Re-read: The Call of the Wild, Jack London
I read this first as a Whitman classic, back at a single-digit age. It's not a children's book, but I loved it: it was about a dog, a dog who survives the worst humans and nature can throw at him, and emerges triumphant.
I hadn't read it in a while, but found a lovely, illustrated copy at Barnes & Noble the other day. It's terrible and savage, but beautiful and wonderful, and I had forgotten so many brilliant passages. The story of Buck is timeless.
The Science of Sherlock Holmes, E.J. Wagner
Sherlock Holmes was one of the first popular detectives to use what we now know as forensics, the science behind the evidence in crimes, from the Great Detective's study of bruising on bodies to his knowledge of tobacco ash. This book discusses real-life Victorian crimes that parallel crimes in the Holmes canon, from poisons to blood evidence, disguises on both sides of the law (the Crippen case is featured, of course) and the examination of crime scenes, ballistics and footprints, and more. For fans of the canon or of the history of forensics.
Re-read: The Rock That is Higher: Story as Truth, Madeleine L'Engle
This was my Good Friday reading for this year; I usually just read until three o'clock comes, but this year, with the loss of my husband, I had to finish. L'Engle has been my soul-ease in bad times for years.
Damn Glad to Meet You, Tim Matheson
Matheson, who started his acting career under his real name, Tim Matthieson, is probably best known for being (1) the voice of Jonny Quest and (2) "Otter" in Animal House. This is a jaunty (but occasionally serious) recollection of his career, including his sojourn in the Marines while in the middle of finishing the film Yours, Mine, and Ours.
Matheson, a familiar television face from when he first appeared as one of Beaver's friends on Leave It to Beaver, gives us a bird's-eye-view of the television and movie industry, including behind-the-scenes peeks at how acting, directing, and producing works. It's a lively narrative with lots of name-dropping, and never a bore.
Lessons in Chemistry, Bonnie Garmus
I was waiting for this book to come out in paperback.
I needn't have wasted my money. Elizabeth Zott is a brilliant scientist, but it's the early 1950s, and the misogynist scientists at the institute where she works want her to go back to the kitchen, get married, and have babies. Luckily, there's one scientist who appreciates her mind, brilliant but absent-minded Calvin Evans. They begin living together without benefit of clergy and Elizabeth is pregnant. A co-worker steals her work plus she's an unwed mother, so for many years she and her child struggle. However, a later, chance encounter at her daughter's school leads a harassed television producer to create a local cooking show for her, Supper at Six, where she not only teaches cooking, but the science behind cooking (kind of a female Alton Brown in the 1960s). It becomes a hit.
So basically it's Elizabeth Zott against the patriarchy of the 1950s at its worst. The absurd plot includes a dog named Six-Thirty who thinks and comments on events in the story, like Cleo the basset hound in The People's Choice, an old 50s television series. This is supposed to be an indictment against the prejudice against women in the workplace in the 1950s. Instead, it's just silly. The only interesting part is about Calvin and his past.
Last Chance Books, Kelsey Rodkey
I enjoyed this new adult romance about Madeline Moore, who's off to university in the fall, but who looks forward to coming home after her education to run the family bookstore, Books & Moore, owned by her aunt Astrid, who brought up both Maddy and her half-brother Benny. Throwing a wrench in her summer plans: her peripatetic mother, Dahlia, who never stays around very long, is planning to return to town.
And then Prologue, a chain bookstore owned by the Hamada family, opens across the street, and Jasper, the youngest son, starts trying to steal Books & Moore's business. Next thing you know, it's a spite war between Maddy and Jasper, while secretly the two are attracted to each other.
The story not only touches on the romantic rivalry, but touches on the more serious themes of how parental neglect affects children and unlikely expectations.

30 April 2025
Books Completed Since April 1
31 March 2025
Books Completed Since March 1

This is a beautiful nonfiction book in which Renkl shares her observations of wildlife in her backyard and neighborhood. Renkl's brother contributes the gorgeous cover and interior illustrations.
Oh, the chapter "It's a Mystery" is very funny. I read it to my terminally ill husband and it was one of the few things that made him laugh.

