Friday, April 25, 2025
The Library of Lost Dollhouses by Elise Hooper
Monday, April 7, 2025
The Mysterious Bakery on Rue de Paris by Evie Woods
Ready for a new start in her life after the sad passing of her mother, Edith (Edie) Lane leaves Ireland for Paris. She applied on a job advertisement, a boulangerie in Paris is looking for a help in the shop, who will stay at the small apartment above the bakery. But when Edie steps out of the Eurostar, she finds out that the bakery is not in Paris at all. The bakery is located on Rue de Paris in a small cobblestone town of Compiègne, an hour from Paris by train. Truly not how she imagined her new life. After the long train travel to the town, she is welcomed not very warmly by the lady who is the owner of the bakery, Madame Moreau. The bakery is a bit mysterious, as Edie is working in the shop in the front serving customers, but is not allowed in the bakery itself at the back of the building. Who is baking the bread and the pastries, Madame Moreau and her cousin Manu? There are strange noises in the night, hears Edie, and she also finds a diary with recipes belonging to someone named Pieree Moreau, who owned the bakery during WWII. The clients of the bakery are all very nice, and Edie makes new friends in town, people give her tours of the town, and she meets Hugo. Hugo whose dad is out on closing the bakery because it is in deep debt. Hugo who tries to start a romance with Edie, untill she finds out about his plans. And she starts a plan to save the bakery..
This is the kind of book that immediately grabs your attention, and it keeps your attention untill the final page. The story is very well written with a strong and entertaining, and a littlebit mysterious storyline, and that same counts for the strong cast of characters. The character of Edie never got uninteresting, and as a reader you truly keep turning pages to find out what will happen next. Madame Moreau's past is tragic, and this still plays a part in her life in the present time, which also has to do with the mystery that surrounds the bakery. I loved how everything fell into place in the end and how the story was wrapped up. This books leaves you with a smile!
I truly enjoyed this entertaining book with a fantastic storyline and characters, I highly recommend reading it!
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Boat Baby, a memoir by Vicky Nguyen
Vicky Nguyen is the well known news anchor of CNN and NBC. In her memoir Boat Baby, she tells the story of her live and that of her parents. When Vicky was a baby in the 1980's, her parents fled communist post-war Vietnam by boat, and after a dangerous journey on sea, they landed on refugee camp in Malaysia. Vicky's mother had worked for the Holt adoption organisation back in Saigon. While they where in the refugee camp, she wrote a letter to the Holt organisation in the USA, asking for sponsorship to get her family to the United States, which worked, and where Vicky's life started in Eugene, Oregon and later Reno and San Jose. Vicky's parents had worked day and night, worked their way up and they became financially stable. For Vicky, it was not always easy growing up as a Vietnamese immigrant; she was always seen as a different outsider. After high school, she studied at the University of San Francisco where she graduated in communcation, after she found her passion in journalism during this study.
She describes how her succesfull career started; starting as a reporter at local news stations before landing her role at NBC News in New York. Meanwhile, she has a long distance relationship with Brian, during the book, we learn about their challenges and sacrifices they made because of the long distance, and the moves to other cities Vicky has because of her work, and the strained relationship with her father because of his unresponsible behaviour with money and doing business.
Vicky's memoir is a true and honest look into her life, both personally and professionally. Vicky truly knows how to engage her audience with her story, which is not surprising as she is an accomplished news anchor. She shares the most personal things about her life and that of her parents, and this book shares an honest picture of what it is like to grow up as a second generation Vietnamese immigrant in the USA. A topic that is more actual than ever now.
Boat Baby is a beautifully written and moving memoir, that is also a joy to read. I recommend you to read it too!
Monday, March 24, 2025
My Side of The River; a memoir by Elizabeth Camarillo Gutierrez
My Side Of The River is the honest and moving memoir by Elizabeth Camrarillo Gutierrez.
Elizabeth was born of Mexican immigrant parents south of the Rillito River in Tucson, Arizona. Elizabeth was the best freshman student in her school and her future looked bright. But then the visa's of her parents expired, and they had no other choice to return to Mexico. This left Elizabeth and her younger brother alone in the USA, suddenly Elizabeth was the responsible one for her education and raising her brother. But soon her brother also returns to his parents in Mexico and Elizabeth is all alone, and lands homeless on the couch of people who are strangers to her and where she never feels at home where she can feel safe and she become one of the many victims affected by family separation due to broken immigration laws. She has to fight to continue her study and has a grumbling belly many time, but with unbreakable determination, she is accepted into multiple Ivy League colleges and graduates. After college . she lands a job in finance and then her younger brother starts to live with her who she takes care of on her own while working full time until he goes to College. At that point she begins to help her parents financially.
