The Masquerades of Spring, Ben Aaronovitch
The fourth of Aaronovitch's seasonal novellas set in the "Rivers of London" universe. But this one has a twist: it's set in the United States, where Englishman Augustus Berrycloth-Young—friends call him "Gussie"—lives in New York City enjoying the delights of the Jazz Age, hiding the fact that he is not only one of those who practices "the love that dare not speak its name," but that his lover is Black. Helped by a talented valet called Maximillian Beauregard, Gussie's living the good life, until Thomas Nightingale shows up on his doorstep, seeking help. Somewhere in the wild, there's an enchanted musical instrument on the loose, and Nightingale wants it confiscated and returned.
Aaronovitch writes a mean Bertie Woosterish romp crossed with magic. Gussie is a gem of a narrator and if you're a "Rivers" fan, you'll want this for your collection.
The Home Front: The Best of "Good Housekeeping" 1939-1945, Brian Braithwaite, Noëlle Walsh, Glyn Davies
Big "coffee table book" I found in a thrift shop, reproductions of the British edition of "Good Housekeeping" during World War II. Lots of articles about keeping a stiff upper lip, being thrifty, working your Victory Garden, and ads for conserving food. A snapshot of the times.
Anne of a Different Island, Virginia Kantra
A modern take on Anne of Green Gables, with unpredictable Anne Gallegher returning to her home on Mackinac Island after the death of her father, who always understood her ways. She hopes to become closer to her mother, who runs the island fudge shop, but she arrives without her doctor fiancé Chris, who can't leave his pediatric patients, and pretty sure she's lost her teaching job at an exclusive school because she objects to banning certain books in the school library. At the dock to meet her is Joe Miller, an older boy who always teased her, who's also her late father's apprentice in the carpentry business.
As Anne helps her mother, and her "bosom friend" Daanis, married and a new mother, she begins to understand herself, and her mother's special reliance on Joe.
This was sweet, and I cried at the end.
Between the Lines: Master the Subtle Elements of Fiction Writing, Jessica Page Morrell
Picked this up at a book sales and glad I found it. Author provides concrete excerpts of writing she considers good examples of descriptions, characterizations, flashbacks, theme, etc. An excellent addition to your writing library.
Deep End, Ali Hazelwood
This story was very popular last year, and the main characters even had a cameo in Hazelwood's Problematic Summer Romance. College student and championship diver, Scarlett Vandermeer is still recovering from a traumatic diving accident and is unable to dive at her best. Her teammate Penelope discovers Scarlett has certain sexual kinks that Pen's boyfriend, the Olympic champion swimmer Lukas Blomqvist, would like to indulge in as well, but she (Pen) doesn't want to. So Pen, who's actually broken up with Lukas drunkenly suggests Scarlett and Lukas get together—just sexually, you understand.
Naturally, it becomes much more than that. As Scarlett works through her trauma, it turns out Lukas' infamous calm actually stabilizes her. But for two people who are trying desperately not to fall in love, they're doing it pretty well.
Still don't get Pen's reluctance to tell people she and Lukas broke up a year earlier, so what she does near the end of the novel really makes me hate her, even if she apologizes for it.
The Ride: Paul Revere and the Night That Saved America, Kostya Kennedy
Long ago I read Esther Forbes' Paul Revere and the World He Lived In, which she used as a template for her classic Johnny Tremain young adult novel. It's still as complete a bio of Revere as you can get, but if you're just curious about the famous Ride (which, as even Revere would have told you, he didn't finish; Samuel Prescott did) and what prompted it, this is an enjoyable modern review of the times and the man.
Re-read: Mr. Revere and I, Patrick Lawson
How could I read a book about Paul Revere's ride without re-reading a childhood favorite, the story of Revere's ride told by his faithful horse?
