"Outside a dog a book is man's best friend, inside a dog it is too dark to read!" -Groucho Marx========="The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid." -Jane Austen========="I don’t believe in the kind of magic in my books. But I do believe something very magical can happen when you read a good book."-JK Rowling========"I spend a lot of time reading." -Bill Gates=========“Ahhh. Bed, book, kitten, sandwich. All one needed in life, really.” -Jacqueline Kelly=========

Saturday, March 21, 2026

"Audiobooks with Don"--Review: CORELLI'S MANDOLIN



It was the day before we were leaving for a vacation to Mexico and my husband, Don, realized the e-book he was currently reading wouldn't last him for a whole week of resort-living. He asked if I had any good books lying around the house that he might like. I shoved Corelli's Mandolin by Louis de Bernières into his hands. So what if the book, one of my favorites, was published in 1994? As Ann Patchett reminds her readers, "If you haven't read it, it's new to you." After a week in Mexico, Don hadn't made much progress so we found the audiobook at our library. From that point forward he consumed the book by reading a few pages in bed each night and listening to most of the book in his truck as he ran errands around town during the day. If I was with him in the vehicle, which was often, I would join him in listening and was immediately reminded how much I liked this story. At one point, let's say about 100 pages in, he turned to me and asked why I hadn't recommended the book to him before. Clearly he was enjoying it a lot. I reminded him that I first read Corelli's Mandolin in 1995, long before I was in the habit of making reading suggestions to him...and everyone else.

The story is set on Cephalonia, a Greek Island, and though it covers a timeline of fifty years, the majority of the story takes place during the years of WWII occupation, first by the Italians and then by the Germans. Nicci Gerrard, writing a review for The Guardian newspaper in April 1994, describes the book this way:
Captain Corelli's Mandolin is an emotional, funny, stunning novel which swings with wide smoothness between joy and bleakness, personal lives and history, between an hour-by-hour narrative riddled with meals and walks and cuffs and courtship and a decade-by-decade sweep through the years. It's lyrical and angry, satirical and earnest.
The book is full of a cast of quirky characters. beginning with Dr. Iannis and his daughter Pelagia. He is the only doctor on the island and also a wannabe historian, painstakingly writing out the history of Cephalonia from ancient to modern times. Pelagia, the heroine of the story, wants to be a doctor like her father despite that being nearly impossible for a woman of the time. She falls in love with a local fisherman, Mandras, who is a sweet and gentle boy who often swims with dolphins. The two get engaged just a few days before he is drafted and sent off to fight in the Greek army. When he returns home a year later, he is not the same person, changed forever by the horrors of war. When the Italian army arrives to occupy the island, their commander is Captain Antonio Corelli. He is not a stereotypical army officer. His first love is music and his mandolin. Soon after arriving on the island he organizes a group of a cappella singers from his garrison. The men all sing together each morning as they are pooping in the open latrine. When a German officer greets him with the traditional "Heil Hitler," Corelli salutes back with a "Heil, Puccini." Clearly he is more of a clown than a serious fascist. When Corelli is billeted with Dr. Iannis and his daughter, his aide Carlo Guercio, his loyal sergeant, picks up the captain everyday in the jeep and runs interference for him. Carlo is a huge Italian man carrying an equally huge secret inside him. Early in the story Carlo philosophizes that the history of war is "the propaganda of the victors, when it should consist of the anecdotes of the little people who get caught up in it."

After Mandras disappears to fight with other Greek partisans, Pelagia finds her heart turning toward Antonio Corelli, wooed initially by the beautiful music he makes on his mandolin. Their love story is both funny and sweet, one only possible during the time of war. The Italians and Greeks got on very well especially considering one was the conqueror and the other the conquered. Friendships and love affairs sprung up all over the island. These relationships, especially between Pelagia and Antonio, greatly interested me the first time I read the book not long after it was published in 1994.

This time around, however, I found my interest captured by what I called the interlude chapters -- chapters which explored a theme, like the church or Il Duce, in depth. The chapter, "A Pamphlet Distributed on the Island, Entitled with the Fascist Slogan 'Believe, Fight, Obey'," was especially fascinating to me because it outlined the life of Benito Mussolini and what a terrible person he was even before he became head of the Fascist party in Italy. As we listened, Don turned to me and asked if it reminded me of of anyone today? Could it be Trump? The similarities were both gauling and frightening.

