RAE’S READS

Category: Uncategorized

  • 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…

  • I haven’t attempted one of these in a very long time, but I’m in the mood to do so today. The meme asks the blogger/reader to share WHAT they have finished reading, WHAT they are reading now, and WHAT they are going to, or wanting to, read next. Here’s my WWW Wednesday for February 9,…

  • And so I begin, again: My first blog post in two years and life during a pandemic

    From one of my favorite librarians and leader of my book club–a look at the pandemic years.

  • SOME GOOD ADVICE Advice to be taken both literally and figuratively: “Turn the page. Turn the page of the book you are reading. Turn the page of the book that is your life.” “Even when you don’t want to. Especially when you don’t want to. Move on right now. Start that next chapter. Turn the…

  • Originally posted on bluebird of bitterness: bluebird of bitterness View original post

  • 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…

  • 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.

  • 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…

  • 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…

  • 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…