This is the final book in the Ruinous Love trilogy featuring Rowan and Lachlan Kane's younger brother, a doctor, and circus motorcycle daredevil Rose Evans, a previously abused young woman who encourages other abused young women to fight back. Rose is a neat character, but Fionn remains a little dull until the end when he embraces his violent side. Still, you get updates on Rowan and Sloane, and Lachlan and Lark.

From the authors of The Personal Librarian, the story of the friendship between Eleanor Roosevelt and famed Black leader Mary McLeond Bethune, although the former's friendship with the latter scandalizes half of the white community. Bethune hasn't been chronicled as much as Roosevelt, so one learns many of her accomplishments, but it's in a way that requires great swaths of dialog to lecture you about them, making some of the talk sound unnecessarily didactic. Those who recoil at the thought of Eleanor possibly being...gasp!...a lesbian will probably want to avoid this book

Another winner from Lim, about a reluctant fortune teller who hates her fate. Vanessa has always been able to predict the future correctly, but she hates it when she has to give bad news. Predicting a death chills her, so she decides to train under the family fortune teller, Aunt Evelyn, who's setting up a tea shop in Paris, and resign herself to the fact that she will never have a relationship, just like her aunt. But life, and Paris, has a way of changing her.

This book has some details about the Von Trapps I'd never read, but if you want to know about the family, you'd be better off reading Maria's books, especially the final one where she came clean about several incidents she'd skipped before, and Agathe Von Trapp's book. And the behind-the-scenes of mounting the musical are okay. Fran and her boyfriend, however, exist just as sounding boards to tell Maria's story.
28 February 2025
Books Completed Since February 1
The Vagabonds: The Story of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison's Ten-Year Road Trip, Jeff Guinn
Three odd ducks: buttoned up Henry Ford, famed inventor Thomas Edison, and, for the first few years of the trip, naturalist John Burroughs, took road trips together on the primitive vehicles of the time.
James, Percival Everett
I was fascinated by the thought of Huckleberry Finn narrated by his companion Jim, until I read the book. Fascinating opening chapters about Jim's relationship with lonely Huck degenerates into a detour that has Jim performing with a minstrel troupe founded by Daniel Decatur Emmett who wrote "Dixie." I was very disappointed.
Once Smitten, Twice Shy, Chloe Liese
Last book in the Wilmot sisters' trilogy. Juliet Wilmot is in Scotland, having escaped from a controlling fiance. She runs into shy Will Orsino, who turns out to be the best friend of her sister's finance, and tries to give him lessons in romance. The lessons turn into the real thing.
Hearts of Darkness, Jana Monroe
Nonfiction. The story of a woman working with the Behavioral Analysis Unit at the FBI.
The Cliff's Edge, Charles Todd
The latest in the Bess Crawford series has our newly demobbed nursing sister accepting a job taking care of a minor noblewoman after gall bladder surgery. Lady Beatrice receives word that a member of her family has been seriously injured and asks Bess to help him, only for Bess to find out the young man is accused of having killed another man. Can she sort out the mystery before an innocent man is arrested?
The postwar adventures are not quite as taut as the wartime ones, but there is a hint of a different relationship approaching for Bess and her friend Simon Brandon.
Dry Bones, Craig Johnson
An argument over who owns the bones of a dinosaur dug up on Native American land results in the death of Danny Lone Elk, who owned the property. An assistant district attorney and a passel of FBI agents make solving the crime even more difficult for Sheriff Walt Longmire, who enlists the help of his friends Lucian Connolly and Omar Rhoades. A subplot involving Walt's daughter Cady and her baby daughter Lola also holds repercussions for Longmire.
I love these books, but if I hear one more description about Vic's "tarnished" eyes I think I'm going to scream.
31 January 2025
Books Completed Since January 1



Enjoyable narrative about a race from Peking to Paris in 1908, set against the history of the time. Annoying, however, were mistakes like these: "...their mud-caked crews in driving coats, hats and googles." And the biggie: "William Penn...who designed Philadelphia...[e]ach of the dwellings in his city—whose name translates to 'Penn's Woods'..." Um, no. Pennsylvania means "Penn's Woods." Philadelphia means "city of brotherly love."

Nonfiction.

Professional violinist Gwen Jackson is offered first chair of the Manhattan Pops orchestra to the displeasure of Xander Thorne, cellist extraordinare. However, they're both attracted to each other.
04 January 2025
Favorite Books of 2024












