RAE’S READS

Tag: novels
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The Shipping News was one of my favorite books–ever. This novel, Accordion Crimes by the same author was not as engaging but a darned good read in its own right. The metaphor or theme was pure genius: a small green accordion which was passed from owner to owner over the decades, and character sketches of…
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Ruth Ozeki’s The Book of Form and Emptiness was a real challenge to read. To begin with, the narrator of this novel is a Book. Yes, you read that right, a book; a story, the story of Benny Oh, a young boy who hears the voice of the Book, his story. His mother Annabelle, is…
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Nora Stephens, an agent who almost always gets the best deals for her clients has been dumped at the beginning of the story. She misses her mother, who has died and feels responsible for her younger sister, Libby, but lives a driven life as a career woman. She meets Charlie, a hot-shot editor, for lunch…
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TODAY I updated my Reading Log and filled in titles on my 2022 challenges. To my delight, I discovered I had FINISHED the Novel Challenge to read 22 novels from January to December. Actually, to date I have read 26 novels. Here they are in the order I read them: Aristotle and Dante Dive into…
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I receive so many of the books I enjoy through trades with friends, donations from neighbors to my Little Free Library that I do not usually buy a book outright just for me to read. This one I ordered through Amazon because the magazine recommendation, for it sounded fresh and appealed to me. This 2022…
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HERE’S MY FRIDAY FIRSTLINER FOR JUNE 17TH on Friday night. “Evie Stone sat alone in her tiny bedsitter at the north end of Castle Street, as far from the colleges as a student could live and still be keeping term at Cambridge. But Evie was no longer a student–she remained at the university on borrowed…
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First Line Fridays, hosted by Reading Is My Superpower asks participants to copy the first line or two of a book they want to read, are reading, or have read in order to tempt someone into reading the book also. Here are the first couple of lines from… As the subtitle states, “A Bookshop Keeps…
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Today’s First Line Friday offering comes from Annie Proulx’s Accordion Crimes: ” The Instrument It was as if his eye were an ear and a crackle went through each time he shot a look at the accordion.” Typical, beautiful prose from the pen of the author of The Shipping News, Annie Proulx.
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A YA novel that has it all Angela Boulley has a series-worthy hit that resonates in her YA thriller, The Fire Keeper’s Daughter. Eighteen-year-old-high school senior, half French, half Ojibwe, Daunis Fontaine, finds herself in the middle of a murder, and is recruited as an undercover operative for the FBI. An award-winning novel, this 2021…