Thursday, November 24, 2022

Horse


I started the book on the day before Thanksgiving while recuperating at Sarah's home in Boston
after knee replacement.  Oh, my....Books such as this one don't come around every day.  I have always loved Geraldine Brooks.  I have read most if not all of her books.  But this book is really one of those books just meant for me!  I love it.  I am listening and knitting.  Here is a short bit of a review found on Amazon:

A discarded painting in a junk pile, a skeleton in an attic, and the greatest racehorse in American history: from these strands, a Pulitzer Prize winner braids a sweeping story of spirit, obsession, and injustice across American history

Kentucky, 1850. An enslaved groom named Jarret and a bay foal forge a bond of understanding that will carry the horse to record-setting victories across the South......

 

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

The Messy Lives of Book People

 


I needed a very mindless book for the first days home from total knee replacement.  And this fit the bill.  I did finish the book, but it was not my favorite.  The heroine is appealing.  The rest of the characters are of interest.  But the story line is a bit "trumped up"

Sunday, November 6, 2022

Undaunted Courage

 On my way home from the Cheer competition today in Parkersburg, I thought about the fact that I had crossed the Ohio River three times.  And the fact that Paige Cruz is going to speak to us this coming Saturday about the Lewis and Clark Expedition 

The first chapters are a biography of Merriweather Lewis.  He was a man from the gentry.  His father was a Revolutionary war hero who not only bought his own uniform but also paid for his own keep as a contribution to the cause.  Unfortunately his father died young after a visit home as he prepared to return to the Revolutionary War arena.  His horse drowned while trying to cross a river and he made it back home totally wet and cold and died of pneumonia soon after.

His early years were spent on a plantation that according to this book looked to the west through Rockfish gap on the east side of the Blue Ridge mountains in Albemarle County.  It is very interesting to me as my Morrison family lived in the general area.  Although the Morrisons had moved to Pittsylvania County by the time Merriweather Lewis was born.  But the author points out that the place of birth and early years of Meerriweathre Lewis was influenced by the fact that his home faced to the west the frontier and to the east with the privileges of education and gentility and that Lewis loved both.



In the first few chapters William Clark is named only briefly as the two men met while serving in the army of the young United States.  






Friday, November 4, 2022

The Lost book of Eleanor Dare


From the Amazon review:  What happened to the Lost Colony of Roanoke remains a mystery, but the women who descended from Eleanor Dare have long known that the truth lies in what she left behind: a message carved onto a large stone and the contents of her treasured commonplace book. Brought from England on Eleanor’s fateful voyage to the New World, her book was passed down through the fifteen generations of daughters who followed as they came of age.

I was not so captivated by the book that I read it quickly.  Probably my favorite part of the book was a fictional story of what happened to Eleanor Dare and her child, Virginia.  The author chooses to have her meet a man who is a spy for the English in St Augustine which is a Spanish settlement in the time of Eleanor's life.  He is a surgeon and is very likable.  They travel down the coast and marry once they reach St. Augustine.  The couple die in an epidemic but Virginia survives and is the second generation down from Eleanor.