I asked Don if he would write a brief review of Corelli's Mandolin for this post. He, after all, read the whole thing and I only got snapshots of the book this time around (and the bonus -- he is a very good writer!)

-Anne
_____________________________________________________________________

"War is hell." -- General William Tecumseh Sherman
"War is the continuation of politics by other means." -- Carl von Clausewitz
Many descriptions of war have been attempted through the ages. Louis de Bernières' Corelli's Mandolin may have added several more, but most poignantly he captures the complex human experience that war is being trapped in circumstances beyond the immediate control of the people most directly affected. As a retired Army officer and veteran of a deployment to Iraq, I will say that most soldiers don't gleefully go into combat zones to advance righteous values, in defense of hearth and home, or out of allegiance to the flag on their uniform. Rather, they have sworn an obligation to serve and -- as part of a team -- they will fight for the men and women by their side so that everyone can go home when it's over. In Corelli's Mandolin, we encounter soldiers from Italy, Germany, Albania, Greece, and Great Britain all caught up in the dire consequences of political aspirations and failures, while just trying to survive and find some joy and beauty in the middle of the ugliness.

As the narrative shifts between the various central characters, each wrestles with the consequences of their initially noble decisions (caring for a widowed father, joining the army, opposing the monarchy, etc.) as the world serves up unimaginable grief, deprivation, and isolation. And in the middle of all this misery, we have the delightful, yet agonizing love story of Corelli, the musical Italian army officer, and the Greek doctor's daughter, Pelagia. Clinging to hope of all the good times that will come "after the war", the two manage to grow deeper in love despite the odds being severely against them. 

Many years ago when Anne first read Corelli's Mandolin, she copied this passage in a Valentine's Day card to me:
Love is a temporary madness, it erupts like volcanoes and then subsides. And when it subsides you have to make a decision. You have to work out whether your roots have so entwined together that is is inconceivable that you should ever part. Because that is what love is. Love is not breathlessness, it is not excitement, it is not the promulgation of promises of eternal passions. ...That is just being "in love," which any fool can do. Love itself is what is left over when being in love has burned away, and this is both an art and a fortunate accident. Your mother and I had it, we had roots that grew towards each other underground, and when all the pretty blossoms had fallen from our branches we found we were one tree and not two.
I was part of the way through the book, when I happened upon that card and recalled the many times we have mentioned how entwined our roots have become over the 45 years we've been together. When I reached this passage in the book as Dr. Iannes describes the difference between being in love and real, lasting love, I was reminded again of our fortunate accident.

Reading Corelli's Mandolin after all these years gave me new insights about the occupation of Greece during WWII. But more, I got an important reminder that in the midst of any and all circumstances, the best thing you can do is choose love.

-- Don


Thursday, March 19, 2026

Review: WE NEED NO WINGS (+Friday56 LinkUp)



Title: We Need No Wings by Ann Dávila Cardinal

Book Beginnings/First Line Friday quote:
The first time Tere Sánchez levitated, she was in the garden.

Friday56 quote:
But the most famous depiction of Santa Teresa was the Bernini sculpture, The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa. The Italian baroque artist had created a marble portrayal of the transverberation of the saint, the vision she'd had where her heart was pierced by the golden flaming arrows of a seraph, an angelic being.
Bernini's the Ecstasy of Saint Teresa (Rome)

Summary: Tere's husband died a year ago and now her life is all upset and she no longer knows what she wants or should do. While in the yard one day, watering his plants, Tere levitates. She is both frightened and astonished. Trying to get her bearings, she calls her aunt in Puerto Rico. While they are talking the aunt mentions that they are descendants of Saint Teresa of Ávila. Because of this comment, Tere decides to travel to Spain to see if she can gain any insights about levitating from being in the hometown of her famous relative, and see if she can locate a living relative who is a nun.

Statue of St. Teresa (Ávila)

Review: We Need No Wings was a book club selection this month. Everyone had fairly high hopes for the book and indeed liked the book but also felt the book didn't live up to its potential. Also a few things mystified us. Why did Tere, a 60-year-old woman, swear so much and fly into angry fits so easily? It was out of character for a college professor of 30 years to be such a loose canon. One gal said the book reminded her of a YA novel, because the writing wasn't very sophisticated. 

