Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday: The Break In


Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released title I can't wait to read.




This week's pick: The Break In by Katherine Faulkner

Due out: August 26, 2025


Synopsis taken from Amazon:


After killing an intruder in self-defense, a wealthy London mother must unravel a terrifying mystery filled with twists and turns, from the author of the “deliciously twisted thriller” (PeopleThe Other Mothers.

Alice, a professional mother of one, is hosting a playdate with friends at her upscale London home when a disturbed man breaks in. With her child in the next room, Alice panics and kills him—an act later ruled to have been in self-defense.

Everyone tries to encourage Alice to move on with her life—but with strange comments appearing online, a mysterious phone call telling her all is not as it seems, and her husband, nanny, and friends behaving strangely, Alice finds herself drawn to the mystery of who her intruder really was. As she digs deeper, she discovers a trail of dark secrets that spiral closer to home than she ever could have imagined.

Monday, June 16, 2025

NonFiction Preview: Don't Call It a Comeback


 

I love adding new nonfiction to my TBR.  Here's a title coming out this fall I can't wait to read:




Don't Call It A Comeback: What Happened When I Stopped Chasing PRs and Started Chasing Happiness by Keira D'Amato

Due out September 9, 2025


Synopsis taken from Amazon:

"Don't Call It a Comeback is fireworks in a crowded field of athlete memoirs. With a knack for hilariously vulnerable storytelling, Keira unspools a fascinating tale of her unconventional running career." Shelby Van Pelt, New York Times bestselling author of Remarkably Bright Creatures

A victorious tale of coming back in middle age to topple marathon records, from the running world's most beloved underdog, mom of two, and woman voted "most fun follow" on Strava.

Keira D’Amato was an all-American runner who used to chase success. But after being injured in her early twenties, she assumed her running career was over, and settled into life as a military spouse and mother of two young children. In her early thirties, she found herself overweight, out of shape, and battling postpartum depression. She knew that improving her fitness would make her feel better, and told herself to just get out and run ninety seconds, down her street and back. To her dismay, she couldn’t do it. But two days later she tried again. And six years after that, she broke the American women’s record in the marathon at the age of thirty-seven.

Keira has created a buzz in the world of professional athletics by taking the road less traveled. The normal trajectory for an elite female athlete has been to focus on sport first, then get a "real" job, and finally, have a family. Keira upended that: she married her high school sweetheart, had two babies in quick succession, began her career in real estate―and only then returned to running. But it’s not just her relatable background that makes Keira so popular amongst fellow runners. We assume that to be successful, one must be serious and humorless, with an all-or-nothing approach to ambition. But what if the opposite were true―that cultivating more fun, and more variety in your life could actually 
help you reach your biggest goals?

At an age when most athletes consider retirement, Keira is just getting started. And she’s determined to share the secrets of her success to help readers to start chasing their own happiness, to dream a big, scary dream, and ultimately to find their way back to themselves.


Monday Mini-Reviews

 I've had such a good week of reading.  The quality of the books I've picked up has been excellent.  I have been devouring books, which is great, but I am sure that will slow down once I start in on a few other projects.




Last week I dropped off some books for my cousin's twin boys.  Listening to them talk, enjoy some stories, eat supper....two and a half year olds are delightful.  I think I could visit them every day - it would certainly be hard to be in a bad mood around them.  

Two of my favorites this past week:



A Family Matter by Claire Lynch is not only a Book of the Month selection but also a Jenna Bush Hager book club pick - and it is fantastic.  At just over 200 pages, this was a one-sit read for me, and I loved every page.  Moving between the present day and the early 80s, we meet Heron who raised his daughter Maggie by himself.  In the 1980s, Maggie was just a little girl and has no memories of her mother, Dawn, who left the family.  Readers see Dawn's perspective as well as Maggie's as their stories are revealed.  The writing in this novel is so good - spare, yet enough.  I can't wait to talk about this one with friends.




Audrey Ingram's The Summer We Ran has been all over Instagram. It's also a Book of the Month pick for June.  This was also a fast read, and easy to get into.  Another book that moved between time frames, we see Grant and Tess as teenagers who fall in love despite coming from different backgrounds.  Thirty years later, Tess and Grant are political opponents, battling for the governorship of Virginia.  They've kept their past a secret, until a photo from long ago surfaces and the two must connect with each other and come to terms with what happened that ended their love affair.

I've still got a few more from the past week that are worth sharing and I'll be picking up another new book to start before bed tonight.   What else do I need to add to my TBR?

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Friday Five : Halfway Through The Month

 It seems amazing that school has been out for just one week.  I worked at school all week - different building, packing up a library for a move - and will start summer school on Monday.

I have been reading a lot.  And not getting a lot of other stuff done - like the house cleaning projects I started a bit ago that are all only partially completed.  

Here are the things I found to share this Friday.  Enjoy!