Of course, Revere didn't own the horse he rode that night; she was a borrowed mare named, they think, Brown Bess. But who cares when this delightful story is narrated by Scheherazade—just call her "Sherry"—who was originally a proud British cavalry horse brought over to guard the city of Boston from those terrible Rebels. Brought to ruin by her frankly stupid owner, Sir Cedric Barnstable, Sherry eventually pulls a noisome cart, but is rescued by the Sons of Liberty as a horse for Paul Revere to carry dispatches with.
Full of sly criticisms of stupidity of the British officers (who bought their commissions) and even the local prominent citizens like John Hancock and Samuel Adams, this book is a delight from beginning to end, actually portraying Revere's backbreaking trips in realistic style. Worth reading even by adults.
This Way Up: When Maps Go Wrong, Mark Cooper-Jones and Jay Foreman
Apparently, these guys, The Map Men, are famous on YouTube, but I bought this because I've always been a little potty about maps. Would have loved to have been a cartographer. The Map Men talk about...surprise!...maps. Like a global map sold by IKEA which completely left out New Zealand (they apologized). Or trying to complete a map in the 1700s when the world wasn't completely explored. Or trying to navigate London...using a map of Paris (privately I didn't understand the purpose of this).
The problem with this book is when it's good, it's good, but then the authors start goofing around. I guess in an effort to make the Donner Party story less grim, it's told in this terrible style that I found really offputting. Telling the story of the deadly shortcut that led to the Donner downfall needn't have been told in a flip matter. Some other chapters are also depressingly flip. I expected to like this more.
The Complete Guide to the Bible, Stephen M. Miller
Tempted by this when I saw it at Walmart. Containing maps, vintage images, pullouts containing additional info, modern photography, Miller walks you through each book of the Bible, explains the significance of each, points out any relevance to modern life, and provides other insights. Enjoyed this. Biggest takeaway, however, was: don't get involved with Assyrians. They perfected the art of torture.
Fight, Sloane St. James
Callahan Woods is a wildland firefighter. Since being betrayed by his fiancée, Molly, a former childhood sweetheart, Cal has sworn off permanent relationships and lets any woman he gets involved with know it. Into his life walks Prescott Timmons, new EMT recruit. It's sparks aplenty, and they're not in the wildfires.
But "Scottie" is hiding a very big secret, one Callahan might never get over.
Whew, is it hot in here? Spice aplenty in this firefighter romance, plus you learn about the process of fighting wildfires and how the men and women live during fire seasons. Scottie's past is unique compared to other romances I've read.
Robert Heinlein, Leon Stover
This is Stover's 1987 biography/examination of the life and fiction of Robert Heinlein. He certainly
is a Heinlein enthusiast: he compares him to Mark Twain, and states
that Have Spacesuit Will Travel should be as famous as Huckleberry Finn.
(Okay, Have Spacesuit Will Travel was my first Heinlein and probably my favorite, but I'm
also a Finn fan--so, sorry, Leon...no.) Did enjoy reading Stover's POV on characters like Friday, Valentine Michael Smith, Delos Harriman, and more.
The Geographer's Guide to Romance, India Holton
Professor Elodie Hughes was a flighty but magically talented geographer at Oxford when she entered into a marriage of convenience (he wanted quieter digs) with stern, grumpy Professor Gabriel Tarrant. Their wedding night turned out to be magical for both of them, except neither knew how to communicate that. So it's been a year since they've seen each other when both Professors Tarrant are summoned to a magical eruption in a small Welsh village. It's growing in power, and if it can't be stopped, the rampant magic may destroy England.
Fighting wild magic, Welsh villagers glad for the business magic brings to their town, bonkers tourists, a pet goat, and their irresistible attraction to each other, Gabriel and Elodie scramble to halt disaster. A comic romantasy period romp.
30 April 2026
Books Completed in April 2026
Labels:
Bible,
biography,
children,
fantasy,
history,
religious,
romance,
romantasy,
World War II,
writing
31 March 2026
Books Completed in March 2026
Euphemia Flite is in debt. Rescued from a terrible life by Artemisa Corvus, proprietor of an eccentric girls' school that teaches young ladies how to overthrow the patriarchy, she's told that if she helps Miss Corvus defeat an odious man named Lord Compton, she will be free of obligations and can look forward to a life of her own.
