"To Know a Woman" by Amos Oz
Story of a somewhat dysfunctional family, that's the first impression one gets. In reality it is a very profound recount of an Israeli espionage agent trying to regain his footing after his wife's accidental death. So WELL written, and yes, gripping.
( I started now "A Tale of Love and Darkness", so far I'm not disappointed!)
"The Art Forger" by B.A.Shapiro
It is her first novel, I came across it in the NYT art section during the week.
The story is very interesting, based on the looting of 13 work of arts from the Isabella Steward Gardner museum in Boston. The book is not perfect but it sure makes one think about the morality of forgery under certain circumstances.
"My Beloved World" by Sonia Sotomayor
This is the memoir of our Supreme Court Judge. Interesting, well written. One can talk a lot about it!
"The Bookseller" by Mark Pryor
This book brings you in the middle of Paris and has you going for a good "ride" à la Sherlock Holmes!
The writer is British, lives in Austin TX and is an assistant district attorney.
This is his first novel, he crated Hugo Marston and it is planned to be a character of many more books. Next one on its way.
Welcome to the 50 Book Challenge Blog! Reading fifty books in fifty-two weeks may seem daunting, but if you share the goal with a supportive group, it can be a lot of fun. Our goal is to provide support for those readers who wish to challenge themselves during 2013. This blog helps to make reading suggestions for your 50 books as well as guide you to resources to find your next pick!
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Friday, March 1, 2013
A Few of My Recent Reads
The Road Home (Rose Tremain)
I had a lot of compassion for the protagonist, especially
when he had bad luck and had to pick himself up and start again. I envisioned
myself emigrating with little command of the language and no support system and
I don't believe I would have the fortitude to completely change my life. This
book has given me new perspective on those who leave their families to try to
earn some money to have a life that is more than subsistence.
Call the Midwife (Jennifer Worth)
I’d watched the series and enjoyed it but the book was
even better (no surprise there) as it filled in details that could not be
captured in the series. Call the Midwife
is a look at the lives of lower class Londoners in the 1950s; their extended family
units (until the slum clearances split families apart) and their cheerfulness in
spite of living in appalling conditions and having lots of children. I admire these young midwives who delivered
babies in basic conditions such as no hot tap water and who were on call
throughout the day and night, bicycling through eight square miles of East
London.
Mrs Queen Takes the Train (William Kuhn)
What would happen if Queen Elizabeth II suddenly decided to walk out of
Buckingham Palace Mews, find her way to the cheese shop for a supply of cheddar,
and then to Kings Cross Station for the train to Scotland to have one last look
at her beloved ship, Britannia. This is
her adventure and the adventure of those who follow her to Scotland to bring
her home.
The Tavern on Maple Street (Sharon Owens)
Maeve Binchy has left our lives but Sharon Owens has entered mine. This is the second of Owens’s Belfast slice
of life books I’ve read and I’m enjoying these light and delightful reads.
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