Memoir as Page-Turner

9/25/24

A Little Less Broken, by Marian Schembari

Flatiron Books, 2024. 272 pages.

In her 30’s a woman who seems successful in her career, marriage, and motherhood, learns that she is autistic, and her world finally makes sense.

Please see “Reviews – Non-Fiction”

A Quirky Coming of Age Story for Grown Ups

9/17/24

Death and Other Inconveniences, by Lesley Crewes

What begins as something of a farce becomes a humor-filled and generous story of grown-ups finally growing up. Please see “Reviews-Fiction.”

A Lesser Known Immigrant Experience

Songs for the Brokenhearted, by Ayelet Tsabari

Random House, 2024.  352 pages.

This beautifully conceived and crafted novel brings to life a lesser known immigrant experience:  that of the Yemeni Jews who arrived in Israel in 1949 and 1950.  Their story opens up a world of tragedies and beauties.

Women and Weaving in 17th century England

Blue Hawk by Chloe Turner. Deixis Press, 2024. 304 pages.

Those interested in fabric arts as well as women’s history will enjoy this novel, based on historical records of the 17th century cloth industry.

LIVING WITH AMERICA’S ACTIONS in Viet Nam

Absolution, by Alice MacDermott.  Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2023.  324 pages.

In this novel, an 83 year-old woman looks back at her time as a young wife with her CIA-advisor husband in 1963 Viet Nam.

80-year-old friends reunite, and look toward the future

 Wrinkled Rebels, by Laura Katz Olson.  July 23, 2024, 281 pages.

As a slightly younger constituent of the 80 year olds in Wrinkled Rebels, I appreciate both the history lessons of 1960’s social justice efforts, and the utopian possibility at the book’s end.

Once Spies, Now Senior Citizens

7/15/24

Spy Coast, by  Tess Gerritsen

Thomas and Mercer, 2023, 341 pages.

Five former CIA agents in their 60’s and 70’s, friends for over 30 years, have retired to a small town in Maine.  The past of one brings them all into action again in a story valuing friendship and loyalty as much as mystery and more than action.

Problems and Promises of America

7/1/24 – For July 4th, 2024

An Unfinished Love Story:  A Personal History of the 1960s, by Doris Kearns Goodwin.

Simon and Schuster, April, 2024.  480 pages.

Presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin brings her insightful and engaging focus to the life of her husband, Richard (Dick) Goodwin, whose words and ideas shaped some of the most powerful policies of the 1960s.

Please see “Reviews – Non-Fiction,” and have a happy 4th.

Parenting Grown Children, and Living One’s Own Life

6/25/24

How the Light Gets In, by Joyce Maynard. William Morrow, 2024, 430 pages.

This big novel reads like a fairy tale of fractured relationships and people, dealing with contemporary personal, social, and political issues.