Unfortunately, if she ruins Compton, she'll twist the plans of Gabriel Royce, a betting shop owner in a notorious poor neighborhood, who's actually using Compton to fund reforms in the area.
"Effie" is introduced to London society at a brilliant ball, where she meets Gabriel—and of course, the sparks fly. It's also a grand adventure with secrets, and a connection to Charles Dickens. Matthews writes grand books if romance mixed with history is what you like.
A friend was giving away some books, and I found a handsomely illustrated copy of one of my childhood favorites in the edition of which I first read it, which begins: "For many days we had been tempest-tossed. Six times had the darkness closed over a wild and terrible scene, and the light of dawn as often brought but renewed distress, for the raging storm increased in fury until on the seventh day all hope was lost." (How can you not fall in love with vocabulary like that? This is the stuff I grew up with, and Albert Payson Terhune, whose narratives and words always made me swoon.)
I discovered there are several translations on Project Gutenberg, including the "French" version, which includes the native attack that was used in the Disney film. I also found out that Jules Verne did two sequels to the book, The Later Adventures of the Swiss Family Robinson and The Castaways of the Flag. (Please note that this means Verne wrote fanfiction!)
Wyss made up the story to please his own four sons (like the Fritz, Ernest, Jack, and Franz in the story), and the variety of animals they run into is almost comical, knowing about geography and habitats as I do: lions side by side with tigers, agoutis rubbing noses with kangaroos, onagers sharing the spotlight with elephants, as if all of the continents banged up against "New Switzerland" and disgorged their native species before floating away again. (Talk about continental drift!) Add in the "how to" survival manual stuff, and it's a really odd book, but I do still love it.
(And everyone knows, right, that the Swiss family's surname isn't "Robinson"?—Wyss does not mention their last name at all, nor the father's first name; the mother is Elizabeth. It's The Swiss Family "Robinson" because it's a "Robinsonade," a tale of survival on a deserted island, like Robinson Crusoe, based on the real-life sailor Alexander Selkirk.)
Ellen Jovin has been teaching grammar and writing for years, but when she decided to set a table outside her Manhattan apartment with a "Grammar Table" sign on it, she discovered just how many people wanted to discuss spelling and grammar with her, basically, "What's right and what's wrong?" So she took the "Grammar Table" on the road to every single state in the lower 48 and had her husband film the interviews.
From the Oxford comma—"a national obsession"—to telling the difference between "affect" and "effect," from whether adverbs are overused—or not—to the joys (or not) of spelling bees, everyone wanted to talk English language conundrums. This is a compilation of the best, and sometimes the funniest, grammar conversations—and you learn something in the bargain.
Everyone knew Amy Tan could write. But who knew she could draw so beautifully?
This is a gorgeously illustrated book about Tan's observations of the habits, quirks, and life of the birds at her feeder from 2017–2022. Bird lovers will adore. I sure did.
The fourteenth in the "Witch City" mysteries.
So happy Perry has continued this series! (I didn't want to read her other about Florida. Yeeech.) This time WICH-TV producer Lee Barrett Mondello, along with the rest of Salem, is invested in a new film about magic and witches being filmed at various historical sites, starring famous screen stars Darla Diamond and Lamont Faraday. Also working on the set is Doug Walker, Lee's crush from an old television show about a boy and his pet bear, someone she's dying to meet.
Then someone poisons Darla Diamond (who, according to other cast members, was pure poison herself) with something injected into her special chocolates—but the producer insists that the production go on with a body double and special effects.
There are lots of red herrings, but I guessed the killer early on. Still, it was great to see Lee, Pete, Aunt Ibbie, and the other regulars again, especially the orange tabby cat O'Ryan.
