Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Later

 Fiction by Stephen King


This book follows a boy called Jamie who lives with his mother In New York and has special abilities--he sees dead people. Some reviewers called this a "recycled" idea, but this story really brings a unique take. As in all Stephen King's books, the point is the characters and how they handle whatever weirdness gets thrown at them.

This is a short story by Mr. King's standards, about 250 pages. I really liked it.


I also read recently by this author: Doctor Sleep

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Midnight at the Electric

 Fiction by Jodi Lynn Anderson


I categorized this book as both futuristic and historical fiction, because it's both. The story takes place in 2065, 1934, and 1919.

Does that sound confusing? Yeah. I felt like the story couldn't make up its mind what it was.

Maybe I'm too old; this book is definitely aimed at a teen audience. I didn't really like it, but I did want to know what would happen, so I did finish it...

Friday, September 24, 2021

The Silent Sister

 Fiction by Diane Chamberlain


I've been enjoying Diane Chamberlain's books recently, and this one was as good as I expected.

At the beginning of the story, seventeen-year-old accused murderer Lisa leaves a suicide note for her parents and disappears, leaving her yellow kayak frozen in the icy river. More than twenty years later, her sister Riley is trying to sort through the family home after their father's death, and uncovers some things about Lisa she had never known.

That sounded convoluted when I wrote it, but reading the novel was not at all confusing. This was an exciting book with good characters and a surprise ending.


I also read recently by this author: Pretending to Dance


Thursday, September 23, 2021

The Guncle

 Fiction by Steven Rowley


Patrick O'Hara gets temporary custody of his niece and nephew, Maisie and Grant, after their mother, who had been one of his closest friends, has died, and their father, Patrick's brother, goes to rehab. Their dad had apparently encouraged the children to call him "GUP" for "Gay Uncle Patrick," hence the "Guncle" of the title. It's Patrick's task to try to give the kids a fun summer while helping them recover from their mother's death; this is made harder because Patrick himself is still getting over the death of his partner, Joe, several years before. 

This was a pretty good story, mostly lighthearted but not exactly laugh-out-loud funny.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Pretending to Dance

Fiction by Diane Chamberlain 


Molly and Aiden are trying to adopt a baby in San Diego, after Molly has suffered a miscarriage and a hysterectomy. But there are things in Molly's past she doesn't want to disclose to the adoption agency, or even to Aiden. Still, the past usually catches up with you....

Told in both the past and present, this story is engaging and and believable. I loved the characters! 


I also read recently by this author: The Secret Life of CeeCee Wilkes

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Perfect Little World

 Fiction by Kevin Wilson


What is the best way to raise a child? If you asked a hundred people, whether parenting experts or not, you might get a hundred different answers to that question.

Dr. Preston Grind is a research psychologist, raised by research psychologists, and he studies families. He sets up the Infinite Family Project,  a new child-centered approach in which ten children are raised in a communal environment with ten times the parental love of an ordinary family. Will his utopian approach actually work?

This is a thought-provoking story with amazing characters.


I also read recently by this author: Nothing to See Here

Monday, September 20, 2021

Lost Child

 Nonfiction by Torey Hayden


In this book, American special education teacher Torey Hayden is volunteering with troubled kids in Wales, her adopted country. She takes on a nine-year-old girl called Jessie who lives in a children's home and has serious attachment issues.

I also read recently by this author: The Invisible Girl


Saturday, September 18, 2021

Dream Girl

 Fiction by Laura Lippman


Gerry Anderson is a writer whose most popular book was called Dream Girl, a novel that distinguished itself because Aubrey, the eponymous "dream girl," rose beyond her status as the protagonist's love interest and seemed a believable character in her own right.

Now Gerry has moved back home to Baltimore and is suffering from a bad case of writer's block, where he has a bad fall and ends up confined to a hospital bed in his expensive apartment. Then the mysterious phone calls begin; a woman claiming to be the "real" Aubrey is claiming Gerry owes her something for her contribution to his work. But Gerry knows that Aubrey is entirely fictional. Isn't she?

This was an interesting book, suspenseful, but more of the slow creepy type than what one expects from a thriller. The ending was a surprise.


