Friday, January 29, 2021

RIP Sharon Kay Penman

I just heard the awful news that historical novelist Sharon Kay Penman passed away on January 22, 2021 from pneumonia. I have read every one of her books and loved them all.  She will be sorely missed.  Ms. Penman published her first book in 1982 and her last novel was published last year. Her stories took place in the 12th and 13th centuries and were meticulously researched. The medieval period is my favorite era so I am going to miss her greatly.  She was 75.

Book of the Month for January, 2021

My favorite book this month is The Midnight Library.  It made me think hard about what I want most in life and the need to be active in trying to obtain it. Keeping decisions on hold because you can't decide what to do is fatal to a good life.  The Midnight Library is a fable about being inbetween life and death. There are an infinite number of shelves inside the library where every book is a chance to live your life differently.  All you need to do is change the decisions you made in life so that you have no regrets.

Saturday, January 9, 2021

14th Annual Graphic Novel/Manga Reading Challenge Sign-Up

I got hooked on comics about 6 years ago and just love this challenge. Of course, I will be rejoining it in 2021. It was unclear whether the challenge would continue until now. We post our reviews on a private Facebook group that was formed 2 years ago. The administrator never said if she would keep it going but 2021 posts are already being published there. I will rejoin the challenge at a 12 book level. While I read much more last year, I never know if I will find a book that I am interested in. I tend to read graphic novels on serious topics.

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

A Yellow House


It took me quite awhile to become interested in A Yellow House.  I did not know what the book was about before I began reading and could not see any plot.  All I saw was a whiny child protagonist with no friends who hated her life. After realizing that the book was about migrant domestic workers I became more interested in the story.  I believe, however, that the first third of the book could have been paced more quickly.

The publisher's summary:

"Ten-year-old Singaporean Maya is lonely:  her grandmother is dead, her mother is focused on her career and her best friend has become a bully.  When Aunty M, a domestic worker from Indonesia, joins the family to take care of Maya and her baby sister, Maya is ready to hate her. Aunty M smiles a lot, but says little.  However, after Aunty M rescues a fellow maid living in the same building and beaten by her employer, Maya discovers a side of Singapore hitherto unknown to her.  She and Aunty M grow closer as they meet more and more women in need. What will happen when Mama finds out about Maya and Aunty M's growing involvement with the aunties?  Will Maya lose Aunty M too?  After all, Mama did say she hates busybodies. This poignant coming-of-age story, told in the voice of the inquisitive Maya, explores the plight of migrant domestic workers in Singapore and the relationships they form with the families they work for."

Women will enjoy reading this sisterhood novel.  Almost all of the characters are female. Maya's father is the only man in the book and his role is limited. Maya's interest in the domestic workers was a hard sell for me. At first, I thought she was only interested in their stories because she was bored and had nothing else to do. Later it becomes clear that she is beginning to form opinions about the world. 

I am unsure what to think about the writing. In the beginning of the story many characters are being introduced with no serious connection with Maya. There wasn't much plot movement but this is a character driven novel. Unfortunately, that was not evident to me until the midway point and it affected my view of the book.  I did, however, expect a mystery of some sort to be solved. There is no mystery here. The author's intention in writing this novel was to highlight the lives of the workers.  Her bio states that she grew up as an expat child in Asia with migrant domestic workers hired to take care of her.  She did not realize at the time that these women left their home countries to work for her family.  Later in life she asked why and in 2012 she joined a charity that supports these workers in Singapore.  The stories that she heard were the inspiration for this book.  

3 out of 5 stars.

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

The Unlikely Adventures of the Shergil Sisters

I loved author Balli Kaur Jaswal's Erotic Stories for Punjabi Women. Ms. Jaswal is now one of my favorite authors.  This Adventures book has more of a suspenseful plot than Erotic Stories and follows the three Shergill sisters as they navigate a trip to India together.

