RAE’S READS

Tag: novels
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On September 27th, I finished The Wildwater Walking Club and promised to “review it soon.” Here it is November, and I’m just now fulfilling my promise. Another donation to the bookstore, this novel was a fun, “light” read that included a discussion of women’s friendships. motivated readers to walk, gave good advice–all while reading for…
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RECENTLY I finished a really unusual book. Fowler’s book was special for many reasons. Not only was it written in an unusual style, but it was also a good story. The Chicago Tribune calls it a “work of art,” probably because of the author’s unique writing style. I had read Fowler before as the author…
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This book counted for two different 2023 challenges: Although Miller’s Circe is not a classic, it deals with classic themes; therefore, I chose to read it for my Classic Club challenge. Circe was my choice for May/June. I had ordered it for my Kindle in 2020 when it was published, but I kept forgetting it…
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Choosing the “Newbie” category and not being good at following audiobooks, I took on the 2023 Audiobook Challenge around halfway through 2023 to read seven audiobooks before December 31st, 2023. This is the second book I have listened to. Zoe Klein has written a debut novel that keeps the listeners attention, provides excitement in adventuresome…
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My challenge for 2023 on classics was to read one every two months. Boy, am I behind! I am counting this novel (with pictures) as a classic because it contains two classic characters, Jane Austin and the poet Shelley. Published in 2021, this novel by Janet Todd was a gift, a pass-along from a friend…
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A story of The Great Depression and the Dustbowl, set in Texas in 1921, The Four Winds was recommended by my friend Teddy at the Tuesday Readers Book Club at my local library. We all enjoyed reading it. Winds tells the story of Elsa Wolcott and Rae Martinelli, two crazy kids who have a night…
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William Kent Krueger is one of my favorite authors, and I respect him for his wonderful writing as well as his versatility. He has said that he always wanted to write his version of Huckleberry Finn, and in Tender Land, He has done just that. This novel is “the unforgettable story of four orphans who…
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I began reading an e-book on my Kindle during my Labor Day Readathon. I chose one I had won in a blogger’s giveaway, Dead of Winter Break, a cozy mystery by Kelly Brakenhoff. In this second book in a series (which read just fine as a stand-alone) Cassandra Soto, an administrator at a Nebraska college…
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This week’s Friday Firstliner comes from William Kent Krueger’s This Tender Land: “Prologue” “In the beginning, after he labored over the heavens and the earth, the light and the dark, the land and the sea and all living things that dwell therein, after he created man and woman and before he rested, I believe God…