RAE’S READS

Tag: novels

  • This was a 2019 publication in large print I checked out from the library.  Although I have The Underground Railroad by this author on my Kindle, I have not read it yet, but after reading Nickel Boys, I intend to. Elwood, the protagonist is an upstanding 14 year old, who is ready to start college at the beginning of…

  • I received this book as a gift from a cousin/book buddy after she had read and enjoyed it. I read it some time back, but I’m just getting around to reviewing it since I have been so tied up with Cybils books lately. The Washington Post describes it as an “epic story” and it is…

  • This 2019 addition to the wonderful collection of Richard Russo’s books could be categorized as a mystery or love story, but neither category would be “traditional.” The mystery is a cold case that three characters who were/are in love with the same woman are trying to solve. Lincoln, a commercial real estate broker from Las…

  • Recently I read and reviewed The Haunted Bookstore by Christopher Morely, a classic from WWII days. It led me to the audiobook of Morely’s previous book, Parnassus on Wheels. Parnassius tells the story of Roger Mifflin, bookstore owner extraordinaire, before his bookstore days and how he met and courted Mrs. Mifflin. Like a tinker of those days, Mifflin traveled…

  • A Year of Wednesdays by Sonis Bahl, a 2019 publication, is “…a story that will make you laugh, cry, and think again,” according to the jacket blurb. I found it warm, humorous at times, and full of contemporary cultural allusions. Two people, an arrogant businessman and a mother with a baby are thrown together as seatmates…

  • The Tuesday Teaser asks you copy a few sentences from what you are currently reading, “teasing” other readers to put your book on their TBR lists. After you read mine, be sure to leave your Tuesday Teaser in the “reply” box at the bottom. It’s fun to “play” too, and I am always amazed at…

  • This book is the conclusion to the Don Tillman trilogy, but it also makes a great stand-alone novel. Written in 2019, it’s “twist-ending” is the perfect sign off to the series. I was so pleased with the ending, I gave a “yay” out loud and would have clapped my hands together in delight had I…

  • Several of my blogging friends participate in this little game, “The Tuesday Teaser,” hosted by The Purple Booker. The idea is to open your current book either to where you are reading or at random and copy a line of two to “tease” others into investigating your book.  Reading other blogger’s Tuesday Teasers has increased…

  • This 2016 publication by New York Times columnist and novel writer, Anna Quindlen, demonstrates the timeliness of her topics. As the story opens, Bridget Fitzmaurice, younger sister to Megan Fitzmaurice, the early morning host of “Rise and Shine,” a “hit” TV show similar to the “Today Show” or “Goodmorning America,” with the difference being that Megan…

  • This meme asks that one copy the first line(s) of a current read in an attempt to “hook” others. With that in mind, here is the first line of The Rosie Result, the final book in the Don Tillman Trilogy. “I was standing on one leg shucking oysters when the problems began.” Weird? No weirder than the…