Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Book Talk: New Authors, Yay!

Summer is upon us, and that means that my children and I need books. Reading is a large part of our entertainment, and we have a lot more time for it now.

I think I've mentioned this before, but the nearest libraries to us are 90 miles one way. We go to different cities for different things, so we can't reliably check out and return books to the same one on our infrequent errand runs. And it's usually A. who does those errand runs, so the rest of us wouldn't have a chance to get to the library anyway.

Our only local options are the once-a-month bookmobile and a books by mail program. Neither of these have a great selection of books. At least, not that we want to read.

So, I buy books. Not the cheapest option, even buying used, but thems the breaks.

This is why when I find an author that we like, I buy multiple books by that author. It's a nice feeling to buy a book knowing we're going to like it, rather than just crossing my fingers.

Recently, I have found two authors we like. This is exciting. And I'm going to share them with you. Of course.


There they are.

Okay, I must admit that the Katherine Center books are really just for me. Not that no one else is allowed to read them, but they are most definitely books written for women.

Katherine Center was recommended on a book-related blog I read, and so I looked up her books. As I always do, I read the sample on the Amazon listing to see what the writing was like. Ninety percent of the time, that sample is enough for me to know if it's not worth my time.

This was. I read it in one day. They are somewhat fluffy books, but not stupid. I suppose I like my story lines to be relatively unchallenging, but the writing to be at least somewhat intelligent. Also, I like happy endings.

These books check those boxes for me. There's a few curse words, but nothing too inappropriate otherwise, and she is very good at creating real, sympathetic characters. All of the main characters have some pretty major challenges, but nothing that makes me so sad I can't read them. I have that problem with some other books. If it's too heavy, I just can't.

I've read two of her books so far and bought, um, five more.

It's a long summer, okay?

Next! Howard Frank Mosher. I do not remember how I stumbled upon this author, but I originally bought one of his books for the older boys. The author grew up in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom--which is on the Canadian border, like we used to be--and as far as I can tell sets his books exclusively there. They are essentially character sketches of the sort of people who live in that remote place, as well as an ode to a vanished way of life.

Although I bought the first book for the boys, I read it, too. All of us liked it so much I bought a few more. They are funny, and touching, and very, very real. They remind me a lot of Richard Russo, who writes novels about small-town upstate New York and pretty much nails the people.

This is rarer than you might think, as most authors seem to be urban and that is reflected in their books.

So those are my two most recent discoveries and recommendations.

Tell me: What are you reading right now? Anything you'd recommend?

18 comments:

  1. Currently reading Tom Sawyer with my 12 year old, one chapter at a time. Despite taking a class in Mark Twain in graduate school, I've never read it. I think my professor focused on the short stories and Huck Finn instead.

    I just finished re reading several Chaim Potok books and am now ready for more lighthearted fare. Waiting on Freaky Friday and A Billion For Boris by Mary Rodgers (intra library loans), and meantime I'm dipping into her biography, "Shy". She was the daughter of Rodgers, of Rodgers and Hammerstein fame, and apparently her dad was a real peach. *sarcasm*.

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  2. WOODSWOMAN:Living Alone in the Wilderness - Anne LaBastille

    Where do you get best prices on your books?
    If I find this cookbook I have already and think your family would love, I will send it to you all.The one I told you about that has how to cook possum/raccoon things like that and all basic best recipes.

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  3. It is on Alibris for 1.89 readable condition shipped from Phoenix Az. maybe your mom/dad could pick it up for you and or it is close to you for shipping cost.

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  4. The War That Saved My Life by
    Kimberly Brubaker Bradley

    This was recommended on a blog and is a young adult book but very powerful. The author really understands how abused kids are afraid to learn another way of doing things because some of their maladaptive behaviors saved their lives when they were being mistreated. It is set in WWII and quite affecting, even for adults. It is sad but very hopeful at the same time. There are two books in the set, but this first one is the best of the two and worth a read. Your kids may enjoy it...I read it to our niece, who could have rad it herself but enjoyed winter evenings of being read to while drinking hot chocolate (so it might have been the drink and not the book that thrilled her!)

