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book club Book review fiction historical fiction reading Spring Uncategorized

Spring Reading

Each month, a different member of my book club picks a book for the group to read and discuss. My turn is coming up in May. So, a few weeks ago, I began the quest to pick a book that both the group and I would enjoy. There are so many good books out there that it’s hard to choose. I settled on “Anxious People” by Fredrik Backman. We’ve read “My Friends,” also by this author, which I very much enjoyed, and the premise of this one, “Anxious People,” seemed like a read I would devour.

A humorous novel about a bank robber bursting into an apartment viewing and taking a group of strangers hostage.

I can’t wait until I pick this one up.

On another “book” note, my interest in reading lately has gone to historical fiction. I recently finished “Carnegie’s Maid” by Marie Benedict. If you like historical fiction and strong female characters, you will probably enjoy her writing.

“Carnegie’s Maid” is the tale of Clara Kelley, a fictitious character who is the lady’s maid for Mrs. Carnegie. Set in Pittsburgh and centered around Andrew Carnegie, creator of the “Free to the People” Carnegie Libraries, I found myself reading on a rainy Pittsburgh day, happily lost in the author’s writing. In the Author’s Note, the author points out that, while some historians have theorized that a personal relationship might have changed this heartless industrialist, there is no definitive evidence for his motives other than a letter Andrew Carnegie wrote to himself in 1868 at the age of 33, pledging to focus on the education and “improvement of the poorer classes.” No one really knows why Andrew Carnegie, the richest man in the world during his day, transformed from ruthless industrialist to the world’s first true philanthropist.

Marie Benedict presents a good tale that it could have been a woman who changed his heart.

The book also shows the immense struggles immigrants endured upon arriving in America during the 1860s.

The other book I read by this author is titled “The Only Woman in the Room,” a book I have previously blogged about. (See my July 2023 blog.) It is the tale of Hedy Lemarr, screen star and scientist.

Another book I enjoyed that might interest historical fiction readers is “The Alice Network,” by Kate Quinn. Written with a dual timeline, it’s based on the Alice Network, a WWI spy ring in France.

I’ve also recently read “West With Giraffes,” by Lynda Rutledge, and am now reading “The God of the Woods,” by Liz Moore. Both of these are book club picks. I’ll post on another blog about these two books at a later date.

I hope my blog book picks give you some ideas for your to-be-read pile, and I hope your spring is filled with lots of great reads!

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book club Book review historical fiction reading Uncategorized

Read and Review (R&R) – “Fifth Avenue Glamour Girl” by Renee Rosen

This month’s book club choice was a historical fiction novel called Fifth Avenue Glamour Girl by Renee Rosen. It is an inspirational portrayal of Estée Lauder, a pioneer of the makeup industry. The book told the story of Estée’s start and rise in the cosmetic world. Set in the 1940s-50s, the author did a great job of placing you in the period.

Estée Lauder revolutionized the cosmetic business with her marketing techniques of free samples and makeup demonstrations. To that point, I loved the descriptions of Saks Fifth Avenue, and as a young girl, I remember walking into Saks and marveling at the beauty of the store, and the “shop girls” as they were called back in Estée’s day, handing out small free gifts and offering makeup demonstrations.

Not only is this the story of Estée Lauder’s entrepreneurial drive and determination to make it in a tough, competitive industry, but it is also a story of love and friendship.

A heartwarming, well-written, researched read that I would recommend.

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book club Book review historical fiction reading

Read and Review (R&R) – “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger

April’s book club read was “This Tender Land” by William Kent Krueger. This is the second book our group has read by this author. The first was “Ordinary Grace.” Once again, the author transports us back in time to a world and time period filled with hardship but also enduring hope. The theme throughout “This Tender Land” is one of “We are not alone.”

Four orphans on a journey down the Gilead River in Minnesota during the Great Depression desperately in search of their true home, love and safety.

It is summer 1932 and Odie O’Bannon is a young orphan boy living with his older brother Albert at the Lincoln Indian Training School where they are the only white children among hundreds of Native American children. Odie refuses to give into a system filled with corruption and abuse of the children. When he gets into unimaginable trouble from which he and his brother must flee the school they take along with them a native American boy named Moses and a young orphan girl named Emmy.

This Tender Land is a story of the human spirit, friendship, adventure, history, hope, and forgiveness.

William Kent Krueger writes an engaging plot with characters that jump from the page into your heart.

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Book review historical fiction novel

Read and Review (R&R) – “Hello Beautiful” by Ann Napolitano

This month’s book club read was Hello Beautiful, by Ann Napolitano.

It was a 2023 Oprah’s Book Club pick.

This is the first novel I have read by this author and it was told from the point of view of the main characters over the course of three decades.

A novel not only about the family you are born into, but the family you gain over the years through schooling, work, and interests. A deep and heartbreaking portrayal of a family of sisters, the Padavano sisters (four in all) and a man, William, who marries into the family. William brings with him a tragic past that he is still living. It’s a story of sadness and loss, promise, hope, and the love, complexity, and quirks of family-both good and bad.

I have mixed emotions about this book mainly because of its depressive nature, and I will be very interested to attend my book club next week to get the others thoughts on this novel. I read this 383-page story over the course of a week returning each night to find out what would happen next to this once close-knit group of sisters. I thought the author did a great job of putting you in the time period and moment. Some of the characters’ actions and inflexibility irritated me, but I give credit to the author for invoking these emotions. Hello Beautiful exposes the not so pretty truths of life and family.

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Book review crime historical fiction mystery

Read & Review (R&R) – “The Truth We Hide” by Liz Milliron

“The Truth We Hide” is a plot-driven, interesting character-filled, well-researched, historical fiction novel.

In the fourth Homefront Mystery from Author Liz Milliron, it’s 1943 and Betty Ahern is no longer building airplane parts for Bell Aircraft. She has decided to become a full-time private investigator and is studying for her license. Betty’s best friend, Lee introduces her to an acquaintance, Edward Kettle, who has recently been let go from his job and wants her to clear his name. But, Edward has a secret he would like to keep hidden and as soon as Betty takes the case, Edward is brutally murdered. Betty finds out that Edward is a homosexual and she is left to wonder was he killed because of his sexual preference or something else. Edward’s sister wants to pay Betty to continue and clear Edward’s name and Betty must examine her own moral beliefs before moving forward. As Betty investigates further, things take a dangerous turn into the world of wartime espionage.

Among the somewhat likable, some not-so-likable suspects are a tabloid reporter, a boarding house roommate of Edward, a former coworker of Edward, Edward’s lover and a young man about Betty’s age with movie star looks. The good-looking man shows an interest in Betty which causes conflict in her feelings and makes her reflect about how her fiancé who is overseas fighting in the war will react to her choice to become a full-time PI when he returns home. Will he accept her new life decision?

This series does not have to be read in order, but if you haven’t read any of the first three, you might enjoy picking up one of those as well to get acquainted with Betty when she worked at Bell Aircraft. Also, no spoilers in this review but in case you have read the other books in this series and are wondering, Betty’s best friends Dot and Lee do appear in the book and also her detective friend, Sam, is back and working the case. Will Betty uncover the hidden truth behind Edward’s murder or will Betty’s investigation turn her into the killer’s next victim? You will have to read “The Truth We Hide,” by Liz Milliron to find out.