RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized
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This 1944, WWII publication, has been described as a “memory drama.” Judging from the photos on the cover, it has been made into a good movie, which I wish I’d seen as well as read the novel. The narrative opens as Charles Ryder, a British officer, approaches the estate of Brideshead, to determine its suitability…
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From one of my favorite librarians and leader of my book club–a look at the pandemic years.
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Originally posted on bluebird of bitterness: bluebird of bitterness View original post
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Here is the first line of a book I’m reading now Here are the book’s first lines: “His wife had died in June and there was to be a memorial service for her in two weeks at the end of the summer…(The actual cover shows Gene, the widower, walking on the beach, seeking inspiration for…
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HAPPY LUNAR NEW YEAR TO MY FRIENDS WHO CELEBRATE IT AS’ TET’ OR CHINESE NEW YEAR! May the Year of the Tiger be a better year than the last one, and may Covid be a thing of the past.
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Rebecca, a thirty-eight-year old single mom, trying to hold her life together and raise her six-year-old daughter, Mary Margaret, decides to rent her basement apartment (the “in-law apartment”) to earn some much needed cash. And, who should apply but a monk, who has left the monastery after twenty years of contemplation and solitude. The book…
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This debut novel was published in 2014, but I did not hear of it until this year on a friend’s blog. The cover suggests, “[It]…will leave you undone, open to the beauty of the little things in life.” Those are strong claims for such a calm, comforting little read, but the novel itself is as…
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Late again! Yesterday was a very full, very busy day, and I am just getting around to recommending this wonderful book for kids and adults alike. Clara’s dad, Marc owns a very special cafe in Flowers, Kansas. Clara knows that the Van Gogh Cafe is where magic happens. Many special events happen that involve the…