I loved this story of romance writer Eloisa James, who was diagnosed with cancer just like her mother (things turned out fine for her). She convinces her Italian husband to sell everything, and they and their two children, Anna (the drama queen) and Luca (the teen cynic), move to Paris. While the children navigate going to school in a foreign language, the whole family comes to love their life in Paris. The chapters take the form of short essays on a particular aspect of French life, followed by Eloisa's diary entries. It's all very charming. I love Anna's little battles at school with the local "queen bee" student, and the stories about Alessandro's mother and how she has custody of the family dog.
28 February 2026
Books Completed in February 2026
It has literally taken me years to read this book, the second of the Family Spies book, about Abidela, the second of Mags and Amily's three children. I threw it down the first time because she had a very obvious parody of a Certain Political Person in the early narrative, and I hated that Lackey wasn't more subtle about it: I would have liked to have had his identity revealed more slowly and less blatantly.
Anyway, Abi has an unusual Gift: she can sense weak spots in structures, and, because of this, she and her best friend Princess Kat were able to save people from being harmed when an unknown weak spot caused a much-used bridge to collapse. Since Abi is studying to be an Artificer (engineer), this makes her invaluable, but she needs to be instructed by Healers to get the most out of her Gift. The story follows Abi's training and then the one final mission she finds herself on before she can be called a Master Artificer, one that involves invaders from outside the kingdom of Valdemar, ones hoping to ruin that country's good name.
This was better than the parody would have led me to believe, but there's quite a lot of detail about structural engineering in the book (although it is about engineering students, after all), and the plot tends to get lost in the details. Still glad I finally read it.
Everyone remembers Project Mercury: John Glenn, the race against the Russian space program, Gus Grissom almost drowning. And, of course Project Apollo took American astronauts to the moon.
But between them was Project Gemini, two-astronaut missions that served as the testing ground for the equipment that landed NASA astronauts on the moon: the backpacks for spacewalks, the testing of docking equipment in space, long-term missions, and studies on how long-term missions affected the human body. Usually the contributions of the Gemini missions have been summarized or simply highlighted, but this is Kluger's in-depth survey. You'll find out about the names behind the scenes along with the astronauts, like Gene Kranz and Christopher Kraft; why Scott Carpenter and John Glenn never flew again (Carpenter for the wrong reasons); and more dangerous events that were not made public at the time.
Easy to read, but a great narrative about this phase of the space program.
Louise Lloyd, who as a young girl foiled a kidnapper, and rescued other kidnapped girls like herself, returns in the sequel to Dead, Dead Girls. She's living happily with her paramour Rosa Maria Moreno, and working at the Dove, owned by Rosa Maria's brother Rafael. One night a young woman spends some time after hours drinking in the Dove with the trio, who all wake up next morning to find Nora dead. The police are quick to pin the crime on Rosa Maria. Louise is also trying to save the sanity of her suicidal sister Josie, who hasn't made peace with the death of her twin, but their father's harsh dismissal of Louise's lifestyle makes this difficult.
Helped by a reporter named Harriet Sinclair and a mysterious man named Fox Schoonmaker, Louise is determined to prove Rosa Maria innocent. But twisted forces are working behind the scenes.
I didn't recall the author's sentences being so choppy in the previous book. The narrative bothered me for this reason, and I didn't enjoy it as well as the first.
Shay Goldstein has always loved her career in public radio, but a new employee at Pacific Public Radio is giving her figurative hives. Dominic Yun is a rising, ambitious journalist who wants to use public radio to bring down corrupt politicians, and Shay's boss Kent O'Grady is all for giving him his way. Shay thinks there's room for human-interest stories, the kind public radio does so well.
After Shay and Dominic have a friendly rivalry on a live talk show, Kent suggests they create and star in a relationship talk show in which they pretend they are ex-lovers who broke apart but remain friends. Eager to keep a human-interest show, Shay agrees, although feigning a relationship offends both her and Dominic. To their surprise, the show is a hit, and PPR's ratings soar. And Shay and Dominic, in trying to reconcile their fake relationship (no one knows it's fake except for them, Kent, and a few others), start to grow closer—and closer.
