RAE’S READS

Tag: novels

  • This bookish meme is hosted by The Purple Booker, and I first discovered it on Brainfluff, a blog I enjoy immensely. The rules of the game are to choose a sentence or two, chosen randomly from a book you are reading, and copy them, giving the author and title of the book.  Here is my…

  • This novel, published in 2015, opens in “a grubby antique shop in Paris, France, discussing the mysterious plight of Grace, the main character.  Whether she is the protagonist or not is up for grabs because all the way to the end of the book, I couldn’t decide if I liked her or was “on her…

  • This fun meme is hosted by The Purple Booker. The blogging friend who first called it to my attention was sjhigsbee at Brain Fluff. She says, “Grab your current read. Open to a random page. Share two (or more) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page. NO SPOILERS, please. Share the title and author too…

  • I believe Davis’s third novel, The Masterpiece, published last year, is her best yet. It deals with the “glamorous” Art School, built above Grand Central Terminal (not Grand Central Station; this is not a station where the trains pass by, but an end-of-the-line, stopping point from which trains begin their next “run.” ) The descriptions of the…

  • I am reading a fantastic book by Fiona Davis, a novelist from New York, who has written three novels, all set in iconic New York buildings erected during the 1920s and 1930s. The Dollhouse is structured around the Barbizon, an early hotel that offered a chaperoned environment to single young ladies seeking secretarial and modeling careers.  The Address, Davis’s second novel…

  • My Tuesday Teaser on Crazy Lady will have to do, instead of the promised review because I visited my friend in her nursing home and picked up about eight Nicholas Sparks’ novels for my Little Free Library.  Vivian is 90 and very alert, not to mention entertaining. I had Crazy Lady,  a junior high book with me, and…

  • This 2015 novel’s colorful cover displayed at the Alvin Library attracted me and “forced” me to check it out. I knew the Impressionistic cover depicted the sunken cathedral of the title, and it “looked like” music. Although I had never heard of Debussy’s score, “The Sunken Cathedral” (described as the composer’s ” musical version of…

  • As an English major in my undergraduate days, I took a course in Contemporary Novels. Emma Straub gives the idea of “Contemporary Novel” a hipper, newer meaning. This was perhaps the most enjoyable novel I have read in 2019 although it was published in 2016. It presents college friends and  rock music bandmates during another life/another…

  • In January I agreed to return to the Alphabet Challenge abandoned last summer with the completion of Joyce Carol Oats, The Man Without a Shadow. So far I have read “N,” “O,” and “P.” Letter “O” was my favorite of the three and definitely the best book I have read so far this year.  It…

  • I have been reading up a storm for the past three days; maybe that’s why we’ve had rain, rain and are rain lately on the Texas Gulf Coast. A book I started Thursday evening was Nutshell by Ian McEwan, author of Atonement, one of my all-time favorite books and films. The novel is the story of Hamlet, in modern…