Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Did Not Finish

I try to finish the books I begin, but occasionally find that the stories are not to my liking, and decide to put the book aside. I had read Justin Cronin's The Summer Guest and enjoyed it very much, so was looking forward to reading his much-acclaimed The Passage. I read about 75 pages and realized that it was going to be a futuristic story about world-changing events that sounded pretty awful to me. So I stopped reading and handed it off to Bill who likes books of that sort. We'll see what he thinks of it!

I recently received Elizabeth George's latest book with Lynley and Havers from The Book Depository. Having read a few favorable reviews I decided it would be next on my list. I'm now well into it, and think it will be a Finished book, rather than a DNF!

On another topic Bill and I had a very nice trip last week to the middle part of Oregon. We stopped to take a picture of the Weddle covered bridge in Sweet Home, and then spent the night in Sisters. Don't you love Oregon city names? The next day we traveled to Bend and another covered bridge. (Bill is determined to photograph all of Oregon's covered bridges!) That night we went to the little village of Dufur. Dufur is in the wheat area of Oregon about fifteen miles south of the Columbia River. We stayed in the old hotel there that has been refurbished, and is very nice.

I wrote this posting over a year ago, and somehow never got back to it. Talk about DNF!




Wednesday, November 30, 2011

The 2011 Books

Here is the list of books I've read this year. I haven't listed the ones I didn't finish, and they aren't listed in any order. I've not reviewed some of them, and don't intend to do reviews anymore. The fact that I read them suggests that I liked them well enough!


1-The Postmistress - Sarah Blake
2-The Water's Lovely - Ruth Rendell
3-Before the Frost - Henning Mankel
4-The Red Door - Charles Todd
5-Mr. Rosenblum Dreams in English - Natasha Solomons
6-The Black Cat  - Martha Grimes
7-Necessary As Blood - Deborah Crombie
8-A Lonely Death - Charles Todd
9-Haunted Ground - Erin Hart
10-The Draining Lake - Arnaldur Indridason
11-The Pillars of the Earth - Ken Follett
12-Hanna's Daughters - Marianne Fredriksson
13-Live Bait - P.J. Tracy
14-Astrid and Veronika - Linda Olsson
15-Heaven is High - Kate Wilhelm
16-Arms and The Women - Reginald Hill
17-An Incomplete Revenge - Jacqueline Winspear
18-Raven Black - Anne Cleeves
19The Lost Summer of Louisa May Alcott -Kelly O'Connor McNees
20-A Soft Place to Land - Susan Rebecca White
21-As Always Julia - Joan Reardon
22-The More Deceived - David Roberts
23-The Tapestry of Love - Rosy Thornton
24-The Spice Box - Lou Jane Temple
25-Voices - Arnaldur Indridason
26-A Rare Interest in Corpses - Ann Granger
27-Fearful Symmetry - Morag Joss
28-A Change In Altitude - Anita Shreve
29-Bury Your Dead - Louise Penny
30-The Season of Second Chances - Diane Meier
31-Whistling in the Dark - Lelsey Kagen
32-Up at the Villa - W. Somerset Maugham
33-Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel
34-The Tiger in the Smoke - Margery Allingham
35-Breaking Silence - Linda Castillo
36-These Lovers Fled Away - Howard Spring
37Two Rivers - T. Greenwood
38-Mind's Eye - Hakan Nesser
39-Other People's Children - Joanna Trollope
40-The King of Lies - John Hart
41-Blood Harvest - S.J. Bolton
42-Tomorrow River - Lesley Kagen
43-I see You Everywhere - Julia Glass
44-Silence of the Grave - Arnaldur Indridason
45-The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver
46-A Trick of the Light - Louise Penny
47-The Redbreast - Jo Nesbo 
48-Nemesis - Jo Nesbo
 49-The Devil's Star - Jo Nesbo
50-Cloud Chamber - Michael Dorris
51-Two For Sorrow - Nicola Upson
52-Hypothermia - Arnaldur Indridason
53-Shoot to Thrill - P.J. Tracy
54-Every Last One - Anna Quindlen
55-White Nights - Ann Cleeves
56-Borkmann's Point - Hakan Nesser
57-A Year on Ladybug Farm - Donna Ball
58 - Sing You Home - Jodi Picoult
59 -B urnt Mountain - Anne Rivers Siddons
60 - The American Heiress - Dasiy Goodwin
61 - The Girl Who Fell From the Sky - Heidi W. Durrow
62 - At Home on Ladybug Farm - Donna Ball
63 - Letters from Ladybug Farm - Donna Ball
64 - An Expert in Murder - Nicola Upson
65 - Turn of Mind - Alice La Plante
66 - Red Bones - Ann Cleeves
67 - A Night of Long Knives - Rebecca Cantrell
68 - The Ice Princess - Camilla Lackberg
69 - Death in the Garden - Elizabeth Ironside

Monday, November 14, 2011

Autumn in New York

We spent a week at Lake George in New York several years ago when we were in the area for our nephew's wedding. This was the sight that greeted us one day when we went for a drive around the lake.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Dinosaurs!

