Friday, November 7, 2025
Novella Review: THEORY AND PRACTICE
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Review: MY FRIENDS (+Friday56 LinkUp)
Louisa is a teenager, the best kind of human.
Then he asked one of the other fourteen-year-olds: "Do you think we'll all still be friends when we're grown up?"
Most people don’t even notice them—three tiny figures sitting at the end of a long pier in the corner of one of the most famous paintings in the world. Most people think it’s just a depiction of the sea. But Louisa, an aspiring artist herself, knows otherwise, and she is determined to find out the story of these three enigmatic figures.
Twenty-five years earlier, in a distant seaside town, a group of teenagers find refuge from their bruising home lives by spending long summer days on an abandoned pier, telling silly jokes, sharing secrets, and committing small acts of rebellion. These lost souls find in each other a reason to get up each morning, a reason to dream, a reason to love.
Out of that summer emerges a transcendent work of art, a painting that will unexpectedly be placed into eighteen-year-old Louisa’s care. She embarks on a surprise-filled cross-country journey to learn how the painting came to be and to decide what to do with it. The closer she gets to the painting’s birthplace, the more nervous she becomes about what she’ll find. Louisa is proof that happy endings don’t always take the form we expect in this stunning testament to the transformative, timeless power of friendship and art. (Publisher)
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Click here to enterNonfiction Review: FURIOUS HOURS: MURDER, FRAUD, AND THE LAST TRIAL OF HARPER LEE (+Discussion questions)
In a 2024 survey, 12.6% of respondents named To Kill a Mockingbird as their all-time favorite book from a given list. In 2021 a British survey found that 13% of the respondents named TKAM as the most inspirational novel. In the 2018 PBS "The Great American Read" it was named as America's best-loved novel overall. All of these surveys took place over 50 years after 1960 when Harper Lee penned her famous book and still today people everywhere sing its praises. If I were asked what is my all-time-favorite novel I'd answer To Kill a Mockingbird, too. So why, with all this success, did its author not publish another book for the next 50 years?
1. How did the book change the way you think about Harper Lee and her literary legacy? What were you most surprised to learn?
2. What were the most disturbing aspects of Reverend Maxwell’s murder spree and the connection between him and his victims?
3. What surprised you the most about the life insurance policies and the way these companies did business?
4. Discuss how race played into the case of the Reverend Willie Maxwell.
5. What were your first impressions of Tom Radney? How did your perception of him change as you read the book?
6. What do you think about the morality of Robert Burns’s decision to murder the Reverend Willie Maxwell? Do you think his acquittal was right?
7. How did Harper Lee and Truman Capote’s relationship play into the larger story? How do you think Lee’s experience with In Cold Blood shaped her approach to writing her own true crime tale?
8. Why do you think the Maxwell case captivated Lee’s attention enough to dedicate years of her life to writing it? Do you think she finished it? If not, what do you think stopped her? What do you think happened to whatever existed of the manuscript?
9. Furious Hours combines the horror and mystery of a true crime tale with the in-depth history and detail of a biography. How does Cep integrate the two different pieces of the book? Why do you think Cep was able to pull off what Lee couldn't?
10. How does Furious Hours distinguish itself from other nonfiction books you have read? What other narrative nonfiction books have you enjoyed reading and would recommend to others?
(These excellent discussion questions come from the Sarasota Springs Public Library. I tweaked them just a bit but credit to the librarians at that library.)
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Reviews: TIMECODE OF A FACE and A STUDY IN SCARLET
November means novellas and nonfiction, and, if I'm lucky, two in one: short nonfiction (which is allowed for the Novellas in November Challenge!) The problem with reading short books is they often can be easily consumed in one or two days which means the reviews really start piling up. Right now I am eight reviews behind! Eek! In an attempt to catch up I shall attempt to write and publish two reviews a day. If that isn't sustainable I will at least aim for one. Don't expect lengthy reviews. Like the books themselves likely the reviews will be short.
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| Timecode of a Face by Ruth Ozeki Audio: Canongate Books, 2022, 1 hour, 51 minutes. Originally published by Restless Books, 2015. |
Ruth Ozeki, a favorite author and a Zen Buddhist priest, sets herself the task of staring at her own face in the mirror for three hours hoping to discover new aspects of herself and her heritage. According to ancient Zen traditions "your face before your parents were born is your original face." Staring into the mirror for a long time Ruth Ozeki hoped to discover her true self and her true identity beyond what she knew from her parents. As she gazes on her reflection her thoughts ripple out to memories growing up as a mixed race child -- her mother was Japanese, her father Caucasian -- and the ugly racism she endured. Her thoughts also lingered on the process of becoming a Buddhist priest and having to shave her head as she took her final vows. She also reflected on her studies of the intricate art of the Japanese Noh mask, at one point even making one herself.
Throughout this essay Ruth Ozeki shows herself to be a well-grounded, interesting and interested person, a writer of great integrity. I am a big fan of her books, A Tale for the Time Being and The Book of Form and Emptiness, and now her essay writing. I am fascinated by her life story and how she incorporates Buddhist practices and beliefs into her writing. I didn't learn a ton from this essay but what I did learn about Zen Buddhism was so interesting. In fact, I found those bits of information much more captivating than what she thought of her earlobes.
