Friday, June 12, 2026

What I Am Reading - June, What I Finished - April and May 2026

 I failed to write this "column" in April and May.  If you have kids in K-12, you know why. 

Currently Reading 

So Old, So Young, by Grant Grinder: I am about halfway through this book on my Kindle.  Elin Hilderbrand blurbed this book, "I will never forget these characters."  Well, I will probably forget them, because Grinder describes every Ivy League graduate's friend group in the early 2000's.  Personally, I would rather forget them. While I never attended an Ivy League school, these characters were all over the city, in droves, and all of them making the same bad decisions. Wedding season is particularly well described - not that I wanted to re-live it.  But, it will be interesting to see where Grinder takes these characters as they reach 42.  

Moby Dick, by Herman Melville: Will try and make some head way this summer. I got stuck on the whale descriptions. I might skim (is that heresy?). 

Land, by Maggie O'Farrell:  Try as I might, I cannot get into this book. O'Farrell's Must be the Place, and I Am, I Am, I Am are two of my favorites. I was truly looking forward to this one, and I find myself skimming through descriptions of maps, wells, and the landscaping of early Ireland.  There is little character development.  Will I put it down?  

Loved

This is Not About Us, by Allegra Goodman:  This is a contender for the Best Books list.  Exquisite short stories based on family and faith.  Not a word out of place. 

London Falling, Patrick Madden Keefe: This will be on the Best Books list. Keefe writes nonfiction like no other. This story will stay with you.

Boomerang, Robert Bailey:  Unusual for me to read a "mainstream thriller" type book, but it was phenomenal.  Finished it over spring break and then my husband read it and enjoyed it.  Plot driven books are great on planes.

Life & Death & Giants, by Ron Riondo: Family Saga.  Fleshed out characters and setting.  

Lake Effect, Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney: Love this author. About as good as Good Company.  

More Than Enough, Anna Quindlen: Always love a NYC, family based, female-driven novel, especially when written by Anna Quindlen. 

Yesteryear, Caro Claire Burke: The hot book of the summer. Hot for a reason!


Thoroughly Enjoyed

American Fantasy, Emma Straub:  Emma delivers again.  I probably won't book a celebrity cruise anytime soon, but I felt like I was on one.    

The Marriage Bed, Tommy Hays:  Asheville author delivers with a family tragedy with multiple points of view.  

What Keeps Us, Jeanine Boulay: My former colleague and friend wrote these short stories about Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn.  Learned history I should have known.  

Enjoyed too

The Connelly's of County Down, Tracey Lange: Lange's best. Always enjoy her Westchester County settings.

Saoirse, Charleen Hurtubise: Irish artist, family drama, International incident. 

The Nest, Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney: Was not sure if this was a re-read for me. I was trying to read all of Sweeney's books after finishing Lake Effect

The Land in Winter, Andrew Miller:  Finalist for this year's Booker Prize (says it all, really).  

A Family Matter, Claire Lynch: Wish the characters had been fleshed out more.

This Book Made Me Think of You, Libby Page: Delivers on quaint.

The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt: Long-winded, and correctly described as "Dickinsonion". Read it to say I did.

Meh

Meet the Newmans, Jennifer Niven: Spent most of the book trying to decide whether or not to put it down. A few surprises at the end, otherwise, the plot derails.   

The Heart of Winter, Jonathan Evison:  The description of a long marriage between members of the Silent Generation.  It is set in present day, so the couple is in their nineties, and have lived all of their lives in Washington state.  Long winded, but accurate. 

Put Down - DNF

Into the Blue, Emma Brodie: Could not get into a voice. 

The Shock of Light, Lori Inglis Hall:  Too glaringly feminist for this feminist.   



 

  

Thursday, March 19, 2026

What I am Reading - March

 Currently Reading

Kin - Tayari Jones.  Oprah Club selection.  One chapter in, and enjoying immensely. Already like the characters.  Jones' first book, American Marriage, was a skim for me.  Hopefully this one will be different.

We Need to Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver.  This is quite an old one - published in 2000.  Shriver recently published another book, and I heard her (yes, "her") interviewed, and was intrigued.  I am going to watch the movie when I am finished. So far, the narrator is very long winded.  I wonder if this was more common in books circa 2000.  

Moby Dick, Herman Melville.  Truckin' along.  Probably on chapter 22.  Extremely good observations. 

What Keeps Us: a novel in stories. Jeanine Boulay.  This is written by more former co-worker, and a friend.  The stories take place in NYC, and all touch upon Greenwood Cemetery, in Brooklyn, which center all the stories.  The book spans 150 years.  Boulay writes historical details proficiently, and I have learned many new facts about NYC history.  

Completed in March

Enjoyed

It's a Love Story, Annabel Monaghan, 4* Monaghan seems to complete a new romance for middle-age women every year.  This is her best since Nora Goes off Script.  But, I can't remember what it is about.

The Color of Water, James MacBride, 5*. Read this (re-read, but from 25 years ago) to help a friend select books for her students.  I remembered why it is a classic, and it is how MacBride made his name as a "major author".   

Meh

The Infamous Gilberts, Angela Tomaski, 3.5*.  Once I settled into the second person POV, I ended up enjoying this.  It would be hard to recommend to a non-Anglophile.  It was compared in many reviews to The Royal Tennenbaums.  The only similarity seems to be the quirkiness of the sibling groups, otherwise, everyone is completely difference.  

