Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Mount Vernon Love Story

Oh, my.  I have only read a few pages, but I can already tell that this will be my favorite book of the year!  It is easy to read.....I don't know how Mary Higgins Clark makes reading history so enticing.  And it is hard to say how much is imagination and how much is really based on documents and research.  But here is a good example of why I like the book so well.  The scene is the last day of George Washington's two terms as first president.  He decides to walk to the inauguration of John Adams.  And we get to share in his thoughts as he leaves office.  And then as he walks into the inauguration site the crowd begins to clap and his entrance is to a room full of people clapping to show their appreciation of a great man.  

I will write more as I read more......

 

The Book of Lost Things

Very Odd book.  When I finished the book I was not sure if I liked it or not.  However, I rarely finish a book that I really DON"T  like....

Basically John Connolly intertwines a Harry Potter kind of character with a plot where a child enters a land other than his own homeland.  And then the author throws in fairy tales that we all recognize, but often they have a twist.  Such as Snow White is FAT and unpleasant.....
 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Strangers in Time


 Fourteen-year-old Charlie Matters is up to no good, but for a very good reason. Without parents, peerage, or merit, ducking school but barred from actual work, he steals what he needs, living day-to-day until he’s old enough to enlist to fight the Germans. After barely surviving the Blitz, Charlie knows there’s no telling when a falling bomb might end his life.

Fifteen-year-old Molly Wakefield has just returned to a nearly unrecognizable London. One of millions of people to have been evacuated to the countryside via “Operation Pied Piper,” Molly has been away from her parents—from her home—for nearly five years. Her return, however, is not the homecoming she’d hoped for as she’s confronted by a devastating reality: neither of her parents are there, only her old nanny, Mrs. Pride.

Without guardians and stability, Charlie and Molly find an unexpected ally and protector in Ignatius Oliver, and solace at his book shop, The Book Keep, where "a book a day keeps the bombs away". Mourning the recent loss of his wife, Ignatius forms a kinship with both children, and in each other—over the course of the greatest armed conflict the world had ever seen—they rediscover the spirit of family each has lost.

The above is audible's synopsis.  This was not a great book.  But I did finish it and I don't finish books that I don't like.  An easy read....it does give one a good picture of the bombs that London endured during WWII.