But there were some good aspects. For one thing we all agreed we want to visit Ávila now. It sounds like a beautiful city with its intact medieval wall. Secondly, we all were delighted by the chapter headings which were quotes from the writings of St. Teresa. In fact, those quotes were my favorite parts of the book by far. None of us knew much about St. Teresa or about the Discalced Carmelite order of Catholicism that she founded. All of that, including how these old churches have parts of saints, or relics, saved for the faithful to view. We talked about that a lot!

 This quote opens the book:

"The soul here resembles someone on a journey who enters a quagmire or swamp and thus cannot move onward. And, in order to advance, a soul must not only walk but fly."                    --Saint Teresa de Ávila, The Book of Her Foundations
My rating: 3 stars


_______________________________________________



Sign up for The Friday56 on the Inlinkz below. 

RULES:

*Grab a book, any book
*Turn to page 56 or 56% in your e-reader (If you want to improvise, go ahead!)
*Find a snippet, but no spoilers!
*Post it to your blog and add your url to the Linky below. If you do not add the specific url for your post, we may miss it! 
*Visit other blogs and leave comments about their snippets. Expand the community. Please leave a comment for me, too!  


Also visit Book Beginnings on Friday hosted by Rose City Reader and First Line Friday hosted by Reading is My Super Power to share the beginning quote from your book.



You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
-Anne

Getting ready: National Poetry Month



National Poetry Month, April, is nearly here. For some reason this event, which I am determined to celebrate each year, always seems to sneak up on me. But not this year. This year I am getting ready for it early.


Yesterday I found this list of the best 48 adult poetry books of the last five years. I took the little quiz and discovered I have already read 12 of them, which puts me in the top 97% of people who filled out the quiz. What does that say about me? What does that say about everyone else? 97%, ridiculous. From the list I found five books I want to read because I've already read something by this poet/author and I've placed these titles on hold at the library:

  • And Yet by Kate Baer
  • Pilgrim Bell: Poems by Kaveh Akbar
  • The Trees Witness Everything by Victoria Chang
  • Woman Without Shame by Sandra Cisneros
  • Goldenrod by Maggie Smith
Hopefully they will all arrive by April 1st. But in case they don't, I purchased a copy of a new collection of poems by Mary Oliver. This will keep me busy for a few days, I hope. 
  • Little Alleluias by Mary Oliver.
On a recent trip to the library and found two poetry collections which looked good, and I currently have them checked out but I may finish them before April (hopefully):
  • Poems and Prayers by Matthew McConaughey
  • Startlement: Poems by Ada Limón
Thinking about favorite poets made me realize I still want to read the memoir of a poet by Kwame Alexander, who generally writes for children and young adults. I placed a hold on this book, too, to find out more.
  • Why Fathers Cry at Night: a Memoir in Love Poems, Letters, Recipes, and Remembrances by Kwame Alexander.
It is unlikely I will actually finish all nine of these books but I will have lots of fun trying.

Join me in reading some poetry in April. Here is a link to more about National Poetry Month. It offers many resources. Like this poster, which you can get for free if you are a teacher:




-Anne

Monday, March 16, 2026

TTT: The Last Ten Books with Green Covers I Read



Top Ten Tuesday: The Last Ten Books with Mostly Green Covers I Read


Green in honor of St. Patrick's Day. My grandson informed me that he is only allowed to pinch other classmates not wearing green on St. Patrick's Day AFTER school. Good to know.

Once again, I've read all the books on the list, liking some much more than others, so their inclusion on the list is not an endorsement.


Symphony of Secrets by Brendan Slocumb
Detransition, Baby by Torrey Peters
The Lion Women of Tehran by Marjan Kamali
Small Gods by Terry Pratchett
Isola by Allegra Goodman
Road Home by Rex Ogle
Abscond: a Short Story by Abraham Verghese

-Anne

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Review: VIGIL (+Friday56 LinkUp)





Title: Vigil by George Saunders

Book Beginnings/First Line Friday quote:
What a lovely home I found myself plummeting toward, acquiring, as I fell, arms, hands, feet, all of which, as usual, became more substantial with each passing second.

Friday56 quote:
“You seem different, he said.

I am different, I said. I'm Jill. Jill Blaine. Jill 'Doll' Blaine.

Weren't you always? he said.

Not this much, I said.”
Summary: Jill "Doll" Blaine is a celestial helper. She is sent to comfort people in their last moments of life and to help them make the transition to the afterlife. Her charge, K.J. Boone, refuses to be consoled, however, because he did nothing to regret. Or so he thinks. Visitors alive and not alive parade through his room begging to differ.