This is a truly moving and beautiful written memoir by a remarkable strong woman. She truly tells openly how life is for undocumented immigrants and the pain of the children of parents who have to move back, and the effects this has on their life and education.Focusing on her mother's advice that she should always be the best student in the classroom, Elizabeth accomplished the near-impossible. I truly enjoyed reading this eye-opening book, I found it truly very moving and interesting to read, and in this current times, I truly recommend reading this book!
Thursday, March 20, 2025
The French Winemaker's Daughter by Loretta Ellsworth
Thursday, March 13, 2025
A Map To Paradise by Susan Meissner
Melanie Cole is a Hollywood movie star that has been put on a blacklist by the movie studio's, because she is suspected of being a communist, which she never has been. She is not able to do her work as an actress anymore because of this, and has to stay at home at her house that is rented from other people. The only company she has is her housekeeper Eva, a woman who moved to the USA after the war in Europe, and who has a little side story about that in the book.
The house next door belongs to Elwood, a Hollywood scriptwriter, and his sister-in-law and caretaker June lives at the house too. The mysterious word about Elwood that goes around in the neighborhood and in the movie studio where he still writes scripts for, is that he has sephere agrophobia and never leaves his house. Sometimes he is seen by the windows and he is able to talk from his room upstairs.
One day Eva and Melanie spot June digging in his beloved rose garden. After this, Elwood is never seen again. Eva and June start to talk to each other, and Eva starts visiting the house more and more during the story as she and June become friends. Also she never sees Elwood leaving his room, and even never hears him making any sound. There obviously is something mysterious going on around him, but what?? During the story, we learn more about the background of Melanie, Eva and June. And then a huge wildfire breaks out in Malibu, and the mystery evolving Elwood takes a turn for the bad, and is on the brink of being found out..
At first, I didn't know what to think of this story. Certainly the first half of the story took of in a slow pace. But just before the half of the story, the story got more and more pace, and slow pace of the first part was just a take-off to a great and mysterious further development of the story. It got better and better and that lasted untill the final page of the book, and how the story was wrapped up was also very good, and three characters of the story got all new perspectives and goals in live. This is just another brilliant page turner by Susan Meissner. I truly wonder how she knows to create such amazing and gripping story every time and time again. Besided the great storyline, the characters of Melanie, June and Eva where also terrific. Not the most realistic characters, but characters you can imagine in an old movie set in LA or Hollywood. The mystery around Elwood was just the right dose of mysterious-ness, altough I could predict a little what had happened to him as it was quite clear he wasn't alive anymore. When the wildfire breaks out in Malibu, this mystery around him got in a fast paced rollercoaster , but I won't put too much spoilers around that here..
Overall, I truly enjoyed this new and entertaining page turner by Susan Meissner!
Friday, February 28, 2025
The Curious Kitten at the Chibineko Kitchen By Yuta Takahashi
Dining at the Chibineko Kitchen for this rememberance dinner works good for Kotoko, as she is relieved of the burden of the deep mourning and give it a place in her life, as her brother dreamed of becoming an actor, he now passed the dream on to her.
The Curious Kitten at the Chibineko Kitchen is a short but beautiful Japanese novel. It is cute and very moving, and altough it felt realistic there was this very good hint of magic into it, just perfectly dosed and not too much. I found the story of Kotoko very moving and beautifully portrayed. Altough the book is shortt and the characters don't have much depth and you don't really get to know them because it is such a short story, the author gives just the right depth to the glimpse of their life you read about in this short story. It was still moving and entertaining to read. This is a book that is perfect for fans of Japanese fiction, it is great that more and more fantastic Japanese novels are translated into English, and this one not to miss!
Monday, February 24, 2025
Tear This Down by Barbara Dee
Freya is a middle schooler who lives with her parents and younger sister in the small town of Wellstone. The town is named after local historical hero Benjamin Wellstone. And no one ever questioned the history of Benjamin Wellstone.
