Saturday, 30 August 2025

BOOKS, BOOKS AND MORE BOOKS! BOOK REVIEWS

 HOW TO MAKE A LIFE by Florence Reiss Kraut  4 stars

Thank you to the author and She Writes Press for the privilege of reading this novel.

The novel starts of with a horrific event. In 1905, in Kotovka, Ukraine, a pogrom wipes out most of the village and all but three members of the family, three of who were hidden in the root cellar, while above ground, atrocities were being committed. Huddled, terrified in the root cellar were a mother and her two young daughters. After waiting several hours, once it became silent outside, she emerges to a sight that will remain forever behind her eyelids. The devastation, the horrors are incomprehensible. She is heartbroken but she is also angry as she and her husband had spoken about leaving before something like this would happen. They had even prepared by hiding valuables, enough to take them to America. Now, they are alone. Just the three of them.

Thus begins the story of a family that will span four generations. We will find that decisions made far in the past will reach into the future of each new generation. The mother, now Ida, and her two daughters travel to New York City to go stay with a cousin. The tenements are a squalid noisy place compared to the green open spaces, and comfort they knew in the Ukraine, but there is some comfort as the language and the culture is familiar to the one, they left behind. The determination and resilience that Ida displays trying to provide for her daughters is inspiring. The older child becomes responsible for the younger while the mother works. Family is what is most important. Family must be protected. We watch the Weissman family as they progress through the years. We see them grow, fall in love, marry, have children, die and the cycle continues. Some family members stay in New York, and some descendants travel to far places. Their journey through life is filled with ups and downs and throughout the strong family connection is maintained. Not always happily, often just stoically, resentments surface, bargains are made, there are decisions made that cause turmoil and unhappiness. But the final message is family endures. JUNE 8, 2024

THE FAVORITES by Layne Fargo 3stars

Thank you to Random House Group and NetGalley for the pleasure of reading this book.

My mom loved watching figure skating and her all-time favourite was Canada’s Sweetheart, Barbara Anne Scott (1948 Olympic champion and the only Canadian Ladies’ single winner of the Gold medal). When the figure skating show came to the city we were there and when they were on tv we watched. Her passion for the figure skaters never dwindled and when dancing was added to the figure skating program, she watched the competitions avidly (more loyal than the most loyal hockey fan) and now that she is no longer with us, we still hold her close and continue the tradition.

Reading The Favourites was fascinating. It made me recall the different scandals and injustices that prevailed in the real world of figure skating (Harding vs Kerrigan, Sale and Pelletier losing gold at 2002 Olympics) and the mentality that prevail for an athlete to win is the only option. The ten-year journey of Katarina Shaw and Heath Rocha, their love for each other and her obsession to win an Olympic Gold medal was at times difficult to read. I imagined that the way they danced on the ice might have had more chemistry than Canadian pairs Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir (sometimes you had to wonder how the ice did not melt). Imagine the drive, the struggles, the dedication it took the figure skaters, pairs, dance, singles, balanced on the thin edge of a blade, to glide so effortlessly across the ice in their dips, twirls, and jumps.

Fargo did an incredible job in writing characters that came alive on the page. The situations Katarina and Heath, and the others, found themselves in and the raw emotions that they displayed was at time joyous and at others heart wrenching. The format of interviewing the different people involved in Kat and Heath’s journey, 10 years later for a documentary was very affective. Seeing all characters later too, added depth to the story too.

This novel is for all readers not just for figure skating fans as I am sure ALL athletes in all the sports must be super focused to meet the challenges, they and others set for them.

Overall, this novel is a gold medal winner. JUNE 8, 2024

MAGIC LESSONS by Alice Hoffman  4 stars

Thank you to the publishers, Simon and Schuster, and NetGalley for the pleasure of reading this book.

Hoffman had written this book, Magic Lessons, I believe, to lend clarity and understanding to the curse that follows the Owen women in her books Practical Magic and The Rules of Magic. In Magic Lessons, we return to the very beginning.  It begins in the 17th century Essex England with Hannah Owen and the abandoned child she finds and names Maria. Hannah practices right-hand magic. She is a healer, who lives in a lovely cottage deep in the woods, and she helps all those who come to her door in the dark of the night. It is a time of witch hunts in England as man is often afraid and hates what he cannot understand. Hannah recognizes that Maria has the gift and instructs the child all she knows.  Hannah cautions Maria that to practice magic she must always remember that what she does will return threefold, to always love someone who will love you back and that every act depends on a payment. As time passes, she is visited her natural mother. Rebecca Lockland. Throughout time there are those that are afraid and destroy what they do not understand and that was Rebecca Lockland’s husband. It is he, in a rage, who nailed Hannah to the door and set fire to the cottage. After this tragedy Maria swears, she will never see another woman burn. Rebecca Lockland takes Maria to her manor and shows her left-hand magic. Rebecca is about self, her wants, her wishes and does not care what it takes to achieve them. The one and only thing that Rebecca cares about is a thief an actor and Maria’s father. He in turn cares about himself and Rebecca. The child, Maria is dispensable. Time, we find flows in a line and in circles and it twists and turns from Essex England to Dutch Curacao to Salem Massachusetts to Manhattan New York and back to Salem. There is much that happens in this novel, and much is revealed. Maria has a daughter who is father by the man from Salem, whom Maria though she loved and that he loved her in return. In Salem, the witch hunt frenzy is in full swing, and her daughter’s father is in the midst of all it as magistrate condemning witches to their death. Maria is tried as a witch and as she is about to hang, she invokes the Owen curse.

Alice Hoffman deftly creates a story that flows into the present and the books that came before and everything Owen’s is clearer. It is always important, as Maria discovers, to love is the only answer.