Review: George Saunders is one of my favorite authors, at least half of the time. I loved his books Lincoln in the Bardo and A Swim in the Pond in the Rain, but I am not a fan of his short story collection Tenth of December, which I disliked so much I threw the book away. (I know. Scandalous.) Therefore, I approached Vigil with a bit of trepidation. Which side of the scale would this book fall on? I happily report is on the positive side.

In a lot of ways Vigil reminded me of Lincoln in the Bardo, or the audiobook production was very similar. Like Lincoln in the Bardo, Vigil had several narrators, not just one person reading all the parts in the story. Lincoln used 166 different voice actors while Vigil used 14 but it still was very impactful. Like in the first book, life in that liminal space between life and death (also known as the bardo) is explored in Vigil. Some people (ghosts) get stuck or held fast by some unresolved aspect on earth while others pass on easily. Jill "Doll" Blaine is sent to make that transition easier.

But K.J. Boone is no easy charge. While others come to confront/condemn him for the choices he made during his lifetime which are now impacting everyone, he is defiant to the end. The publisher sums of Vigil this way: "George Saunders takes on the gravest issues of our time—the menace of corporate greed, the toll of capitalism, the environmental perils of progress—and, in the process, spins a tale that encompasses life and death, good and evil, and the thorny question of absolution."

Vigil had a lot to say in very few pages, 192, and I rated it with 4 stars.

_______________________________________________



Sign up for The Friday56 on the Inlinkz below. 

RULES:

*Grab a book, any book
*Turn to page 56 or 56% in your e-reader (If you want to improvise, go ahead!)
*Find a snippet, but no spoilers!
*Post it to your blog and add your url to the Linky below. If you do not add the specific url for your post, we may miss it! 
*Visit other blogs and leave comments about their snippets. Expand the community. Please leave a comment for me, too!  


Also visit Book Beginnings on Friday hosted by Rose City Reader and First Line Friday hosted by Reading is My Super Power to share the beginning quote from your book.



You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

-Anne

Monday, March 9, 2026

TTT: Book Titles With Ordinal Numbers



Top Ten Tuesday: Books Titles With Ordinal Numbers

An ordinal number is a number that defines an item’s place in a row: First, third, 22nd. etc.)

I've read all these books, some I liked, some I didn't, and others I can't remember much about since I had to look as far back as 2013 to fill out this list. (Date in parenthesis is the year I read the book.)



1. The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin (2025)

2. Tenth of December by George Saunders (2024)

3. A First Time for Everything by Dan Santat (2023)

4. The First Notes: The Story of Do, Re, Mi by Julie Andrews Edwards (2023)

5. The Sixth Extinction: An Unusual History by Elizabeth Kolbert (2022)

6. Pray First: The Transformative Power of a Life Built on Prayer by Chris Hodges (2023)

7. Voices from the Second World War: Stories of War As Told to Children of Today by First New Limited (2023)

8. Motor Girls: How Women Took the Wheel and Drove Boldly Into the Twentieth Century by Sue Macy (2017) 

9. Fourth Down and Inches: Concussions and Football's Make-or-Break Moment by Carla Killough McClafferty (2016)

10. The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey (2013)

Of note: six of the titles are nonfiction; six of the titles are for children or young adults.

-Anne

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Sunday Salon -- a follow up

Instead of viewing the celestial display of six planets lined up on Feb. 28th, we got to see this beautiful sunset over the Puget Sound and a view of the Olympic Mountains in the background. Too many clouds to see most of the planets.


Weather: Rain or threatening to rain. We understand this rain will turn to snow in the mountains so we are keeping our fingers crossed because we need the snowpack to keep down summer forest fires. The street trees, flowering plums, are starting to bloom out but the skies have been so grey they don't look very impressive.

Messages of love: Last week I wrote about how it seems like something new is happening, that perhaps love and acceptance is starting to break out amidst all the hate and division in our country. The sermon on Sunday at my church paralleled my same message, so much so I asked my pastor to read my blog. He did and sent me this reply:
Hi Anne,

I took you up on your invitation and enjoyed reading your post.  Matthew 25 was on both our hearts last week!  That was funny to see how our messages intersected the same themes.  As we were preparing for Good Friday service, one author said something along the lines of this:  Jesus revealed the violence of the world by embodying the opposite of it, and in that space between, the possibility for peace to take root exists.  We see this best when we aren't yelling angry slogans, but when we put on frog costumes, sing songs, and serve communion in front of detention facilities.   Also, generally speaking, people are attracted to the joyful crowd rather than the hateful one.  It just takes more work and creativity.  