British sisters Rajni, Jezmeen, and Shirina must take a trip to their homeland to satisfy the wishes of their recently deceased mother. Their mother wants her ashes to be disbursed at the Golden Temple in Amritsar. Before her death she wrote down a daily itinerary of what she wanted her daughters to do when they arrived in India.  The sisters are at odds with each other and always have been. Rajni is the oldest and has previously been on a pilgrimage to India with her mother. However, she had vowed to herself that she would never return there.  Jezmeen is a struggling actress and cannot afford to spend time traveling as she has an appointment for an important audition for a part that could catapult her to stardom. Shirina is married but is always pressured by her in laws to do something she does not want to do. They have given her an assignment to do while she is in India. The question is whether she will stand up for herself or cater to their wishes once more.

The theme of the story is, obviously, family, including what it means to be a second generation immigrant. Current topics such as assisted suicide are also addressed. There is another important topic discussed that relates solely to Shirina but I don't want to be a spoiler. 

I highly recommend this funny and heartwarming story, particularly for women, as the bonds of sisterhood are what this book is all about.

5 out of 5 stars.

Monday, January 4, 2021

The Girls in the Snow

The Girls in the Snow is the first book in a new detective series featuring FBI agent Nikki Hunt as the detective.  The second book in the series will be published next month and I am looking forward to getting a copy of it as this novel was fantastic.  This tight psychological thriller begins in 1995 with Nikki coming home from a high school party and finding her murdered parents in their Stillwater, MN home. Fast forward 20 years and Nikki is a FBI agent who has been dispatched back to Stillwater to investigate the deaths of two girls.  There are two mysteries to be solved in the book. The first one is who killed the girls. The second mystery deals with whether the right person was convicted and jailed for killing Nikki's parents.


The Nikki Hunt character is mysterious and makes a great protagonist for a series. Her job as a detective in the FBI's Behavior Analysis Unit will make a great backdrop to the investigations that she will be involved with in the future.  In addition, being familiar with violent crime in her personal life is always going to be an issue for her. I expect that this family history is going to be a part of all the investigations that she heads in future books. 

The weather is the main setting in the novel. The ice cold temperatures in Minnesota during winter works well with finding two dead girls whose bodies were staged by the killer frozen in the snow. Winter is what comes to people's minds when they think of Minnesota so this was a bonus for the setting. 

Nikki's reunions with friends and neighbors help move the plot along.  For example, her former boyfriend John is a local police officer who is supposedly assisting her but there is a hint that he is hiding something. It seems that everyone in Stillwater is hiding something, which only adds to the suspense.

The advertisement for the book says that it is unputdownable. I agree with that assessment. I read it in one sitting. One Perfect Grave is the next book in the series. It will be published on February 25, 2021 and I have already pre-ordered a copy. 

5 out of 5 stars.

Sunday, January 3, 2021

The Midnight Library

The Midnight Library is the most thought provoking book I have ever read. The story concerns the decisions every person makes in their life and how each decision impacts the outcome of your life. Written as a mystery, main character Nora Seed wants to die. She loses her job, her cat dies, her boyfriend leaves her, she loses her one and only piano student and the elderly neighbor she has been assisting no longer needs her help.  She finds all these things out in the span of a day. 

Nora is planning to kill herself but while she is considering suicide she is taken to a new plain where there is a library with an infinite number of bookshelves filled with an infinite number of green books and the prospect of living an infinite number of lives. Then she sees a woman at a desk, her elementary school librarian Mrs. Elm.  Mrs. Elm explains that Nora is neither alive nor dead. She is inbetween, perhaps in a coma. Nora is told that each book is a life that she can have. All she has to do is pick a book and she will begin living the story in the book.  If Nora has doubts about the life, she will automatically return to the library and can select another book. The library gives Nora the opportunity to work out her regrets in her life. However, there is a catch. These opportunities will stop at some point. Neither Mrs. Elm nor Nora won't know when that time frame is up. It is possible that Nora will lose the opportunity to be in the library and subsequently die if she does not choose a life to live before that time comes to an end. It's a risk Nora must take.

The Midnight Library shows that a stagnant life is no life. Nora had many options to choose for herself. She could have been a glaciologist, Olympic swimmer, rock star, pub owner, wife and mother, or a philosopher. Nora was indecisive and couldn't pick which goal to pursue. So, she did nothing. As one character told Nora, she has life fright.  It is worth considering what makes your life worth living and which life dreams are what you really want.