For a project in social studies class, the students in Freya's class are assigned by teacher Mr. Clayton to do research on a historical figure, Freya chooses Benjamin Wellstone. And she finds out that Benjamin wasn't so much of a hero, as he had very conservative and wrong ideas and writings about particularly women. In his eyes, women where only fit and suitable in the kitchen, as nanny's and cleaners and no, women had absolutely no right to vote. Who was he to decide what women and girls should do or not do? The more she researches about Benjamin, the more she disvovers, and she learns about the suffragists movement, and in particular suffragist Olivia Padgett, because of the help of her friend Callie and Mai, the cool librarian who is a true research hero. Freya wants nothing more than that the statue of Benjamin Wellstone that has been standing in town for decades, will be removed. With Callie’s help, Freya writes and posts a blog post where she shines a light on Mr. Wellstone’s views about women and suggests removing his statue. She gets mixed reactions on the post from people standing with her and against her view on him, and Freya has to think of a way to make her voice still heard and protest and shine also a light on suffragists like Olivia Padgett, who didn't get the honours that men like Benjamin got and seem to be forgotten. With the help of her family, who sometimes have a hard time dealing with Freya's outspokenness, she finds a way..
I really liked this new book by Barbara Dee. Barbara Dee truly knows how to weave an relevant social topics into books for young readers, every time again,in a fantastic way. The storyline and characters in this book are, just like in her previous books, brilliant. The writing is perfect for the age group it is aimed at, and altough this book has an educational part because of the social topic, it is never to difficult to follow for young readers, and the tone is just the right one, that makes this book also very entertaining and fun to read, and I think Barbara Dee's boos should be mandatory reads in every classroom and is perfect for a class disscussion.Freya truly is portrayed as a realistic, authentic and idealistic tween, while you are also shown her parent's point of view, and the interactions with her friends and other people in her community, it all made this story feel very real. I truly recommend this new book by Barbara Dee!
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
Harlem Rhapsody by Victoria Christopher Murray
The Crisis is a magazine founded by W.E.B (Will) du Bois, who is also the editor. Jessie Redmon Fauset, the main character in this book has recently moved to Harlem with her mother, and she becomes the editor of The Crisis. Her task at the magazine is discovering young black writers whose writing will change the world .She discovers many new black writers; sixteen-year-old Countee Cullen, seventeen-year-old Langston Hughes, and Nella Larsen, who becomes one of her best friends.The magazine thrives under Jessie's leadership, the number of subscriptions rises quick and every black aspiring writer wants their work published in the groundbreaking magazine.
But her work at the magazine also has a darker side; she has a an affair with Will, while he is married an has a daughter and is fourteen years older then Jessie. Jessie's mom finds out, leaves and moves back home. From one of her friends she gained over the years working at the magazine, rumors come that Will is also seeing other women besides Jessie. Their affair is chaotic and has many ups and downs, and it influences Jessie's work at the magazine more and more, as she sees Will almost everyday. And she has a goal, to one day become the editor in chief of the magazine, which is Will's position at the magazine. When her relationship with Will becomes troubled, she has to choose between her position at the magazine, going on with her relationship with Will, or to study at the Sorbonne University in Paris and choose for herself.
This is a book I have mixed feelings about. Most of all, I found this story lacked depth, and the characters stayed very one-dimensional, and the storyline, which also lacked an interesting development or events that keep you interested as a reader, evolved mostly around the secret relationship between Jessie and Will, which made the more interesting topics that the book has, the era of racial and civil unrest it was set in, fall to the background. And to stay interested in the characters, what was happening in the book was just not interesting and the storyline felt quite thin. You truly starts wondering as a reader why Jessie is starting an affair with a married and very egoistic man like Will, which truly conflicted with her work for The Crisis, and I truly expected Jessie to be smarter than to start an affair. What else was missing was any interesting plot twist or turns, in this story there where not any of them, and that's a true pity. It would have been a nicer book if the author decided that Jessie made a few wiser decisions earlier in the story, and stood more up for herself instead of falling for a doomed affair.
I truly expected more of this book, and do not really recommend reading it.
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
What am I reading?
At the moment, I am trying to figure out how to continue reviewing books on my blog. Because of the recent changes on Netgalley (they removed Adobe Digital Editions as a download option) I am not longer able to download digital review copies from Netgalley. I have the Netgalley Shelf app, but it is not my preferred way of reading, as it is not the same as my Kobo ereader with e-ink, which is a lot more comfortable to read on for a longer period with sensitive eyes like mine.
At the moment I am reading the digital review books that are still on my ereaders and laptop. I am not sure when I will run out of review books.
My current read it Harlem Rhapsody by Victoria Christopher Murray, which I will review next week!