I'm preaching to the choir, simply to say that I appreciated what you have drawn out of this current moment.  We are not without hopeful examples of love. As a side note, I've been grateful for the secular media in this moment, which keeps finding language to be explicit about how MAGA Christians are their own thing, implying some distance from the person of Jesus.  I praise God that even the non-religious crowd can tell the difference....

Pastor John
This week's news brought new concerns about our government (bombing Iran) but the truth remains the same ... if good people don't speak up, nothing will change.


James Talarico won the Senate primary in Texas on Tuesday. I look forward to hearing more from him this year.



Astronomical moments: Don and I drove west to Chambers Bay on the Puget Sound to view the six planets all lined up on Saturday night last week but the weather didn't cooperate and low clouds on the horizon kept us from being able to view Mercury, Saturn, and Neptune. We did see the other three: Venus (during a brief break in the clouds), Uranus (with binoculars), and Jupiter (which was high in the sky near the moon.) We did take some amazing photos of Chambers Bay and the Olympic Mountain range, along with a beautiful sunset. So the trip was worth the effort. See photos above.

A few nights later we set our alarm for 3:20 AM so we could view the Blood Moon/Lunar Eclipse. This time the clouds were so thick we couldn't even see the moon at all. Oh well, we tried. We had to satisfy ourselves with photos taken by people from other parts of the world.

Books and reading: I am really struggling to gain my usual reading mojo. I am going to blame it on my decision to read That Master and Margarita for the Classics Club this month. The book is satire, but I don't really understand what is being satirized. I keep telling myself that no one is making me read the book but now that I've struggled through as much as I have, I will finish it. (And complain about it, if I want to! 😉)
  •  Finished this week:
    • The Vigil by George Saunders -- A higher being sits with a dying man confronting both his mortality and her past. Audiobook. 4 stars.
    • This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar -- A love story set against a war which transgresses time. This book blew my mind. Audiobook. 4.25 stars.
  • Currently reading:
    • Corelli's Mandolin by Louis de Bernieres. A reread/relisten of a favorite with my husband, who is enjoying the book immensely. Audiobook. 78%.
    • The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov. Both print and audio. A classic Russian work. Very off-beat. 27%.
    • We Need No Wings by Ann Cardinal. E-Book. A book club selection about religious mysticism and Teresa of Avila. 50%. 
  • Recently acquired from the library -- Up next:
    • The Road to Tender Hearts by Annie Hartnett. Another book club selection.
    • Startlement: Poems by Ada Limon. Will poetry provide the reading fix I need?
  • Blogging:

A little rock and roll: Sometimes singing along to loud music is good therapy.

My cousin's daughter and her rock and roll cover band playing at the Rock the Dock in Tacoma. 


Springing ahead to daylight savings time.

-Anne

Review: THE STORY OF A NAME


Over a year ago the New York Times published a list of the top 100 books of the 21st century. They asked 503 literary luminaries for their input in creating the list and this cast of readers, writers, editors, critics came up with a list and at the top of the list in the #1 spot was My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante. It is the first book in the Neapolitan series, four books published between 2012-2014. The fourth book in the series, The Story of a Lost Child, is also on the NYT list but that means there are two books to read before getting to it. The Story of a Lost Name is the second book in the series. 

At the end of My Brilliant Friend, Lila, one of the two friends, gets married. The story of this book begins right where the first book left off. Lila is unhappily married to Stefano, a grocer, while Elena carries on with her education and begins dating and playing around with the idea of finding someone to marry herself. As the story continues Lila's existence becomes almost unbearable. It is like she lives in a beautiful gilded cage which is trapping her. She wants to be let out. Instead of trying to find a way to make her happy, her husband attempts to bring her into submission by beating her. While this is happening Elena finds a way out of the community by attending college in Pisa. Away from Lila's influence Elena starts to blossom, though she always feels like an outsider or a fraud in the world of education. At the end of her college career it is a boyfriend's mother who helps her make the transition to a new life as a published writer.