The new viewing building at Dinosaur National Park, Utah

The first thing you notice when entering.

And then you turn and look at the wall.

The discovery of this mound of bones must have been astounding.

There are hundreds of bones from many different dinosaurs.


This whole wall area is covered with dinosaur bones - just where they were found.


The old Ranger building where you get a parking pass, buy books!, and replicas of dinosaur bones.

This is a trip everyone should try to make. An amazing collection of bones and a walk back in time.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Fall Color - Steamboat Springs, Colorado






 The leaves were almost gone on many of the trees, but we were able to climb even higher to get some pictures. Most of the hillsides looked gray - the aspen trunks from a distance are very gray. The small scrub oak added a bit of color.
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These pictures were taken on the trail and in the parking lot at Fish Creek Falls. The other camera got a picture or two of the falls, and I'll post them later - if they're worth posting!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Travel and Books

We have returned to the coast from our trip to Nebraska and Colorado. It was good seeing the families in Nebraska, but the time has come for us to stop driving such long distances. It was very tiring because we haven't "right good sense" as my grandmother used to say, and we go farther each day with ten hours of driving - not smart! So we have made the decision to only go two days of driving from home from now on. The scattered families will just have to come see us!

I did get a lot of reading done, so have some short reviews of the books.


1) A Trick of the Light - Louise Penny - I think she just gets better and better with her tales of Three Pines village in Quebec, and the murderous goings-on there. Trick tells the story of an art critic's death, and the suspects are all the villagers! I enjoyed this book on my NOOK and was sorry when it ended, but Penny has already written the next book, and has started on another, so I'll have at least two more to read in the future.


2 and 3) The Redbreast and The Devil's Star - Jo Nesbo - I hadn't realized that the Harry Hole books should be read in sequence, and I read Nemesis, the second book, on my NOOK before reading Redbreast. So I knew something of what was going to happen in Redbreast. It was a great beginning to Nesbo's stories, and not spoiled by my reading Nemesis first. The Devil's Star follows Nemesis, and made me anxious to read the next in the series. Now I find that there is one book before Redbreast! These are pretty gritty stories, but I like the pace and most of the main characters.


4) Cloud Chamber - Michael Dorris - I had only read Yellow Raft in Blue Water by Dorris, so wasn't sure if this would be as good, but I did like it. The plot follows a family from Ireland to Kentucky to California and on to Montana. It is told in the voices of the various members of the family - some are good people, but some are greedy and not anyone you'd want to know!


5) Two for Sorrow - Nicola Upson - The second mystery with Josephine Tey as the main character. I was surprised to find out who the murderer was, and the story - concerning baby farmers in the early 20th century who murdered newborns rather than finding adoptive homes for them - is based on actual case histories. These books are set in Britain between the two world wars - as are the Maisie Dobbs books - and I find them very interesting and good reads.


6) Hypothermia - Arnaldur Indridason - Erlandur is off again solving a suicide that everyone wishes he would just leave alone. And he is still worrying about missing persons - especially his brother whose bones have never been found. Very good - and read on NOOK.


7) Our Kind of Traitor - John le Carre - Audio Book - It has been years since I last read a le Carre book, but we bought the audio book in Nebraska for the long drive home, and it was well worth it - to my way of thinking, but not to my husband's. He prefers "Jane Austen endings" and this left him rewriting the last chapter - or adding another chapter - to his liking! I thought it was a typical John le Carre ending and didn't expect anything else. The reader - Robin Sachs (not a relative!) did a good job of portraying all the characters.


8) A Painted House - John Grisham - Audio Book - Another for the long days of driving. Interesting story unlike other books by Grisham, and a good one to listen to. A boy tells  the story of growing up on a cotton farm, and the poor life he and his family had when the crops weren't good. With a Tom Sawyer twist in painting the farm house.


So now it's back to housework with a lot of reading in between chores!

Friday, October 7, 2011

Autumn

We have left our short summer behind. The leaves are falling - they don't change much in color here on the coast. This picture is from a trip into the Cascades a few years ago. We'll have to go again in the spring!

