Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Husbands and Lovers: A Novel by Beatriz Williams

 

 Husbands and Lovers: A Novel by Beatriz Williams. Ballantine Books, 2024. Adult fiction.

Single woman Mallory's life has complications. Her young teen son needs kidney dialysis. Her old flame has become a rock star. Her mother apparently was adopted from a Catholic convent in Ireland. Williams begins all of these together in several captivating New England summers circa 2022. The chapters alternate between Mallory's story and that of her mother and grandmother in the 1950's and before. Strong women, family ties, espionage, beach love, privilege and class; all are tied up with ribbons. Just keep reading as the trip is well worth the journey!  

My one quibble in the book is that the Gardner Museum in Boston is misspelled on page 120 and FOUR times on page 204. The editors are listed by name in the author notes at the end. You know who you are!


Tuesday, July 30, 2024

The Cliffs: A Novel by J. Courtney Sullivan

 

 The Cliffs: A Novel by J. Courtney Sullivan. Alfred A. Knopf, 2024. Adult fiction. 

    Jane has grown up in Maine and had a turbulent childhood. Now, as an adult, she returns home. The little town is much the same, but Jane has changed. High up on a hill was a lavender house that had been abandoned and in which Jane liked to explore as a girl. Now it is the rather palatial estate of Genevieve and her family. Jane has pursued a career in which the past and relics from other times are important. 

Sullivan has done a masterful job of melding the present and the past in this novel. Jane's mother and grandmother are presented as well as their neighbors over the years. None of the women know the whole story of the house on the hill, but Sullivan puts all the clues together for us as readers to understand. If you like Maine, you will definitely want to put this novel in your stack to read this summer!


Monday, July 22, 2024

The Glass Maker: A Novel by Tracy Chevalier

 

  
 The Glass Maker: A Novel by Tracy Chevalier. Viking, 2024. Adult Fiction. Historical Fiction.

This creative novel begins in 1486 and ends in 2019 with the same characters who have aged a little, but not a lot. Its interesting to see how the characters have adapted to the different time periods and Chevalier does a great job of telling how the world itself has changed each time the time changes for the characters..

The Rosso family are glass makers in Murano near Venice. The brothers make the glass while the eldest sister, Orsola Rosso, works on beads, considered lesser work by the men. But, it is Orsola who is able to feed the family in hard times.  Loves, deaths, plagues, the enticements of Venice all crowd the narrative. It is a fascinating look at glass over the ages and the long tradition of glass making on the island of Murano.


Wednesday, July 17, 2024

The Story of Charlotte's Web by Michael Sims

 

 The Story of Charlotte's Web: E.B.White's Eccentric Life in Nature and the Birth of an American Classic. Walker and Company, 2011. Adult nonfiction.

In this novel, author Michael Sims does a masterful job of telling about the life of author E.B. White and what led him to life in New York City, to his wife, and always back to his farm in Maine. Sims writes in an eloquent manner and his descriptions are apt and  lush. Readers can almost hear the traffic sounds in the city and the silence in the country. The interviews, manuscripts, newspaper accounts, magazine articles, and other resource materials are carefully documented at the end. A bibliography for further reading is provided. His work showing how White worked and lived adds much for readers to pore over and enjoy.

E.B. White grew up on a farm. He knew the animals and the daily routine. He felt more at ease with animals than with people. His glorious book, Charlotte's Web, tells of life on a farm and the animals and people who live there. Often noted as a tale for all ages, the novel is one of friendship, greed, family, and great wisdom. If you have never read it, do it now.


Wednesday, July 3, 2024

 

 The Mona Lisa Vanishes by Nicolas Day. Illustrated by Brett Helquist. Random House Studio, 2023. All ages, but published as a children's chapter book.

You're heard this before, but this is probably the best book I have read all year. I do love a good art heist book as readers of this blog are aware. But, Nicholas Day has created a fascinating look at da Vinci era Florence, the early 1900's in Paris, the connection Pablo Picasso had to a theft of the Mona Lisa from The Louvre, and the creation of police work involving finger printing. And, he does it with humor and complete bibliography and references! The only thing missing is an actual photograph of the painting herself...and photos of the Gainsborough stolen portrait and the statues Picasso used to paint ears! The book may finally receive the readership due it since it has been placed on the Texas Lone Star book list for middle grades.