I love Solomon's characters and settings. Another great offering.
By now, everyone has heard of "the Green Book," thanks to a PBS documentary, a BBC radio show, and a (highly fictionalized) film, but for years, the people who knew it best were the African-American families who benefited from it. The original editor was a mail carrier who hoped to aid Black families who needed—and later wanted—to travel, for, back in the 1930s, traveling for Black families/individuals was hazardous and difficult because they were banned from hotels, restaurants, and sometimes even from whole towns. Victor Green compiled a list of boarding houses, restaurants, barber/beauty shops, and other businesses friendly to African-American travelers, who, due to bigotry, usually traveled with their own food, water, and gasoline due to a lack of these services. The last edition of the book was, sadly and incredibly, published in 1961.
Hall and his companions travel to locations listed in the Green Book, and interview people who traveled or whose relatives traveled using the book. The stories they tell are revealing, sad, and infuriating. A complicated but compelling read.
As a kid, I loved a horse story called "Maudie Tom, Jockey," about a wild girl brought up by her lighthouse-keeper father. I became fascinated by the lives of lighthouse-keepers' families. Found this book at the Air Force Museum, a collection of stories told to the authors by children who grew up on lighthouses. These children played unsupervised on small islands, rowed boats to school, helped their fathers keep the lamp and the lighthouse working and clean, and endured inspections during which they were supposed to keep out of sight.
Modern children, especially, would be shocked at the freedom the kids had and the antics they got into. These are first-person narratives, so you get a feeling for how they talked in the past, and their feelings about growing up as "lighthouse kids."
Three adopted children of a wealthy baron return home after their father dies. Alan, Roger, and Caroline had an unconventional upbringing under a stern father, who was also their tutor, and a retiring, weak mother; their one respite: a playroom in a deserted tower where they played games of Camelot. Now, returning home, they discover their father was murdered, and has indicated in his will that only one child will inherit his estate: the one who solves his murder!
Set in the early 1920s, Huang sets up a mystery worthy of the classic era, with twists galore, and grim truths.
Ken Goddard, according to his author profile, was a former deputy sheriff, CSI police forensic scientist, and crime lab director. And boy, does it show.
This is the first of the CSI novels not written by Max Allen Collins, involving a multi-US Customs Agent shootout at a desert drug-bust. The team has to figure out who shot who and when, and how a prominent mobster some distance away was also shot at the same time as a mule deer. It's all about the procedure in this one, with minute details about the angles of the shots, the bullets used, the sophisticated hardware used. If you want to know how the crime lab works down to the details, check this one out.
This is an inexpensive little history book of "surprising and amusing tales." If you've read a lot of history, you probably know most of the trivia. Some interesting items of note: Henry Morton Stanley, who "found" David Livingstone, changed his name to cover the shocking thing he did. Alexander Hamilton never shot back.
A great bathroom or bedtime book, as the stories are told in two, or in a few cases one, pages each.
31 January 2026
Books Completed in January 2025
In this quirky fantasy, Quincy Flack, a boy who believes he's cursed, moves to a new village with his abusive aunt and uncle (think the Dursleys) and is befriended by Megan Mugwood, a plucky girl who lives with her widowed mother, experiencing hard times since her father was killed by a dragon. Next thing you know, they've met a wizard—he says he's not—who can "grow mountains."
This is rather oddly told, from the point of view of each new character that Quincy, Megan, and Pagfire encounter, rather than the other way around, so you really don't get a whole lot of character development. But it's a fun story to see how the coincidences work out.
I say I didn't inherit the Italian gene for gardening; however, I can't seem to resist these garden-related books by McDowell (Beatrix Potter's Gardening Life, The World of Laura Ingalls Wilder). Maybe because I would like to have a beautiful walled garden like in the Burnett book, but don't want to do the work!