Saturday, September 10, 2011

More Pictures from Alaska/Yukon Trip

Caribou in Denali National Park, Alaska

Five Fingers Rapids

Grizzly - Denali

A Hanging Glacier in Denali

Monday, September 5, 2011

The Yukon and Alaska

 The White Pass Railroad from Skagway, Alaska to Carcross, The Yukon
 Mounties on parade marching to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Lost Patrol - Dawson City
 Panning for gold! And we each got some.
Permafrost has collapsed these buildings in Dawson City

Tripping with NOOK

We have returned from our wonderful trip to the Yukon and Alaska, and I'll try to post some pictures later, if I can figure out how to do it!

I managed to read quite a few books on my new NOOK while we were on planes, waiting at airports or for stragglers on our motor coaches.

The first: Nemesis by Jo Nesbo - Norway mystery featuring the Police Detective Harry Hole. Very good - and kept me reading too late one night.

The second: Shoot to Thrill - P.J. Tracy - Another Monkeewrench mystery concerning Web murders and FBI Agent John Smith. Also very good.

The third: Every Last One - Anna Quindlen - Oh my. Lesley said I shouldn't read it, and I understand why, but it was such a well-written story. No spoilers.

The fourth: White Nights - Ann Cleeves - Another Shetland mystery with Jimmy Perez set during the long days on summer in the north - with very little darkness.

These were all so good I'm glad I saved them for the trip. I have two more on my NOOK for our trip to Nebraska, and may download another. But I can take books in the car with us, so don't have to rely on the NOOK too much!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Differences

I've recently read two very different books, and both were quite good. The first one I finished was another Norse mystery by Hakan Nesser, Borkmann's Point, and the second was A Year on Ladybug Farm by Donna Ball.


Well, the Nesser book was again a very good, slow-paced story, with a surprise ending. I've enjoyed his writing, and find it very interesting that most of the Scandinavian mysteries I've read are usually less violent than American "thrillers."  


A Year on Ladybug Farm is very funny and fun. I was expecting a fluffy read, but while it isn't terribly deep, it has lots of episodes that had me laughing so hard I had tears running down my cheeks, and had to keep wiping my eyes so that I could continue reading! 


When I was first learning to read back in the olden days, we had Readers in school with Tom, Dick and Jane. One of my favorite stories has stayed with me for years. It was about the three or four young people wanting to help a struggling family. I expect the story was written during the Depression. The children gathered up food to take to the family, as well as helping them out in other ways. That reading experience gave to me the idea of not just helping, but "making do" with what was available. Ladybug Farm is the adult version of helping out and making do - with lots of humor thrown in. 

There are two more Ladybug books, and I can hardly wait to read them. Laughter is such a necessary part of life, and such fun to find it in writing!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Purple

One of the plants that does very well on the coast in Oregon is the hydrangea. This is one of my favorites. It starts out as a light mauve, then darkens to a real purple and eventually turns to a metallic blue. We do get some hard frosts in the winter, and the plants suffer, but come back in the spring. Because of the frosts, however, we don't get blooms until late in the year. One year we had beautiful blooms in December - and then it snowed!

Blogging and Books

I'm finding it difficult to write reviews of the books I'm reading. I've read four books recently, and don't really have too much to say about any of them. So I think I'll just write a sentence or two, and leave the real reviewing to Les! 


Sing You Home - Jodi Picoult - Lesley has written an excellent review of this book so I won't even attempt one! As usual Picoult has written an engrossing story, and I found the book to be as good as most of her others, with interesting topics. A Plus read.


Burnt Mountain - Anne Rivers Siddons - This is not one of my favorites of hers. It was a quick read, and entertaining, but not something that will stay with me for very long.


The American Heiress - Daisy Goodwin - Something of a fluff book, but it kept my interest enough that I finished it! Tale of a very rich American woman who goes to England to "catch a Duke." Modeled after Consuelo Vanderbilt's era of titled husband-hunting in Europe.


Breaking Silence - Linda Castillo - Mystery in Amish country in Ohio. The Chief of Police in the community is an excommunicated Amish woman. This is part of a series, and I got into it after the first two books, so there were some spoilers. I liked this book, and will look for more of hers.


So my blogging will now be shorter, and even more infrequent than it has been! I hope to be able to add pictures from some of our trips some day, and do a Wordless Wednesday!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Roofing

We have been under attack for a week with much pounding on the roof. Our shake roof only lasted a bit over 13 years, thanks to the dampness and the towering trees shedding their needles. So this is the summer to re-roof, and it has taken quite a while. The rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat is becoming a real distraction. I'm finding it difficult to read for more than a few minutes at a time, and have had to do most of my reading in bed. So it took me a long time to finish These Lovers Fled Away but it was worth every minute of reading. 