I listened to the audiobook read by the author herself. It seemed perfectly paced and I was satisfied with what I got out of the listening experience. But here is one thing I've never encountered before when writing a review -- when I visited the author's own webpage, Ozekiland, she refers to this book by a different title: The Face: A Time Code. I'm not sure when and why it was changed, but if you have trouble finding it at a bookstore or library, you might want to try both title variations in your search.
My rating: 4.25 stars.
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| A Study in Scarlet by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Audio: Prince Frederick: Recorded Books, 2017, 4 hours and 30 minutes. Originally published: Ward, Locke, and Company, 1887. |
Monday, November 3, 2025
TTT: The First 10 Books Randomly Generated from My TBR Shelf
Top Ten Tuesday:
The First 10 Books Randomly Generated from My Goodreads TBR Shelf
#163 --- Chronicles of Death Foretold by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I'm an admirer of the author and I see that this book is short, a novella, so I'm sure I added it to remind myself to read it during Novellas in November...which is now.
Nonfiction November -- Week Two
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| The StoryGraph Genre Chart found on my reading stats page. One book to go and I will have read a book for all 58 of their genres. |
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| One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad Worth Fighting For by John Pavlovitz Separation of Church and Hate by John Fugelsang Abundance by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson The Exvangelicals by Sarah McCammon (Links for Goodreads for book descriptions) |
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Sunday Salon -- Back to Standard Time
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| Mom and her cat settling into their new home. |
Weather: Lovely fall day. The last few days have been rainy and windy but not today. Today we have blue skies and lovely fall colors to enjoy.
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| Garage Sale 2.0 spoils |
"Garage sales": Mom wanted to give her things to neighbors and friends after the family claimed the items we wanted. She decided to invite them to her old house for what she kept calling a "garage sale" though I hoped no one would feel like they needed to pay if they wanted a scarf or yard frog. Many of her friends dropped by and I think mom was pleased. Don and I packed up a box of treasures to bring home to share with our daughters. Yesterday we had "garage sale" 2.0 at our house and our daughters/grandchildren took home china pitchers, table runners, games, and a braided rug. I'm sure my mother will be pleased to know these treasures are now going to live a new life in her grandchildren's homes.
November reading challenges: 'Nonfiction November' and 'Novellas in November.' With any luck I can combine the two as the novella challenge also allows for short nonfiction. Here are my plans for each:
- White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky -- My current Classics Club Spin Book and a novella. 10% complete, print.
- Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino -- another classic novella. 10% complete, audio.
- Henry and June: the Unexpurgated Diary by Anais Nin. This will finish up my StoryGraph Genre Challenge for 2025. 55% complete, e-book.
- The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones. An Indigenous Vampire who preys on buffalo hunters who wiped out the herd which caused a chain reaction of starvation and death among his people. Don and I both enjoyed it very much even though we don't usually read horror novels. Audiobooks. 5 stars.
- Timecode of a Face by Ruth Ozeki. A short memoir about a favorite author where I came to understand much about her Buddhist beliefs. Audiobook. Short nonfiction. 4 stars.
- Persuasion by Jane Austen. The last of Austen's six novels. This one closes out the Austen250 challenge. I was supposed to read this one slowly, 12-pages a day, but I zoomed through it. A reread. Print. Rating this time: 4 stars. (Last time - 5 stars.)
- Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata. A novella set in Japan. The main character is on the autism spectrum and keeps hoping she'll be cured so she can just be normal. Charming. Don and I listened together and both awarded 4 stars.
- The Afterlife of Data by Carl Ohman. Another book for the Stroygraph Genre Challenge. I didn't get out of this book what I hoped: What should we do with a beloved's Facebook account when they die? E-book. 3 stars.
- Ursula K. Le Guin's Book of Cats. A poetry, essay, letter, illustrated cat collection from the famed Sci-Fi author. An indulgence. Print. 4 stars.
- My Friends by Fredrik Backman. A book club selection which I've been working on for months. I finally decided to bear down before it was automatically returned to the library (again for the third time). Audiobook. 4 stars.
- Theory and Practice by Michelle de Kretser. A Goodread Challenge book and a novella. I think I need to upgrade my rating since I've been thinking of it alot. Audiobook. 3.5 stars.
- Audition by Katie Kitamura -- National Book Award Finalist and novella
- Heart the Lover by Lily King -- novella
- The Teacher of Nomad Land: A World War II Story by Daniel Nayeri -- National Book Award finalist, novella
- All My Knotted-Up Life by Beth Moore -- memoir
Friday, October 31, 2025
My Year in Novellas (#NovNov25)
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Audiobooks with Don Review: BUFFALO HUNTER HUNTER (+Friday56 LinkUp)
"In this story-within-story-within-story structure, Buffalo Hunter Hunter opens with a discovery — in 2012, a book hidden in the wall of an old parsonage is found by an unnamed construction worker. It turns out to be a journal, written in 1912 and belonging to Arthur Beaucarne, the pastor of the local Lutheran congregation. Inside it contains the story of his strange encounters with Good Stab, who, after years of carnage, has seemingly come to him to confess. Good Stab is an Indigenous man from the Blackfeet tribe living in Montana around the time of the 1870 Marias Massacre, when U.S. Army troops killed nearly 200 unarmed women, children and elderly members of the Blackfeet Nation, a tragedy that figures in a multitude of ways throughout this gruesome joyride of a novel" (NYT).
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