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  5. For mysteries set in a remote place, City under One Roof and Village in the Dark by Iris Yamashita. Set in Alaska. These are the first new books I've been able to finish in a while. My brain's just not in the mood for new authors. Reading some Terry Pratchett Discworld (Mort and Reaper Man, Tiffany Aching series, The Amazing Maurice... good choices for tweens and teens) which my sons like too. Rereading the Murderbot Diaries. (Very good but lots of swearing and other issues you might not want young teen to read, but really engrossing. Great pacing. Deep thoughts about what is a person.)
    Going to make sons read the Screwtape Letters this summer, and maybe East of Eden.
    My town has a brand new library (after months of reduced/no service while they moved), so I expect we'll be visiting quite frequently this summer.

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  6. samcarter: My boys agreed they like Huck Finn better, but it's best to start with Tom Sawyer. I haven't re-read any Chaim Potok books as an adult. That would be an interesting experiment. I expect they would hit different now.

    G.P.: I read Woodswoman awhile ago. I don't remember it in detail, but I do remember liking it. I just buy the used books on Amazon, typically.

    mbmom11: Both Screwtape Letters and Steinbeck in one summer? That's a heavy summer. :-)

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  7. I like the Deborah Knott series by Margaret Maron. The title of the first book is Southern Discomfort.

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  8. The past 2 or 3 weeks have been too crazy for reading on my part, but I'm hoping soon to pick up Tom Sawyer again. Like samcarter, I had read Huckleberry Finn in college, but only a couple of chapters in, I'm fairly sure this will be my next fiction read-aloud with the kids.

    My current read-aloud with the kids is the third book in the Luck Uglies series by Paul Durham.

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  9. Julia Phillips' DISAPPEARING EARTH is good; she has a new book out that I haven't read. If one likes classics, one cannot go wrong with George Eliot. Excellent mystery--Kate Quinn's The Rose Code. And I'm reading a non-fiction that I will send out: The Last Pony Express Ride by Will Grant (2023). David Grann for non-fiction that is well-researched but easy to read. MIL

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  10. I bought James by Percival Everett the other day but haven't read it yet. It's getting much praise from those who have! It's the story of and by Jim who accompanies Huck on his travels. Quite a different point of view! Mary in MN

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  11. Have you considered Kindles all around? This seems like a major investment at about $100 a device, but they do go on sale, and following that expenditure, you can utilize the Libby app and library cards to get books for free with no worries about having to physically return to the library to return the book. Many libraries have most of their catalogs available through Libby. Karen. would be able to tell you a lot more about it as that's how her children do much (or all) of their reading.
    --Karen.'s sister

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  12. Love mysteries so thanks for those suggestions!

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  13. I just finished the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon for the third time. Now I am reading A Very Private School by Charles Spencer and Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

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  14. Yeah, we are not nearly as far from a library as you are, but a Kindle reader, Libby and a library card are lifesavers. My kids read hundreds of books a year. And I know it's not nearly the tactile experience that reading a paper book is, but it's also awesome in its own way.

    Of all the criticisms of reading via Kindle vs paper book that I've seen, the one that I've had a hardest time reconciling is the idea of remembering what you've read. I could not do research on a Kindle. Turning back pages and finding the right spot for reference is quite difficult. But reading for pleasure, no big deal. I myself have read a zillion fiction books that I don't remember, both as books and as ebooks. But the genuinely memorable ones, I remember either way. "Where the Crawdads Sing" still stands out to me, and I read it on Kindle at least three years ago.

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    1. I agree about preferring physical books, especially for research. But you can add both bookmarks and notes to Kindle books. So if you were doing research, these tools might actually improve that. -Tarynkay

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  15. Seems as though your family prefers physical books, but some library systems have e-books and audiobooks available to borrow for free through an app with your library card. I’m awaiting the newest novel in Louise Penny’s Inspector Gamach series which is set in a fictitious small town called Three Pines in Canada. Currently, I’m reading a mystery set in India called The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey.

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  16. Due to COVID when the libraries were closed and now due to bad eyes, I read exclusively on my Kindle. I'm not sure if that's feasible - number of devices you have or reliable Wi-Fi in your area but I can download up to 5 books at a time on my Kindle. I currently have over 200 on my wishlist. I know a paper copy brings a certain kind of joy and even nostalgia but I can only read large print and there so few of those at any library. Just a thought - the read only Kindles are very inexpensive compared to the $150 I spent for mine that can do anything a regular tablet can.

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  17. Wanted to add that there have times when I didn't have WiFi at home and I would go somewhere that did have WiFi and I would download 5 books to last me a while. It takes less than one minute to download each and then they are there as long as I have power. Fwiw, I read 100 books on average each year.

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