I know I read Spring's book years and years ago, but didn't remember any of it. It is somewhat reminiscent of Delderfield's books in that the characters develop along the way in a detailed plot. The descriptions of England are fantastic. This is not the England we saw when we traveled there  ten years ago, but the England of the 1910s to 1940s. I most definitely recommend reading These Lovers Fled Away, if you want to immerse yourself in a "jolly good tale."

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Family Reunion 2011

We had a lovely time with a good number of the families represented. The weather was very nice - for a change!
A part of the family  celebrating Bill's 80th!

If all had been able to come, there would have been twelve more of our children and grandchildren. 
Maybe next time!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

HOOKED ON NOOK

I recently got a Nook for my birthday, and I'm saving the books I've downloaded to read on our trip to Alaska. We'll be away for fourteen days, and normally I would have at least ten books in my suitcase. Of course I wouldn't read them all, but I'd be sure to have something to read just in case the first five weren't exactly what I wanted to read! Now with the Nook I have seven books available, and can download new ones if necessary!!

My Nook also has the feature of getting my emails, so I won't be wondering what catalog has arrived - or maybe even an email from one of my children. I could even download some music from my iTunes and not take along my iPod! What riches! I'm very happy with my new toy.

This week - the week after our family reunion week - has been quiet. Almost too much so. I've started a new book after not reading for quite a while. I found it hard to get started on These Lovers Fled Away, by Howard Spring, but I'm enjoying it very much now. It is a comfortable story set in Cornwall and Yorkshire at the time of the Boer War and on into the 20th century. I love the descriptions of the countryside. Spring makes you really see what the moors, glens and all the flowers and animals look like. A lovely book - so far.

Friday, July 1, 2011

And the Last Two

I don't understand blogging. I saved the last reviews to come back to, but wasn't able to tack on the next two, so will start anew!

Two Rivers - t. greenwood - An involving story of a young widower with a twelve-year-old daughter. He is trying, but not very hard, to get over the death of his wife. He has loved her since they were twelve years old.
The book goes back and forth from the present to the past telling the story of Betsy and Harper and their growing up together, and the story of today when a train derails in the town of Two Rivers and brings a young pregnant woman into Harper's life. This was somewhat slow going in spots, but picks up the pace later in the story.

Mind's Eye - Hakan Nesser - And now for another Scandinavian mystery! This author also has a middle-aged, overweight and overworked Detective Chief Inspector. In this case he is Van Veeteren. He and his team set out to solve the murder of a beautiful teacher whose husband remembers nothing of the night in which she died. The case becomes more involved as the book progresses. Do they have the right suspect? Why would the victim become a victim? The twists and turns make this a good quick read.

The Rest of June

I've only read four more books this month. With a cousin reunion in California and preparing for our family get-together in early July, I found my reading taking place mostly late at night. Two of the books were passed on to my sister before I could form my thoughts about them, but I'll try to remember a bit about both.

Other People's Children - Joanna Trollope - A story about "extended families" and the repercussions when a parent marries, has children, divorces and then marries someone new who has also married, had children, divorced etc.  Following the lives of the children and the parents was sad, but I'm often what happens. I thought this was a good book, but as my husband says "Not a Jane Austen."

The King of Liars - John Hart - I found the plot of this mystery to be quite good, but the flowery prose left me very irritated. Hart seemed to be trying too hard with his descriptions of a woman crying. Why not just say she was crying instead of saying "silver tracks made their way down her cheeks." Maybe he is paid by the word because most of the book is filled with these things! But the story itself was okay...

Sunday, June 5, 2011

MORE READING



I started this month with a bang – one good book after another - almost. The first had me “on the edge of my chair” from page one.

Blood Harvest – S. J. Bolton – This is the third of her books I’ve read, and by far the best. I had to stop reading every so often because it was so tense – but I had to go back almost immediately to see what was going to happen next!

The Fletcher’s new house – built between two churches in a small village – out to be paradise, but they’ve barely settled in before they find that someone seems to be trying to drive them away with increasingly dangerous threats targeting their oldest child, ten-year-old Tom.

Bolton has won various awards for her thrillers, and with good reason. She keeps you guessing and keeps you from reading late at night with her tales. Scary!!

Tomorrow River – Lesley Kagen – I bought this ARC from our book sale at the library because I had read one of her books before and liked it well enough. I had a hard time at the beginning hearing the “voice” of Shenandoah Carmody. Shenny and Woody are twin sisters living at Lilyfield – a beautiful home in the country, but Woody has become mute since their mother’s disappearance, and Shenny has to speak for both of them. The girls start searching for their mother with very little help from their father who has become a drunken, mean person, and not the loving father he had been. The search includes a varied group of friends of Shenny’s, but no one can really help her – or will. The family seems to disintegrate and Shenny faces many heartbreaking times ahead.