Isola, Allegra Goodman, 3*. This was an interesting story told in a very long winded fashion.  Having just completed a book about a solitary life (The Autobiography of Sven ....), I know that plot can be mored along, even in a sparse setting.  This did not achieve that.  


What am I Reading - February

My Friends - Fredrik Backman:  Readers raved over this book in 2025. It made many "Best of" lists.  There are still around 400 readers ahead of me in the library hold line, which is one of the highest hold lines I have ever seen.  Yet, YET, I could not sit down and pay attention to this book.  I knew nothing about the book's premise, yet I was familiar with Backman's style through Anxious People.  Anxious People was a social commentary told through the comedy and tragedy of real estate.  So, I expected SOME social commentary in My Friends. Well, readers get heavy social commentary.  Starting in the first chapter, broad statements about class are made. I dislike social statements in books, even if I agree with them.  That is one of the reasons I crawled through the first 30% of this book, and subsequently had to read other books as this one sat on my Kindle App.  So, when I finally started getting into My Friends, the library snatched it back. Now, I am back to being 400th on the list. But, each time I go to the bookstore, I have squeezed in another chapter. I only have about 50 pages to go. The plot is quick, unpredictable, and tragic.  It took awhile for me to become fond of the characters, and that is probably because I didn't relate to them at all (immigrant teens in Sweden).  That was another reason I could not finish this book in time.  BUT, I will finish it.    

Moby Dick - Hermand Melville.  It has always been a dream of mine to complete this book. I bought a copy three years ago, and my husband read it. I am finally doing a year-long guided read through the Church Blogmatics Substack, and I am not on Chapter 10.  Around 175 more chapters to go!  I am currently enjoying the description of old New Bedford.  

Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania - Erik Larson.  My first Erik Larson book. This is surprising to me. This book has also been on our shelves for over five years. I asked my husband if he enjoyed the book, and he said he had not read it. Now I truly don't know how we got it. Anyway,I read it on a trip to Colorado. It is interesting, and riveting enough to have kept me reading the entire flight home.  I look forward to picking it back up for next month's trip to Utah. 


Recently Completed 

Books I Loved

Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage - Belle Burden.  I read this in one day. Unputdownable.   

The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven-  Nathaniel Ian.  This book has the "Molly Trifecta of Good Reads"  Likable characters, fabulous (to me) location, and realistic plot.  It is truly fascinating how people create community in the middle of no where, and Sven truly creates a home in the Arctic Circle.  


Books I Enjoyed

The World Below - Sue Miller.  Love Miller's New England settings. Trying to "compete" the works of this author. Loved Monogomy and that still is the epitome for me. Her prose is addictive. 

Unscripted - Cheryl Hines.   Very quick, very fun read.  

Family of Spies - Christine Keuhn.  Interesting history from a descendant of German spies about her formerly unknown family origins.   

The Ten Year Affair - Erin Somers. Fiction that explores modern marriage and parenting. Made me a bit afraid for our future.  

Dominion - Addie E. Citchens.  This was dark, but still thinking about it weeks after finishing.  Unpredictable and moving plot.  


Books I Didn't Love

The Bright Years, Sarah Damoff. Short plot: Alcoholism destroys a family. The title and cover had me expecting another plot. Disappointed and skim city.   

What Happened to the McCrays, by Tracey Lange.  This is probably the weak book in Lange's work.  Predictable.  I dislike books that start at the end and give a back story, especially when they are predictable.  Skim city.  

Spectacular Things - another unsuccessful Reese Book.  Can't even remember what it was about. 

What Kind of Paradise, Janelle Brown. Easy read. Social commentary is high school level. Plot is good. The main character is likable and you pull for her. Skim City.  

Penitence, Kristin Kovel.  Can't remember what this was about. 


Friday, January 16, 2026

What I am Reading.

 Currently, I am reading Precipice, a novel by Robert Harris.  It is a true story that takes place on the eve of World War I, and it highlights the romance between the Prime Minister, H.H. Asquith, and his much younger love interest, Venetia.  The letters and telegrams from the PM to Venetia, contain the actual text communication between them, and Harris uses those to create a story about the beginning of WWI from Asquith's and Venetia's POVs.  The minutia of the PM's daily days, and how Britain landed itself at war, seems to be never ending. But, Venetia's side of the story has kept me reading.  

What Kind of Paradise, by Janelle Brown.  I am reading this on my Kindle.  This was on many "Best of 2025" lists last year. I don't know what kept me away, but I am enjoying it so far.  I am enjoying the pace and the Montana setting.  

Books I have finished this month - January 2026 -  that I have enjoyed:

Show Don't Tell, by Curtis Sittenfeld.  I always enjoy her books. I pushed this off for awhile until it became available at the library.  4*

Some Bright Nowhere, Ann Packer. 4.25*. Amazing writing.  Elin Hilderbrand described her as a "writer's writer." Every sentence works.  But, it is depressing and nothing much happens.  It describes a marriage in its final days, as the wife succumbs to cancer. 

Here After, Amy Lin, 4.25* More death, this time a young widow writes about her grief in the aftermath of losing her young husband very suddenly.  I compulsively read this, yet it was incredibly depressing. 

Lion, Sonya Walger, 5*. First 5* read of the year.  Almost flawless.  Can't believe most of it is true. It is classified as fiction because the author did not trust her memory and wanted to create stories.  The author and her father have lives mesmerizing lives, and every sentence displays them.