Fiction

May 08 16:15

Fiction

 

 Montana 1948 by Larry Watson

Watson's tale of 12 year old David Hayden, son of a small town sheriff in Montana, has been compared to Harper Lee's "To  Kill a Mockingbird."  Both are set in  small towns in  a past era,  at a time and place where justice is different  for whites and nonwhites.  In Montana, it is the local Native American women who can expect to be abused, and have no one believe them.  A slim book, but a powerful story.  --SB

Apr 28 12:17

Fiction

 

 Magic hour by Kristen Hannah

This was a very worthwhile read.  It takes you in from the start and you become enthralled.  --LR 

Apr 07 13:46

Fiction

 

 The Saving Graces by Patricia Gaffney

This book makes you appreciate your girlfriends if you have then and long for them if you don't. --LR 

Feb 22 15:26

Fiction

A Good Yarn by Debbie Macomber
Second in the Blossom Street Series--another great book. What fun it is learning about the characters and how their lives intertwine just because of knitting a pair of socks!
~SR

Feb 11 15:24

Fiction

Agnes and the Hitman
by Jennifer Crusie
Take one food writer named Cranky Agnes, add a hitman named Shane, mix them together with a Southern mob wedding, a missing necklace, two annoyed flamingos, and a dog named Rhett and you’ve got a recipe for a sexy, hilarious novel about the disastrous side of true love… Agnes Crandall’s life goes awry when a dognapper invades her kitchen one night, seriously hampering her attempts to put on a wedding that she’s staked her entire net worth on.  Then a hero climbs through her bedroom window.  His name is Shane, no last name, just Shane, and he has his own problems:  he’s got a big hit scheduled, a rival trying to take him out, and an ex-mobster uncle asking him to protect some little kid named Agnes.  When he finds out that Agnes isn’t so little, his uncle has forgotten to mention a missing five million bucks he might have lost in Agnes’s house, and his last hit was a miss, Shane’s life isn’t looking so good, either.  Then a bunch of lowlifes come looking for the money, a string of hit men show up for Agnes, and some wedding guests gather with intent to throw more than rice.  Agnes and Shane have their hands full with greed, florists, treachery, flamingos, mayhem, mothers of the bride, and—most dangerous of all—each other.  Agnes and the Hitman is the perfect combination of sugar and spice, sweet and salty—a novel of delicious proportions.
~VV

Feb 04 12:11

Fiction

 

The Ladies of Covington Send Their Love
by Joan Medlicott
First book of Joan Medlicott Covington Ladies series.  Meet three older women, Grace, Hannah, & Amelia, who are living at a home with a caretaker.  Amelia inherits a farmhouse in Covington, North Carolina.  Soon the three of them have moved to Covington for a new start.  If you enjoyed books by Jan Karon and Ann B. Ross, I recommend these books.  Other books in the series are:

~SS

Feb 04 11:49

Fiction

  Manless in Montclair: How a Happily Married Woman Became a Widow Looking for Love in the Wilds of Suburbia
by Amy Holman Edelman
Described as a "mature" chick lit title, Edelman's novel, partly based on her own life, tells Isabel's journey from wife to widow to 40-something woman with 2 children looking for a new husband. The happy marriage and death of her husband play a large part in the story and you do see Isabel and her children suffering. However, it's the breezy, funny challenges Isabel faces in her hunt for a man that make the story. Who among us would agree to be interviewed by a major New York City newspaper about our outlandish idea on how to find a husband!
~JD

 

 

Feb 04 11:43

Fiction

Abundance: a novel of Marie Antoinette
by Sena Jeter Naslund
Intriguing historical fiction about the life of Marie Antoinette. Marie Antoinette tells her life story beginning with her travel to France to marry at age 14. Descriptions of French court life and her marriage and motherhood draw the reader in. Details like the way people bathed or gambled away their evenings suggest the author did a lot of careful research. I wonder about the accuracy of the depictions of the French Revolution and can't wait to go to the library shelves and read nonfiction titles about the Revolution.
~JD

Jan 15 15:46

Fiction

Shop on Blossom Street

 

The Shop on Blossom Street
by Debbie Macomber
I enjoyed this book, couldn't put it down! As her web site says, "Debbie is best known for her ability to create compelling characters and bring their stories to life in her books." I concur!
~SR

 

 

Dec 21 09:07

Fiction

All Saints

 

All Saints by Liam Callanan
A middle aged teacher in a Catholic high school has issues - so does a dying priest, and several confused students. A Wisconsin author.
~SB