I See You Everywhere – Julia Glass – I liked The Three Junes when I read it several years ago, so looked forward to this new book. It was a book that held my interest, but I had a hard time identifying with the two sisters who tell the story in alternate chapters. Both Louisa and Clem are very flawed people, and not too fond of either each other or of their parents. Louisa has always been jealous of her younger sister, and through the years the jealousy continues. Early in the book is a chapter about a great-great aunt who is ninety-eight. Clem comes to be her companion for a summer. I could have read a whole book about Clem and her aunt Lucy! There are chapters about ecology and conservation that involve Clem, and chapters about art and Louisa, but overall the book doesn’t hold together very well – at least for me. Sometimes if felt as if I was reading a lot of short stories.

Now to see what the next book will be!




Wednesday, June 1, 2011

LOVELY JUNE – AT LAST


I think our weather may finally be improving. We seem to have some sunshine between rain showers, and that makes the rain less depressing. It has been a very wet spring, and now the snow in the mountains is melting and all the rivers are running high.

Our rhododendrons are in full bloom. The white ones have finished, but the reds and pinks are beautiful, and we have one small lavender that has two blooms. Some of the hydrangeas have beginning buds, so they may bloom eventually.

We planted some annuals in pots, and they look quite sad. Not enough sun to bloom, although there are lots of buds. Maybe by July!

I am reading a “thriller” and find I have to put it down after each chapter and take a break. It is very tense. Think of “The Turn of the Screw” and you will get some idea of what awaits you, if you read this book. I won’t give anything more away about it until I’m ready to write my review at the end of the month. A very, very good and frightening book!

Monday, May 30, 2011

MAY READING



The Lost Summer of Louisa May Alcott – Kelly O’connor McNees – This is a “what if?” story. McNees imagines what might have happened to Louisa May Alcott during the summer she was twenty-two. Did she fall in love? Might she have married instead of going on to write “little Women” and other books? It is an interesting imagining, and I really enjoyed reading more about the Alcott family and the times in which they lived. If I were rating books, this would probably get an 8/10. I did like it.

A Soft Place to Land – Susan Rebecca White – Kathryn Stockett, the author of The Help, said “Book Clubs: This is your next pick. I loved this book.” So did I. When I began it I was afraid it was going to be too fluffy, but it has depth and brings quite a bit of history of our time into play. The two sisters in the story handle their lives quite differently, but stay close in spite of their differences.

As Always, Julia – Food, Friendship & the Making of a Masterpiece – Edited by Joan Reardon. What a fascinating book! Not only interesting letters written between two friends, but politics, gossip about people of note, government postings in various foreign lands and above all publishing, and the problems encountered in getting a book in someone’s hands. I read As Always, Julia as if the letters were arriving at intervals. I kept it by my spot on the sofa where I picked it up during the days over a period of four months and a bit. Julia Child and Avis Devoto didn’t even meet for several years after they started corresponding, but became close friends and confidants as the years went by. I wish I had been able to read this when I was younger and still enjoying cooking!

The More Deceived – David Roberts – “Don’t judge a book by its cover.” I wasn’t sure I was going to like this mystery because the cover seemed dated. “A murder mystery featuring Lord Edward Corinth and Verity Browne” – It is a very good mystery with spies and much history and historical figures from just before WWII. Lord Corinth is somewhat like Lord Peter Wimsey, but not pretending to be dim. The Spanish Civil War has a large part of the story, including the bombing of Guernica. Quite a good book.

The Tapestry of Love – Rosy Thornton – My daughter gave me this novel for my birthday this month, and I had read reviews of it in several blogs, so I dove into it right away. It is so good. This is the story of a woman leaving England to live in France in the mountains of Cevennes in her new home Les Finels – the haylofts. She meets and makes friends with her few neighbors, and starts up her business – making soft fabric covers for pillows, curtains and her real joy, needlepoint from designs in her mind’s eye. (What a talent – to be able to visualize a design and then execute it in silk thread!) Her son and her sister come to visit her, but she spends most of her time alone – and liking it. This is a very satisfying novel.

The Spice Box – Lou Jane Temple – “A historical mystery – with authentic recipes of nineteenth-century New Your City.” The time is during the Civil War. Bridget Heany, an Irish immigrant of twenty, is starting a new job as assistant cook in a very wealthy home owned by Mr. Gold. On her first day of work she discovers a body in the pantry. She and Mr. Gold set off to discover who the murderer was – and also look for Bridget’s sister who has been missing for several years. This is a simple story in many ways, but I enjoyed it – and the recipes in the back of the book might get a try-out someday.

