Sunday, October 7, 2018

November Book Selection

This should be a good one for the season; a comedy about Armegeddon by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett (of Discworld Series fame).  It is also being made into a TV series to be released in 2019 on Amazon Prime video.

Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch is a World Fantasy Award-nominated novel, written as a collaboration between the English authors Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman. The book is a comedy about the birth of the son of Satan, the coming of the End Times. Wikipedia
Originally publishedMay 1, 1990
Page count288
GenresHorror fiction, Fantasy, Humorous Fiction


Here is the link to the series preview trailer; 

https://mashable.com/video/good-omens-trailer-nycc/#fMw63Pi9waqa

Friday, August 31, 2018

October 3rd Book !

We will be reading 'I Am The Messanger' by Marcus Zusak.  It was recommended by Maura.  See all of you in October.  Have a good read!

Here is the beginning of a review by N. Alysha Lewis :

For seventeen years, I forced myself not to have a favorite book. I loved reading so much, I didn’t want to decide on one in case I read something even better right after. The Phantom Tollbooth came close because it gave me my love of word play, but even still, when asked, I never gave a straight answer. Then I read I Am the Messenger, by Markus Zusak.
Many know Zusak as the man who wrote The Book Thief, a very popular selection for summer reading lists that got the movie treatment a few years ago. And I get it. The Book Thief is a great book. It deserves the accolades and attention it has received—but in my opinion, I Am the Messenger, which turned 15 this year, is the YA read you should be picking up.


Thursday, July 19, 2018

August 2018 Book

The River of Doubt; Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey by Candice Millard.


Saturday, April 28, 2018

Early June Book Club at ARBOR CREST Winery!!

We had a very nice time at The Gilded Unicorn followed by the Pie & Whiskey readings at the Washington Cracker Barrel building!  So much fun in fact that we decided to try Arbor Crest outside next time.  If the weather is bad we have a back up plan; Candace's house.  Regardless, her famous applesauce cake will be there! 




We are reading "Guns of the South" by Harry Turtledove.  This is an alternative history book about the Civil War. There is one copy in the city library system and one digital copy in county.  So.... if you can't find one in one of our local used bookstores then you will have to get a cheap copy from one of the following online source;  thriftbooks.com, amazon, betterworldbooks, bookfinder, alibris, abe books.  Candace and I already have a copy. We have a 7 week period till book club so order it
soon.





Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Homegoing

Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi Ghana, 18th century: Two half sisters, Effia and Esi, are born into different villages, each unaware of the other. One will marry an Englishman and lead a life of comfort in the palatial rooms of the notorious Cape Coast Castle. The other will be captured in a raid on her village, imprisoned in the very same castle, and shipped off to America to be sold into slavery. HOMEGOING follows the parallel paths of these sisters and their descendants through eight generations: from the slave traders of the Gold Coast to the plantations of Mississippi, from the Asantes’ struggle against British colonialism to the first stirrings of the American Civil War, from the jazz of 20th-century Harlem to the sparkling shores of modern Ghana. Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi Publication Date: May 2, 2017 Genres: Fiction, Historical Fiction Paperback: 320 pages Publisher: Vintage ISBN-10: 1101971061 ISBN-13: 9781101971062

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Martin Marten in January 2018

We will be reading Martin Marten by Brian Doyle for the upcoming January Book Club. It will be at Lori's house on Tuesday January 16th. Martin Marten is a braided coming-of-age tale like no other, told in Brian Doyle's joyous, rollicking style. Dave is fourteen years old, living with his family in a cabin on Oregon's Mount Hood (or as he prefers to call it, like the Multnomah tribal peoples once did, Wy'east).