Apparently Elena Ferrante is a pen-name. Though quite popular with several well-regarded books in print, no one knows exactly who Elena Ferrante is or even if she is a she. One can't help but wonder if this series isn't a bit autobiographical. The use of the name "Elena" is one clue. Another clue is that Elena in the book becomes a published author. The story is set in post-WWII Naples, Italy. It is a guess, but the books are written in Italian, beautifully translated into English by Ann Goldstein. So who knows, maybe the mystery person, Elena Ferrante could be from Naples. A reviewer writing for NPR described The Story of a Lost Name as a possible origin myth similar to a book by Henry James by calling this one a "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman." We may never know if this series is autobiographical or not and it doesn't really matter.

I read The Story of a Name recently during my trip to a Mexico resort. Wherever I think of my reading experience with the book I will picture palm trees and and the blue ocean nearby. The book is long and detailed with lots of characters. It could be mind-boggling but I decided to just read it and not worry if I remembered every single detail. It is so well-written I was transported to Naples, Pisa, the Italian coast and I lived there among the characters for 400 pages. Then the book ended on a cliffhanger so I know exactly where the third book, Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay, will pick up the story. This time, however, I will not wait a year and a half between books. I've already purchased a used copy of each of the last two books and I am ready to continue with the story of a friendship between Lila and Elena as soon as I finish this month's book club selections.

My rating: 4 stars.
-Anne

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Review: A GUARDIAN AND A THIEF



Title: A Guardian and a Thief by Megha Majumdar

Book Beginnings/First Line Friday quote: 
From the storeroom hidden under the stairs, Ma fetched a cup of rice and a sack of eggs speckled grey like the moon, then cooked standing before the stove's blue flame, her eye upon the window and its dusk, in which bats swooped and the neem tree shivered and a figure down on the road pedaled a bicycle, whistling, as if everything was all right.
Friday56 quote (from page 22): 
He spoke in the melodic way he did with Mishti, the act of communicating in words with her, as she acquired language, its own enchantment. But as she cried for cauliflower, somewhere inside him, from a deep slumber, rose what he knew about shortages past. The word he feared was famine.
Summary:
In a near-future Kolkata beset by flooding and famine, Ma, her two-year-old daughter, and her elderly father are just days from leaving the collapsing city behind to join Ma’s husband in Ann Arbor, Michigan. After procuring long-awaited visas from the consulate, they pack their bags for the flight to America. But in the morning they awaken to discover that Ma’s purse, containing their treasured immigration documents, has been stolen.

Set over the course of one week, A Guardian and a Thief tells the story of Ma’s frantic search for the thief while keeping hunger at bay during a worsening food shortage; and the story of Boomba, the thief, whose desperation to care for his family drives him to commit a series of escalating crimes whose consequences he cannot fathom. It is a kaleidoscopic portrait of two families, each operating from a place of ferocious love and undefeated hope, each discovering how far they will go to secure their children’s future as they stave off encroaching catastrophe. (Publisher)
Comment: I listened to the audiobook of A Guardian and a Thief. I had no idea until I looked around for quotes that the book is stuffed full of all these compound run-on sentences. Now I keep trying to imagine what my ninth grade English teacher would have said about them. Ha!

Review: A Guardian and a Thief came to my attention when it was named a finalist for the 2025 National Book Award and was the winner of the Carnegie Medal for fiction in 2026. Just this week it was named to the 2026 longlist for the Women's Prize. Clearly the book has some literary chops, run-on sentences be damned.

The story is fairly depressing. A small family is trying to escape India because of the famine and rising temperatures. Just when they think they are on their way out, the papers that will allow their exit are stolen and so begins a frantic and desperate search for them and for a solution. I started listening to the book with my husband but due to unforeseen circumstances finished it by myself. The story is depressing but the ending is double depressing. When I summed up the book for Don, he quipped, "Well, I guess we can say that the moral of the book is there is not going to be a good ending for us concerning climate change." Gulp! All joking aside, he's right, I fear.

My rating: 3.75 stars.
_______________________________________________


-Anne

Monday, March 2, 2026

TTT: Genre Freebie --- Literary Fiction


Top Ten Tuesday: Genre Freebie -- 
The Last Ten Books I Read in 2025 Categorized as Literary Fiction (According to Storygraph Genres)


Storygraph recognizes 54 genres. The Literary fiction category was my most read genre in 2025. These are the last ten I read in the year.





White Nights / Dostoevsky
Audition / Kitamura
Seascraper / Wood
My Friends / Backman
Theory & Practice / de Kretser
Persuasion / Austen

-Anne