Voices – Arnaldur Indridason – Erlendur is back with Elinborg and Sigurdur Oli to solve the next Icelandic mystery. This time it concerns the murder of “Santa Claus” – the doorman in a busy hotel in Reykjavik, who had been a boy wonder with his astounding voice - during the days leading to Christmas. Erlendur stays at the hotel, holed up in a small cold room, while the three work to discover more about the victim, and who wanted him dead. Erlendur meets a woman who gets him to talk about his solitude and why he can’t forget his brother who was lost in a blizzard. These are very low-key books, but very involving and interesting.

A Rare Interest in Corpses – Ann Granger – My friend, Kate, has introduced me to Ann Granger’s mysteries. It looks as if she found another winner. The story centers on Elizabeth Martin who has come to London as a companion to her god-father’s widow. Within hours of arriving she discovers her predecessor had eloped, but now things look as if she was actually kidnapped. Elizabeth and Inspector Ross work together to discover the person involved in the disappearance of the former companion to Aunt Parry. This is an old-fashioned “cozy” sort of mystery. Not too gory and not very suspenseful, but very readable.

This was a good month for reading. I only had one book I started and didn’t finish. The rest were all quite good. This week I decided that my bookshelves were too crowded, and I was buying duplicates because books were stacked two deep – so we bought another bookshelf for the bedroom. There are five in the room now! There are seven in the study, and one in the loft and one in the second bedroom. I hope I can read all the books some day – and even re-read a few that are favorites.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

APRIL READING

APRIL BOOKS

Haunted Ground – Erin Hart – Finished 04/09/2011 – Pages 326 – The second book of Hart’s I’ve read, and the first in her series. This also tells of the finding of a bog person in Ireland and the archeology involved in discovering why the body was buried and who she was. There is the other story of a missing wife and child and the suspicion falling on her husband. Nora Gavin and Cormac Maguire are the investigators as they were in the Lake of Sorrows. These are interesting stories in that they give a lot of information about delving into the past of Ireland.

The Draining Lake – Arnaldur Indridason – Finished 04/12/2011 – Pages 312 – Another winner from Indridason. I really like his main character, Erlendur, who is such a laid back detective. He has an agenda – missing persons – as a result of losing his brother in a blizzard. A skeleton has been found in a lake bed, and the book sets about discovering the identity of the body. The Cold War and spies are a part of the story. I hope to read more of these Icelandic tales.

The Pillars of the Earth – Ken Follett – Finished 04/22/2011 – Pages 974 – Hefty good book about the building/erecting of a cathedral in Kingsbridge in the 12th Century. The major players: Tom Builder, who designed the cathedral and built most of it; Ellen, his fey wife; Aliena, the daughter of an earl; Jack, Ellen’s son – also  a builder of the cathedral; Tom, Tom Builder’s son; Martha, Tom Builder’s daughter; Prior Philip who saved the cathedral, Ellen, Aliena and many others. The bad guys – mainly William, pretender to the earldom, and various prelates. Even Thomas Beckett appears late in the story. A “sweeping” tale of the people of different classes at different stages in their lives. Something of a bodice-ripper, but very enjoyable!

Hanna’s Daughters – Marianne Fredriksson – Finished 04/27/2011 – Pages 345 – Quite good story about three women – grandmother, mother and daughter – as they tell of their lives in Sweden. They all bear sadness, and are striving for love.  The stories unfold through a hundred years of living – from very humble and harsh beginnings up to the present with a much easier life led by the granddaughter and her daughters. 

I've started another book, but doubt I'll finish it before the end of the month. "The Pillars" was really several books, so I read more than the four titles would tell you! 

Saturday, April 2, 2011

March Books

Again this month I didn't read as many books as usual. Maybe the lack of sunshine is getting to me! Here are the books I did read with a very brief review:

Live Bait - P.J. Tracy- This was a re-read for me, but as I didn't remember most of the story it was still fun. This is the third Tracy book I've read, and they are all good, amusing? mysteries. This one has elderly victims being killed for what seems to be no reason. Gino and Magozzi banter their way to solving the puzzle. The Monkeywrench group don't figure as prominently as they have in the other books.


A Dubious Legacy - Mary Wesley - An odd story about two couples who take over a country estate during the days after WWII. The characters are interesting, the humor strange and the outcome somewhat surprising. This is not your usual "weekend in the country" British novel. The women in the story are all very different, and don't always behave themselves.

Astrid and Veronika - Linda Olsson - A lovely little book about friendship. Two women - one old and one young - share their stories with each other over the period of some months, becoming very close in the process. The story is set in Sweden in a small village, and Olsson has described the country-side in beautiful detail. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book.