Monday, October 16, 2017

A.J. Fikry

KIRKUS REVIEW Zevin (Margarettown, 2006, etc.) chronicles the life of A. J. Fikry, a man who holds no brief for random acts, who yearns for a distinct narrative, who flounders about until his life is reordered by happenstance. Fikry owns Island Books on Alice Island, a summer destination off Massachusetts—think Nantucket. He’s not yet 40 but already widowed, his wife, Nic, dead in an auto accident. Fikry drinks. Island Books drifts toward bankruptcy. Then, within a span of days, his rare copy of Poe’s Tamerlane (worth $400,000) is stolen, and 2-year-old Maya is deposited at his bookstore. Fikry cannot bear to leave the precocious child to the system once it becomes apparent her single mother has drowned herself in the sea. He adopts Maya, spurred by her immediate attachment to him. That decision detours "his plan to drink himself to death" and reinvigorates his life and his bookstore. Add Amelia Loman, quirky traveling sales representative for Knightley Press, and a romance that takes four years to begin, and there’s a Nicholas Sparks quality to this novel about people who love books but can't find someone to love. With a wry appreciation for the travails of bookstore owners—A. J. doesn’t like e-readers—Zevin writes characters of a type, certainly, but ones who nonetheless inspire empathy. Among others, there are the bright and sweet-natured Maya, who morphs into an insecure but still precocious teenager; Lambiase, local police chief who finds in Firky the friend who expands his life; A. J’s brother-in-law, Daniel Parish, a once–best-selling author riding out a descending career arc; and Daniel’s wife, Ismay, who sees A. J. as everything Daniel should be. All fit the milieu perfectly in a plot that spins out as expected, bookended by tragedy. Zevin writes characters who grow and prosper, mainly A. J. and Lambiase, in a narrative that is sometimes sentimental, sometimes funny, sometimes true to life and always entertaining. A likable literary love story about selling books and finding love.

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Maise Dobbs

Maisie Dobbs Maisie Dobbs Maisie Dobbs, Psychologist and Investigator, began her working life at the age of thirteen as a servant in a Belgravia mansion, only to be discovered reading in the library by her employer, Lady Rowan Compton. Fearing dismissal, Maisie is shocked when she discovers that her thirst for education is to be supported by Lady Rowan and a family friend, Dr. Maurice Blanche. But The Great War intervenes in Maisie's plans, and soon after commencement of her studies at Girton College, Cambridge, Maisie enlists for nursing service overseas. Years later, in 1929, having apprenticed to the renowned Maurice Blanche, a man revered for his work with Scotland Yard, Maisie sets up her own business. Her first assignment, a seemingly tedious inquiry involving a case of suspected infidelity, takes her not only on the trail of a killer, but back to the war she had tried so hard to forget.

Saturday, June 24, 2017

Our Next Book is..."As I Lay Dying" by William Faulkner

This is our first book by Faulkner. I have always been meaning to read something by this famous American author and here is my chance. I have had 2 copies lying around in my many stacks of books. Here is an excerpt about him: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1949 William Faulkner William Faulkner - Biographical William Faulkner (1897-1962), who came from an old southern family, grew up in Oxford, Mississippi. He joined the Canadian, and later the British, Royal Air Force during the First World War, studied for a while at the University of Mississippi, and temporarily worked for a New York bookstore and a New Orleans newspaper. Except for some trips to Europe and Asia, and a few brief stays in Hollywood as a scriptwriter, he worked on his novels and short stories on a farm in Oxford. In an attempt to create a saga of his own, Faulkner has invented a host of characters typical of the historical growth and subsequent decadence of the South. The human drama in Faulkner's novels is then built on the model of the actual, historical drama extending over almost a century and a half Each story and each novel contributes to the construction of a whole, which is the imaginary Yoknapatawpha County and its inhabitants. Their theme is the decay of the old South, as represented by the Sartoris and Compson families, and the emergence of ruthless and brash newcomers, the Snopeses. Theme and technique - the distortion of time through the use of the inner monologue are fused particularly successfully in The Sound and the Fury (1929), the downfall of the Compson family seen through the minds of several characters. The novel Sanctuary (1931) is about the degeneration of Temple Drake, a young girl from a distinguished southern family. Its sequel, Requiem For A Nun (1951), written partly as a drama, centered on the courtroom trial of a Negro woman who had once been a party to Temple Drake's debauchery. In Light in August (1932), prejudice is shown to be most destructive when it is internalized, as in Joe Christmas, who believes, though there is no proof of it, that one of his parents was a Negro. The theme of racial prejudice is brought up again in Absalom, Absalom! (1936), in which a young man is rejected by his father and brother because of his mixed blood. Faulkner's most outspoken moral evaluation of the relationship and the problems between Negroes and whites is to be found in Intruder In the Dust (1948). In 1940, Faulkner published the first volume of the Snopes trilogy, The Hamlet, to be followed by two volumes, The Town (1957) and The Mansion (1959), all of them tracing the rise of the insidious Snopes family to positions of power and wealth in the community. The reivers, his last - and most humorous - work, with great many similarities to Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, appeared in 1962, the year of Faulkner's death. From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969 The Wikipedia entry makes for interesting reading; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Faulkner