1.  Novelty Print Split Neck Blouse




2.  Denim Jacket




3.  Mixed Metal Interlock Necklace





4.  The Jacie Poplin Printed Knee-Length Skirt by Maeve




5.  Ritchie Short Sleeve Sweat




6.  Finley Tank





7.  Bend Decon Slip On





8.  Book Club Pink Graphic Sweatshirt





9.  Neelum Tote




10. City Nights Muscle Tank




That's it for me this week.  What's caught your eye?

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

On Topic: Space

 

I was the kid who always had a book open under my desk, reading a novel while my teacher taught us a lesson.  So it is no surprise that I learned nothing about space, the stars, or the various missions in the space race.  

As an adult this is a topic I find fascinating, and I've read both fiction and nonfiction books on the topic of space. 

Taylor Jenkins Reid's book Atmosphere is THE BOOK of summer, and I devoured it over the weekend.





It's the 1980s and Joan Goodwin has been accepted into NASA's shuttle program.  Women are finally being included in a field previously reserved for men.  While there's a little suspense in this novel, there is also a lot of character development. We watch Joan struggle to find who she really is and what she wants, work through a complex relationship with her sister, Barbara, and experience uncomplicated joy when she's with her niece, Frances.  Joan hasn't chosen an easy path professionally or personally, and as the novel unfolds we understand Joan's choices.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book.  It might not be my favorite TJR, but she consistently delivers enjoyable unputdownable fiction and this one lived up to the hype.

And if you are in the mood for a few more books about space/astronauts/the space race, here are ten more titles (a combination of fiction and nonfiction) for you to enjoy.




1.  The Six: The Untold Story of America's First Women Astronauts by Loren Grush

2.  The Astronauts Wives Club by Lily Koppel

3.  The New Guys by Meredith Bagby

4.  The Martian by Andy Weir

5. Challenger by Adam Higginbotham

6.  October Sky by Homer Hickam

7.  Rocket Men by Robert Kurson

8. Packing For Mars by Mary Roach

9. Shoot For The Moon by James Donovan

10. The Time It Takes to Fall by Margaret Lazarus Dean

Monday, June 9, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday: The Secret Book Society

 



This week's pick: The Secret Book Society by Madeline Martin

Due out: August 26, 2025




Synopsis taken from Amazon:


A captivating new historical novel from Madeline Martin, set in Victorian London about a forbidden book club, dangerous secrets and the women who dare to break free.

You are cordially invited to the Secret Book Society…

London, 1885: Trapped by oppressive marriages and societal expectations, three women receive a mysterious invitation to an afternoon tea at the home of the reclusive Lady Duxbury. Beneath the genteel facade of the gathering lies a secret book club—a sanctuary where they can discover freedom, sisterhood and the courage to rewrite their stories.

Eleanor Clarke, a devoted mother suffocating under the tyranny of her husband. Rose Wharton, a transplanted American dollar princess struggling to fit the mold of an aristocratic wife. Lavinia Cavendish, an artistic young woman haunted by a dangerous family secret. All are drawn to the enigmatic Lady Duxbury, a thrice-widowed countess whose husbands’ untimely deaths have sparked whispers of murder.

As the women form deep, heartwarming friendships, they uncover secrets about their marriages, their pasts and the risks they face. Their courage is their only weapon in the oppressive world that has kept them silent, but when secrets are deadly, one misstep could cost them everything.

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Waiting on Wednesday: Our Last Vineyard Summer




Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature where I highlight a soon to be released novel I can't wait to read.




This week's pick: Our Last Vineyard Summer by Brooke Lea Foster

Due out: July 1, 2025


Synopsis taken from Amazon:

From the “great storyteller” (Natalie Jenner, author of The Jane Austen Society) Brooke Lea Foster, a captivating new novel set in 1965 and 1978 about a graduate student who returns with her sisters to their family’s summer home on Martha’s Vineyard and begins to unravel old family secrets.

After suffering through her first year of graduate school at Columbia following her senator father’s death, Betsy Whiting is hoping to spend the summer with her boyfriend…and hopefully end the summer as his fiancée. Instead, her mother—a longtime feminist and leader in the women’s movement—calls Betsy and her sisters back home to Martha’s Vineyard, announcing that they need to sell their beloved summer house to pay off their father’s debts.

When Betsy arrives on the island a week later, she must reckon with her strained familial relationships, a long-ago forbidden romance, and the complicated legacy of her parents, who divided the family even as they did good for the world.

Following a dual timeline between 1965 and 1978, and filled with the vibrant, sunlit nostalgia of the cherished New England vacation setting, 
Our Last Vineyard Summerpoignantly captures two generations of women navigating love, loss, and womanhood while trying to find the courage to stand up for what they believe in—and the strength to decide if the home they once loved is worth saving.

Non-Fiction Tuesday: Coming Soon

 


I have always loved books about words.  Just this past weekend, when looking through picture books, I pulled out several titles that I had initially intended to take to Goodwill, but ultimately couldn't part with because I wanted to use them with groups of students.  