If you like The Secret Garden, you'll probably enjoy this book, as it tells an abridged version of Burnett's life, and her special affection for gardens: wherever she lived, she always had one, even if it was a leased property. If you love gardens/gardening, then this is just the book for you, with beautiful black-and-white/color photographs of Burnett in her gardens or just of the flowers in her gardens. As a bonus, the volume includes three of Burnett's short writings: an essay about her gardens, an article about the "ha-ha," an English estate feature that separated gardens from parkland, and the story of the robin that inspired the robin character in The Secret Garden.
Vivian and Daniel Tanaka and their five-year-old daughter Aria were just normal people until Aria is bitten by an emotionally-disturbed werewolf. Since she can't go to a human-only school because of her unfortunate tendency to shift, sometimes in mid-play, they are forced to send her to the magical Grimoire Grammar school, where Vivian feels left out because she's only mortal, and tries to juggle Aria's magical curriculum and be part of a community. But someone seems to be targeting Aria as part of a prophecy that states the community will be destroyed.
Think PTA politics taking place at Hogwarts. The enjoyment in this book is the magical, yet mundane, universe that Rozakis builds around the Tanaka family, with gossiping, pushy parents.
These are 21 new stories from Lackey's world of Valdemar, about Heralds, Bards, Healers, and recurring characters like Nwah the kyree.
I'm still really not sure that I like the "themed" volumes that they've done the last few times. Shenanigans rather bored me, although Anything With Nothing was better. I have to say about this one, though, that I enjoyed how each writer addressed "feuds" differently, with different concepts (especially the first story, which had the creepy "full circle" vibe to it), and that there's really not a bad story in the bunch. We even get a Vanyel story where he pairs up with his aunt in a story that parallels Romeo and Juliet. I got a big kick out of Vanyel posing as "Jackomo, Prince of Minstrels and Minstrel to the Prince," revealing that Misty Lackey is a fan of the wonderful Danny Kaye film The Court Jester (Kaye poses as Giacomo, King of Jesters and Jester to the King).
Who hasn't heard of the Lowell Observatory? Certainly I'd heard about it, and thought Percival Lowell was a famous scientist.
He wasn't, just a rich Massachusetts dilettante from the famous Lowell family of cotton mill fame (Amy Lowell, the 19th century poet famous for "Patterns," was his sister). He went looking for novelty, including during trips abroad, where he encountered the charismatic Camille Flammarion, an astronomer who opened the minds of hundreds to the wonders of space. But the real obsession with Mars began when astronomers at the Lick Observatory spotted three lights in a triangular pattern and an Italian named Schiaparelli mapped the planet and identified lines he called "channels," translated as "canals" in English, clear evidence of life on Mars—and Martian obsession was on, with everyone from H.G. Wells to Nikola Tesla involved.
If you thought alien-mania started after Roswell, this will disabuse the notion. Illustrated with black-and-white pictures from the newspapers of the time.
This is a companion book to Ferguson's The Fake Mate (Nate, the doctor in that novel, is related to Hunter Barrett). I wasn't enchanted by that one, but this one was half price...another omegaverse novel, this about Tess Covington, who discovers she's a late-bloomer wolf-shifter who's also an omega about to go through her first heat. Her doctors tell her it would be dangerous to take heat suppressants before her first heat, so she's advised to keep away from alphas.
Unfortunately, her next client for redesign—she and her brothers are hoping for a home redesign show on HGTV—is Hunter Barrett, a small-town lodge owner, an alpha who's avoiding romance. The prospects for the redesign are good, since the lodge is charming but how will these two stay away from each other, especially after Tess starts going into full-blown heat?
I liked this one a little better. The lodge sounds like a really nifty place and Hunter's protectiveness of Tess was very sweet.
Labels:
children,
Christmas,
fantasy,
gardens,
history,
religion,
romance,
science,
series,
space,
young adult
03 January 2026
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