Heaven is High - Kate Wilhelm - Another of Wilhelm's good tales with Barbara Holloway uncovering a plot to deport an illegal alien. Binnie is married to an American, but she escaped from a pimp in Haiti and is now living in the US. By heritage Binnie is Belizian, and Barbara spend a good bit of the book in Belize trying to uncover the reason Binnie may be deported. The parts about Belize were of interest to me because of my sister and brother-in-law's times spent in Belize helping the people of a village there.

Arms and the Women - Reginald Hill - Ellie Pascoe has two stories going. One she is writing, and one she inhabits. Both are fun. Is Ellie a target, or just in the way? Will her first novel get published and her Comfort Blanket be just that, or will it too find its way to the publishers? Lots of action.

An Incomplete Revenge -  Jacqueline Winspear - Maisie Dobbs rides again! (And wouldn't I just love to have her little car!) Gypsies, fires and mischievous actions all occurring during hop-picking season in 1931. The writing seemed a bit stilted at first, but as I read on it became more natural. Maisie uses skills that are  unusual, but she solves the mystery in the end.

Raven Black - Ann Cleeves - New-to-me author. A good mystery set in the Shetland Islands. Two deaths eight years apart seem linked to an old man. Jimmy Perez is the detective who finally solves the case. The setting is mid-winter, and I felt cold the whole time I read it! There is a twist at the end that caught me by surprise. I'll be looking for more of her books.

The Girl Who Fell from the Sky - Heidi W. Durrow - The book won the Bellwether Prize for Fiction, and is a pretty good first novel. It draws heavily on Durorow's own life, and tells the story of the daughter of an American soldier stationed in Germany who marries a Danish girl. The daughter struggles with the discovery that she is neither 'black' nor 'white', and also with the aftermath of a terrible tragedy. I found the writing a bit disjointed, but the plot was interesting.

And that was it. I have also been editing my husband's memoirs, and finished re-writing them today, so that did take up a bit of my reading time!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

The Little House in the Woods


This is the home we built in 1997. We have lived here longer than any other place. Both of us have moved so often that it was wonderful to be able to stay put for a change. This picture was taken several years ago, and the trees on the left are much taller now. We've actually stayed in one place long enough to watch trees grow higher than we are! 


This summer there will be a gathering of our family again, and the house will be filled with happy talk and laughter. I wish that all the children and grandchildren could be here, but it isn't always possible, so we will be happy to have those who are able to be here. We can't put everyone up - only three bedrooms and a loft - but there are lots of places nearby where the overflow will stay - and we'll have meals here. I hope the weather will cooperate this year and we can grill frequently! This will be a celebration of Bill's 80th birthday although the actual date was last month.


Sometimes it seems as if this peripatetic society doesn't have the "home" for children to go back to, and our children were adults before this became home to us. But I hope it has now become their "home" as well.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Books Read in February

This was not such a good month for reading as I was away part of the time and not well again. I did manage to finish six, however, but spent almost a week trying to find the seventh to read. Just couldn't get into any of five books I started.

So here are the six I did read:
The Black Cat - Martha Grimes - G - A good Inspector Jury tale about the murders of three women who were escorts, three black cats and Mungo and Joey - two dogs. As usual in the Jury stories there are some humorous parts of the story, and the dogs and cats add to the humor.

 Mr. Rosenblum Dreams in English - Natasha Solomons - G - A first novel by Solomons that Lesley gave me. She has given a much better review of it than I can, but I'll give my impressions. The story concerns a Jewish refugee and his wife who have escaped from Hitler's Germany to England. He very much wants to become a real Englishman, and tries to be as British as possible. This includes the building of a golf course on a hill in Dorset because he isn't allowed into any other course. There is some humor in the story, but it has an underlying sadness too.

The Red Door - Charles Todd - G - Rutledge and Hamish set out to solve a mystery about the disappearance of a soldier after WWI. A case of double identity? Hamish is still there in Rutledge's mind, but not as obnoxious as he usually is. I like reading the books of the Todds - but wish Hamish would go away!

 Before the Frost - Henning Mankel - G - I have avoided this book for the better part of a year. Had found the Mankel books rather depressing and quite dark, but finally picked this one up. It is good - as the others have been. Kurt Wallander's daughter is following her father and becoming a police constable. She gets caught up in the disappearance of her friend Anna, and tries a bit of sleuthing before she actually begins work at the same station where her father works.

The Water's Lovely - Ruth Rendell - G - Another of Rendell's psychological mysteries. Not a thriller, but a good study of some strange characters. Unfortunately, there were few of the characters I could sympathize or empathize with - or even begin to like. Human beings are flawed and Ruth Rendell shows all their flaws and then some!