This review is also posted on Goodreads.

KILLING MOON by Jo Nesbo  4 stars

When I requested this novel from Penguin Random House Canada and NetGallery I was drawn to the book by its synopsis. I enjoy reading suspense/thrillers and this book delivered on both counts.  What I had not realized that it was book 13 in the Harry Hole detective series. As The Killing Moon was my first novel by Jo Nesbo it was not long before I knew it was not the book to start with. There were connections between the characters that I was missing, like why Harry felt and the choices he made.

Harry Hole was a down and out detective from Oslo living in an alcoholic haze in Los Angles when he is drawn back to Oslo to help his friend, to find a missing girl and solve a murder. The story is well written, and it is full of twists and turns, and it keeps the reader guessing right to the end. It was also horrific; chilling and it was much more gruesome than I had anticipated. Enough so, to give me nightmares from the well written imagery and scenes in the novel.

This novel is just too dark for me. If you are not bothered by cannibalism and acts of violence, then this may be the book for you.

This review is posted on Goodreads and on Amazon.ca JUNE 16, 2024


THE SCHOOL OF MIRRORS by Eva Stachniak 4 stars

I received a copy of this book to read courtesy of Penguin Random House Canada and NetGalley. Whilst, I am appreciative of this, the opinion given is my own.

Set in 1793, Louis XV’s France, into the French Revolution and ends in Year III of the new Republic. The author very obviously researched this time and did a fabulous job of weaving snippets of history into her story. One piece of history that I found interesting is the birthing machine that Madame du Coudray brought to Versailles to show Louis XV how the machine works and to have him deliver a baby (doll). The machine was able to show different type of births. Lous being so impressed made her the King’s Midwife. He also financed her travel throughout France to teach peasant women to become midwives.

The School of Mirrors (love the book title as it is a play on Versailles mirrored hall) weaves the story of young lower-class girls who brought to Deer Park, in the village of Versailles, for his pleasure. One such girl is Veronique; she captures the king’s interest, and all goes well until she becomes pregnant. Madame de Pompadour and the King’s valet arrange for Veronique to have care until the child (a girl) is born. Veronique receives a dowry and is married to a merchant. Strangers raise the child Marie-Louise. Reading about Marie-Louise growing up is my favourite part of the book. She is a survivor; she learns to depend on herself, and she is curious with a great imagination. Marie-Louise is sent to live with a midwife, and it is here, with the woman that she eventually calls Aunt Margot, she found her calling. Marie-Louise trains as a midwife and becomes an accredited midwife. As years progress, Marie – Louise marries and has a son. France is facing turbulent times. It is time of the guillotine. It is a time to be cautious, to stay beneath the radar, to distance oneself from royalty, and try and just survive. It is during this time that Marie-Louise takes responsibility for a woman that she eventually learns is her mother.

Eva Stachniak created a historical novel that pulls at the strings and keeps the reader’s attention. Do give this book a try. JUNE 20, 2024

STANDING IN THE SHADOWS by Peter Robinson

I was given the opportunity to read an advance copy of this book by Penguin Random House Canada and NetGalley. Thank you.

This is the first novel that I have read by this author, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. It is last book in a series, but it readily stood on its own. The characters were well formed, and I did not feel as though not knowing their previous history mattered to this story. Knowing the history may have added more depth to the story but, not knowing did not distract from it either. The book had two timelines going on simultaneously. It begins on November 28,1980 when a university student, Nick Hartley, returns to his house and finds a murder investigation taking place. Then we fast forward, 39 years to November 24, 2019, when a skeleton is discovered in a field during an archaeological dig for Roman artifacts. The skeleton is not from Roman times and DS Banks and his team is called in to investigate. This back-and-forth investigation continues throughout the book. I must admit I found the current year’s investigation more interesting. I really was not very fond of the Nick Harley character from the 1980s. I enjoyed meeting Detective Superintendent, getting to know his choice of music and the food he enjoyed and a little of his personal life. He seems to a genuine character, realistically portrayed with a good team gathered around him. The clues along the way are not obvious, the various aspects of trying to identify the skeleton, the science techniques used were interesting and added to the story. The tenacity of Bank’s team, their police work and their instincts culminate in a murder solved. Respectable job everyone.  JUNE 29, 2024

THE ALCHEMIST OF ALEPPO BY MARIE K. SAVAGE   4stars

The Alchemist of Aleppo was an intriguing read. It makes one think, and ask questions about love, soul mates, life and immortality. I was swept away, caught in the maelstrom of a family's history throughout the ages and cycles of life.
Is it possible? I do not know, but I do know this, I kept reading until the novel was finished and I knew what happened. Better yet, it still has me thinking. I loved this book so much I recommended it to the readers in my life.

Thank you NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to read this delightful book.  January 1, 2025

 

THE IVORY BONES: The Lewis Chessman Murders by Sara Winokur 3 ½ stars

I found this book to be a fascinating read. I enjoyed learning about the history of Iceland, its culture and a tiny bit of its language through the interactions of the characters and from an old diary of a young girl kidnapped from its shores by Barbary pirates in 1627.  Iceland sounds like such a beautiful place, although it can be very cold and forbidding.

What appealed is how this far past and a murder(s) committed in the present are connected. The author was genius in weaving a story that captures the imagination and  connects the present to the past through the skill of Brynja Palsdottir, a forensic geneticist . The only times it bogged down for me, is when the ‘science’ became too detailed, (it interrupted the flow, and the mentions of the despicable things her parents (especially her father) did without explanation, to me, were distractions. I still want to know what the parents did. But it captured and kept my attention,  and that is what a good story does.

Thank you to NetGalley and Briarstone Press for this advance copy. JANUARY 8, 2025

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