I didn't plan it this way, but how appropriate it seems to be starting a new reading week on the very first day of 2024. Last week I finished The Last Talk with Lola Faye by Thomas H. Cook and Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus and I will post reviews for both books in the next several days (loved them). I'm also close enough to finishing two others, The Night of the Storm by Nishita Parekh and Laurie Frankel's Family Family that I'll probably finish one of those today.
I'm a fan of Laurie Frankel novels, so I was happy to get hold of a review copy of Family Family (to be published on January 23). You might think it's missing a comma in its title, but the first "Family" is actually an adjective and the second a noun. Put a little emphasis on the adjective, and you get the point of the title. This is Frankel's take on today's debate about pro-choice vs. pro-life and where adoption fits into the debate. It also addresses cancel culture issues - and is a very good coming-of-age novel for several different characters.Nishita Parekh's debut novel, The Night of the Storm, is set in Houston during the horrific arrival of Hurricane Harvey in August 2017. The storm killed about 100 people mainly because of the catastrophic flooding involved. But inside one home, they are not nearly as worried about the wind and water outside as they are about the neighbor who seems to have been mysteriously murdered right before their eyes. That's scary. But even scarier is knowing that the killer has to be a family member trapped inside the house with the rest of them.I'll also be spending some time this week with some of these:
I enjoyed Thomas H. Cook's The Last Talk with Lola Faye so much that I immediately went looking for another Cook novel and found Red Leaves (2006). The plot doesn't sound very original (a couple's teenaged son is accused of kidnapping and killing a little girl and they start to believe he may really have done it) but I don't know if that was true seventeen years ago, so I'm giving Cook the benefit of the doubt. Cook is a good storyteller, but this one reads very differently from The Last Talk with Lola Faye...not nearly as suspenseful so far.
I enjoyed Thomas H. Cook's The Last Talk with Lola Faye so much that I immediately went looking for another Cook novel and found Red Leaves (2006). The plot doesn't sound very original (a couple's teenaged son is accused of kidnapping and killing a little girl and they start to believe he may really have done it) but I don't know if that was true seventeen years ago, so I'm giving Cook the benefit of the doubt. Cook is a good storyteller, but this one reads very differently from The Last Talk with Lola Faye...not nearly as suspenseful so far.
This will be my first nonfiction read of 2024 even though it's not turning out to be quite the book I thought it was going to be. The basic premise of the book is that the act of writing forces you to focus your mind and organize your thoughts to such an extent that writing about it is the best way to learn any new subject you take on. It's commonly called "reading across the curriculum" and means that every discipline should include teachers capable of teaching how to write within their specific area. I'm hoping that it helps me in my own writing of reviews, especially of nonfiction titles.
My Favorite Scar is to be published on January 16, so it will definitely be coming up very soon for some serious reading time. I've read the first two chapters (18 pages), and I'm enjoying the style even though this is a translation from the Spanish. If you're wondering what the "favorite scar" thing is all about, it refers to the two main characters, a father and his fifteen-year-old daughter. In one conversation between the two, the father tells Ambar that she is his favorite scar as he points to a tattoo of her name on his forearm. I'm looking forward to this one.
Also waiting in the wings for now are these:
Have a great reading week everyone...hope you didn't wake up with a headache this morning! Happy New Year!
You've never read an Agatha Christie mystery? That surprises me! And I personally don't think you need any help with your writing...your reviews are always so thoughtful and well written. It makes me a little jealous. ;D I wish you a very good week of reading and a Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteI really haven't, Lark. I think I was so put off by every one of the movie versions I tried to watch that I became convinced that the books were not for me. I plan to read the one mentioned sometime in the next week or two, and I'm hopeful that it will change my opinion...but it was a random selection picked solely because it was on the shelf the last time I was in the library. Thanks for the kind words about my reviews; I do try my best, but the results are totally random.
DeleteI used to say I didn't like Hercule Poirot at all because the TV/movie versions I saw of him were so annoying, but then I tried one of Christie's Poirot mysteries and I ended up really liking it...and Poirot. Now he's a favorite. So you never know.
DeleteThat's good to hear. I guarantee you that if I had seen that awful adaptation of Louise Penny's Gamache series before I read the books that I would never have read them at all. I'm still twitching from the sheer awfulness of that show.
DeleteHi Sam, Happy New Year and I am so happy that you liked The Last Talk With Lola Faye and have gone on to Red Leaves which I also really liked and I would say stick with it. The mystery editor Otto Penzler is a big fan of Cook's and that is high praise.
ReplyDeleteWriting is so difficult and you do it so well. I am always eager to read and learn from your reviews.
Happy New Year, Kathy! I did like "Lola Faye" a lot; it reminded me of some of the Alfred Hitchcock stuff I used to read and watch on TV way back in the day. Red Leaves is holding my attention, too, at near the 40% mark, and I suspect it's about to get a lot more interesting as the heat is turned up on the man and his wife about their son. Thanks, too, for your kindness regarding my reviews. I appreciate your words.
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