I also read recently by this author: No Good Deeds

Thursday, September 16, 2021

The Invisible Girl

 Nonfiction by Torey Hayden 


I have read most if not all of Torey Hayden's books, so I was super excited to see that, after a fifteen-year-publishing gap, she has come out with two more!

Torey lives in Wales now, and she is still working with troubled children, although she's not a teacher in the UK. In this story she meets Eloise, a young teenager who is acting out in strange ways, to the despair of her social worker and foster parents.

This was a good story and a quick read.


I also read recently by this author: The Sunflower Forest

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

The Boy With the Tail

Nonfiction by Grace Hunter



Although I still prefer paper books, I am getting more used to reading on the app on my phone. This is good, because this book appears to be only on Kindle ebook.

This is a true story from a British foster carer, much like Cathy Glass (see Mummy Told Me Not to Tell), but Grace Hunter is much newer at the fostering game and seems to bring an earnestness to the table that is fresh and fun and a little naïve.

In this book, Grace and her husband take on a little boy named Teddy. He is seven, the same age as their own daughter, but Teddy is very developmentally delayed and seems much younger. I liked the story and really felt I'd gotten to know Grace and her family, as well as Teddy. It was a good short read.

As for the tail, which is is an eye-catching feature on the book, does the boy really have one? You'll have to read and find out!

Monday, September 13, 2021

The Westing Game

 Fiction by Ellen Raskin



This is a children’s/ young adult novel that’s kind of like a puzzle mixed with a mystery. 

In this book, several different people are brought together in an apartment building, but none of them realizes that they have been chosen for a purpose. The purpose, they will discover, is the “Westing game.”

This was a pretty good story with decent characters, but the plot was a little too contrived. 

Sunday, September 12, 2021

The Devil Wears Scrubs and The Devil You Know

Fiction by Freida McFadden


Jane McGill is a young physician navigating her first year of medicine in the funny story The Devil Wears Scrubs. Then her story continues a few years later in The Devil You Know.

This two-book series is a quick and fun read.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Too Scared to Cry

Subtitled: How Trauma Affects Children, and Ultimately Us All
Nonfiction by Lenore Terr

Dr. Lenore Terr did some pioneering research into childhood trauma in the late seventies and eighties, and this is her book.

This is a textbook rather than a storybook, and so it was generally more informational than the books I usually read. However, it had some powerful true stories inside it, so I enjoyed it. (Although I admit to skimming some of the boring parts....)



Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Nothing to See Here

 Fiction by Kevin Wilson


I hate this cover, but I loved this book! I have literally put off reading this novel because the cover is so ugly, despite the many good reviews I've read.

Don't be shallow like me; go ahead and read it!

The story follows a woman in her late twenties called Lillian, who has been coasting though life and living with her mom since she was kicked out of school at seventeen. Then she's offered a job opportunity from Madison, an old friend who happens to be a Senator's wife, and figures why not? Madison tells her they need a nanny/governess, and emphasizes the need for discretion. When Lillian meets the kids (from the Senator's first marriage), she discovers they are very unusual in a nearly paranormal way.

They catch on fire.

Wait, what? Don't try to explain it; just go with it and enjoy the story. This novel is quirky and funny, and heart-warming and sincere.

I also read by this author: The Family Fang

BTW I suggest this artwork for an alternative cover; it's from the New York Times review of the book:

See? Isn't that pretty? You can be weird and not ugly!

Yeah, yeah; I know. I'm just jealous because I didn't write this little jewel of a story and I'm nitpicking...

Saturday, September 4, 2021

Under a Cloudless Sky

 Fiction by Chris Fabry


In 1933, Ruby was a little girl who had a best friend called Bean, living in a mining town in the mountains of West Virginia. But now it is 2004, and Ruby is an old lady in Kentucky who struggles to hold on to her independence--and her car keys!--while her grown children worry about her safety. Back in West Virginia, the mining company is still in charge, moving in to take away the land from the mountain people. The past and the present come together in this story about both versions of Ruby.

This was a good book with some surprises!

I also read recently by this author: The Song

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Snow Crash

 Fiction by Neal Stephenson


Published way back in 1992, this is one of the original versions of the "in-the-future-we-will-all-live-cyberspace-lives" stories that permeate the sci-fi universe these days.

I liked the beginning of this book, but then it turned so slow and confusing I gave up. I feel bad about it, but there you go. DNF (did not finish).