Antics by Cathi Hepworth is a book I've had since I started teaching (and at this point that is a long time ago).  I can easily see challenging students to find words with "ant" in them: romantic, antler, lantern...you get the idea.  So, I returned this book to the pile of books I am still keeping around.

And then, this morning, while I was driving to work I listed to Thoughts From A Page, one of my favorite bookish podcasts.  Cindy just received a copy of this book, which is publishing in August.  And once I heard the description, I ordered it for myself.  


Even better, there is a podcast A Way With Words, hosted by Martha Barnette, that is now on my radar.  





Synopsis taken from Amazon:


With warmth, a popular radio and podcast host shares her love of language, weaving together linguistic history, regional phrases, the hidden poetry in etymologies, new words, and stories from her life and time on the air

Martha Barnette has spent two decades as the co-host of 
A Way with Words, lauded by Mary Norris in The New Yorker as “a virtual treasure house” and “‘Car Talk’ for Lexiphiles.” Over that time, she’s developed a keen sense of what fascinates people about language. They are curious about etymology and revel in slang, are surprised by regional vocabulary and celebrate linguistic diversity. Idioms both puzzle and delight word lovers, and they are eager to share family neologisms and that weird phrase Grandma always used to say.

In 
Friends with Words, Barnette weaves together all these strands in a clear, informative, highly entertaining exploration of language. Chock-full of anecdotes, humorous asides, new words, trivia, and other lexicological delights, Friends with Words also tells Barnette’s story—from her Appalachian roots through her study of Ancient Greek, and on to the making of a beloved and enduring show. Friends with Words is an expert, good-humored, joyful book.


Coming out on August 5, I can't wait to get my hands on it.

Monday Mini-Reviews: Summer Reading

 

I look forward to summer reading every year.  There is nothing like a good beach read - and there are several authors that routinely publish each year and I can't wait to get a hold of their books every spring.


I started my summer reading a little early this year and have already enjoyed a couple of my must-read authors. And to be fair, the days of my lounging at the pool while my kids played are a thing of the past. So I don't need beach reads exclusively at the pool or during the summer.  I enjoy a good book any time of the year.






Great Big Beautiful Life is Emily Henry's latest book - and it's another enjoyable read.  I don't know that I want to rank any of Henry's books; they are all good.  This one weaves some suspense in, and although it did take me a while to get into it, I did truly enjoy it. Henry's books seem to always center around literary/book related characters and that is no different in this one.  Alice and Hayden are competing to write the biography of former tabloid princess Margaret Ives who has been out of the public eye for decades. Of course there is an attraction between the two of them, and since this is rom-com, you can guess where things will end up.




Next up was The Love Haters by Katherine Center.  I've loved Katherine Center since her very first novel was published, and I continue to read everything she's written.  I do love her earlier works better than her newer ones - I feel like this happens often when an author becomes popular and starts publishing books at a more rapid pace.  Katie is being sent to profile Tom "Hutch" Hutcheson, a Coast Guard rescue swimmer.  She either takes this assignment (despite not being able to swim) or be laid off.  Katie meets Hutch, but the relationship is a love/hate from the very beginning.  The Key West setting was one I was excited about, having just been there for spring break myself, and I enjoyed the usual love/hate trope.  This is a perfect pick to throw in your beach bag.





Summer In The City by Alex Aster ended up being a fun surprise.  This is Aster's debut adult novel, and I totally loved reading it.  Elle is a screenwriter with writers block.  So, when her sister asks her to house-sit in New York City, Elle takes her up on the offer. All is good until she realizes that her next door neighbor is tech billionaire Parker Warren, who Elle hooked up with in a stairwell two years ago.  The two enter an agreement that they will date for the summer - as a diversion for both of them as they face career pressures. Summer ends, but does that have to mean the end of their relationship? 


Three winners to start out my summer reading season.  I have several others lined up as well, and can't wait to get started on my summer break.

Friday, May 30, 2025

Friday Five: Heading Into June

I've been confused all week about which day it was.  Apparently the Memorial Day holiday threw me off, and work has been crazy busy with collecting chromebooks and library books.  I still have a full week left before the 2024-25 school year is over.  

The weather has been cold, and I am looking forward to some sunshine and heat in the near future.  

Here are this week's picks:






1.  Crochet Short Sleeve Cardigan





2.  Varsity Muscle Top



3.  Cotton Cable Cardigan




4.  Linen Blend Collared Top




5.  Straw Market Tote




6.  We The Free Asher Pullover




7.  Wide Legged Crop Jeans




8.  Janet Top





9.  Just A Thought Navy Blue Rickrack Dress




10.  A Body In The Snow on Max - Big Sister has been asking her sisters to watch this for a while.  I've added it to my TBW list as well.  





That's it for me this week.  What's caught your eye?