The Postmistress - Sarah Blake - VG - Such a good book, and probably why I found it hard to get into another. The story of Frankie Bard, a woman reporter in England during WWII, and the story of  the people of Franklin - on the tip of Cape Cod - who wait for their war to begin. So nice to have characters you can relate to, or at least understand and like! Not an easy book to read because of the subject matter, but one that will stay with me for a long while.

So - that was it for the month. For the most part it was easy reading, and mostly mysteries. Pure entertainment. I've finished the first book for March, and started on another. I'm also reading the letters written by Julia Child and her friend Avis DeVoto - but I'm reading the book as if the letters are arriving in the mail and the letters are long, so I only read three or four at a time. It's not my bed-reading book.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

So Many Books...........

I think I will list "books read" each month with a tiny review. I'm not the writer my daughter is, so won't try to give more than a brief outline of the story - as I write it when I've finished each book. So here goes.


 Necessary as Blood - Deborah Crombie - The most recent of Crombie's books, and a good one. Kincaid and Gemma are back again - There is a missing mother, a murdered father and a sweet little girl. Gemma is very taken with the little girl - and Gemma and Kincaid are about to be married - maybe.


A Lonely Death - Charles Todd - This is the first Todd book I've read in a long time. I began to tire of Rutledge and "Hamish" after the first six books, but this was a fast read, and interesting. Someone is killing the young men in a village by garroting, and it looks as if it has something to do with their service in WWI.


Fearful Symmetry - Morag Joss - The second of her books I've read, and to me not as good as the first. This one was funny in places, but the "mystery" took a long time to develop. Sara Selkirk - the heroine of the first book - is a cellist. This story concerns a "community opera" written by an unknown composer, a composer who will remain unknown, and an unruly bunch of performers. Sara and Andrew, who is probably the least involved Detective Inspector I ever read about, are the star-crossed lovers.


A Change in Altitude - Anita Shreve - A couple living in Kenya climb Mt. Kenya. There is a tragic accident that leads to problems with the young couple. A depressing story, not helped by my reading it while down with pneumonia!


Bury Your Dead - Louise Penny - How I do love reading these books! Having lived in Quebec and recognizing some of the locations makes the stories even more interesting to me. This one weaves three threads of mystery - a terrorist plot, finding the burial place of Champlain and discovering a killer.


The Season of Second Chances - Diane Meier - A debut novel about a woman professor who decides to change her life by changing jobs - from teaching at Columbia University to teaching at Amhurst - buys a Victorian house that is a definite fixer-upper - becomes involved with various men and finds her life quite changed. A fun, quick read.


Whistling in the Dark - Lesley Kagen - Another first novel about two little girls in a very dysfunctional family in 1959. Something of a mystery, but more about growing up and discovering life. Not a comfortable read.


Up at the Villa - W. Somerset Maugham - A real change of pace. One of Maugham's well-known short novels about an English woman - a young widow - living in Florence who is trying to decide whether she should accept a proposal from a much older man. She gets into some rather terrible difficulties, and finds she needs the help of a somewhat disreputable younger man. A quick read that was recently made into a movie starring Sean Penn.


Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel - Oh my. This is a great book. Winner of the Man Booker Prize for 2009. Excellent historical novel concerning the reign of Henry VIII during the time Anne Boleyn becomes Queen. Told from the view of Thomas Cromwell. I enjoyed this long book!


The Tiger in the Smoke - Margery Allingham - Written in 1952 this Campion mystery is still intriguing, and not too dated. Campion is older in this story, not as "posh", and not the central character as he is in Allingham's earlier books. 


Silence of the Grave - Arnaldur Indridason - The second of Indridason's Icelandic mysteries I've read. Similar to the Swedish Mankel stories, but this one at least is much less violent and more character-driven. This story concerns Erlandur's daughter, a skeleton discovered in the foundation of a new house and a long-ago mysterious disappearance.


The Fugitive Wife - Peter C. Brown - Good story set in 1900 during the gold rush to Nome, Alaska. A woman fleeing her husband finds adventure, new friends and herself. The hardships of the era are detailed and interesting. The gold fever that hit in the mid-1880's and on up into the 1900's was rather amazing. Some of the characters in this story were actual people enhancing the tale.


The Lacuna - Barbara Kingsolver - Wow! I'm cheating a bit because this is February 1st and I just finished this wonderful book. I bought Kingsolver's latest novel back in the fall, but kept pushing it aside as I didn't enjoy her last two books very much. This one is terrific. I'm not going to tell anything about it because I think it needs to be discovered by each reader without a review or even telling a bit about what it is about. Just know that it is one of the best I've read in years.