Now it is the one-year anniversary of Ana's death and Mitra is traveling to New York for the family ceremony. (Apparently Iranians have a second funeral service for this. I think it's a really interesting idea.) Mitra must finally confront her estranged father and try to come to terms with Ana's death all at once.
This was a good character story about both Iranian culture and about the relationship between sisters.
I also read recently (for free) from Amazon Prime Kindle: Don't Believe it
Youth Fiction by Cammie McGovern
This is a story for young readers written from the point of view of a cat. It was a fun read.
I also read by this author: The Art of Seeing
Fiction by Katherine Center
Having lost her husband two years before, Libby is moving to her aunt's goat farm in Texas to start over, bringing along her two small children. Of course, by saying she "lost her husband," I mean that he died. Despite the book's title, the man is not really lost.
Then Libby meets a strange girl called Sunshine who cheerfully states that she can find Libby's lost husband. What can she mean? And, more importantly, can Libby move on with her life in this new place without her husband?
This was a really fun story with great characters and a couple of surprises.
Keeper of the Light, Kiss River, and Her Mother's Shadow
Fiction by Diane Chamberlain
Fiction by Olga Tokarczuk
I'll admit I chose this book simply for the title. It's a great title.
Unfortunately I didn't like anything else about it.
Amazon Prime Kindle Fiction by Charlie Donlea
In 2007 on the island of St Lucia, American vacationer Julian Christ was murdered. His girlfriend Grace Sebold was quickly charged with and convicted of the crime, and sentenced to life imprisonment despite her protestations of innocence. But now, ten years later, true-crime documentary filmmaker Sidney Ryan is looking into the case.
Was Grace wrongly convicted or did the St. Lucia police have it right all along? What will be uncovered through the documentary filming?
This was an interesting story with surprises; I'm not sure about the ending. Maybe it's a setup for a sequel?
I also read by this author: Some Choose Darkness
I also read (for free!) by Amazon Prime Kindle: The Couple Across the Street
Fiction by Shelly Read
The first time Victoria Nash met Wilson Moon, she fell in love with him. But it was 1949 and Iola, Colorado, was a small insular town that called Wilson a no-good Injun, refusing to let him hang around. What would become of the two young lovers?
This was a good story but a sad one.
Fiction by Nicole Trope
Leslie left Millie, her three year old daughter, at home while she went to the grocery store, trusting her twelve year old stepdaughter Shelby to babysit. When Leslie came back, Millie was gone. Shelby said the child ran away, but did she really? And for that matter, did Leslie really go to the grocery store? And what about Randall, the girls' father; was he really out golfing?
This was an exciting thriller with several surprises.
Fiction by Katherine Center
Helen is thirty-two years old and recovering from a failed marriage when she signs up for a “wilderness experience" trip as an attempt to Be Something Different. What she doesn’t expect is that her little brother’s best friend will follow her there, potentially ruining her chance at a fresh start by muddying up her future with pieces of the past.
This was a good story with memorable characters.
Fiction by Terra Little
Pamela and Paris are identical twins, raised together in the small town of Mercy, Georgia, but bound for very different destinies.
This book was okay but I didn’t love it. I felt like it gave too much of the plot away at the beginning and I had trouble engaging with the characters.