Thursday, June 15, 2023

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese

Well, Tuesday marked the end of the 22-23 school year and the wrap on New Title Tuesday.  17 new books in 18 weeks for the WHHS Library!  Of course, this one won't be added to the collection until we return to school as I didn't start it until teachers were let out.  

This HEFTY work was recommended to me by a friend.  I mean it's BIG.  It's 770+ pages.  I read this sporadically over the past three days between my annual cleaning, as Ms. Marcella calls it "The Annual Cleaning Rampage".  

I have a mixed review.  The story begins in 1900 on the West Coast of India, in a Christian village called Parambil. A 12 year old is married off to a wealthy 40 year old widower, more to be a caretaker to his toddler son.  Eventually she grows to love her husband and they have two more children.  However, there is something of a curse on the family that each generation loses someone to drowning.  As time passes, new British settlers arrive, along with doctors and nurses.  The caste system is alive and well, even in the Christian areas, and the systemic classist differences in treatment are evident.  The story continues over 80ish years. 

Now, I absolutely LOVED the parts of the book set in Parambil.  Our young 12 year old main character grows from a timid child not much older than her stepson to a formidable matriarch grandmother who controls significant wealth for the area.  We see her come to terms with the ever present spirit of her husband's late wife.  We watch her playful interactions with the family elephant Damo.  We cry with her after a miscarriage.  We can almost taste how her curry and other recipes change with time and maturity. 

What I didn't like was the excruciating details on the backgrounds of the minor characters.  The reader is forced to read chapter upon chapter of unnecessary fluff about what brought some of the white men to this area including one doctor's mother's history in Glasgow. If all of the unneeded info was cut, this would be a MUCH shorter novel that would be easier to read.  I admit to skipping some of it. 

Well, there it is.  My next post will be after I finish The Cleaning Rampage and will tell you my Summer Reading theme for 2023.

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W. 

Tuesday, June 13, 2023

The Last Word by Taylor Adams

Before I say anything else about this book THE DOG DOES NOT DIE!

As soon as I started reading this, I was absolutely terrified I was going to read the dog dies and actually sought out the answer before I continued.  Thankfully another reader who did not want to read the dog dying posted a spoiler.  Dog lives. 

I loved the premise of this book: Emma is housesitting with her dog (a Golden!).  There is only one neighbor nearby.  She passes the time reading and posting reviews on her blog.  One of these reviews is negative, and the author takes the review to heart and starts threatening her.  

OK, so as someone who quite literally reviews books on a blog as part of her job, I'm honestly spooked a little to write this negative review (maybe that's the point? *laughs nervously). I like the idea, and some parts were really gripping thriller writing.  In places it was very Pike and Stine like creepy YA horror of the 80s and 90s.  Which I loved.  BUT, I really struggled with the alternating viewpoints via the changing font of what was said, narrated, appeared in print on the blog or articles, etc.  It made it very difficult to read physically, as I had to move the book back and forth to get my eyes to focus in the right spot, and it just made the storyline more confusing than it needed to be.

Anyone who likes thrillers and crime will like this, IF you can get past the aforementioned issues.

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W. 

Please don't find me Mr. Adams...

Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Whiskey Women by Fred Minnick

Now before anyone gets a little put-off by the title, this is a history book.  You really can't talk about American history without mentioning Prohibition and its repeal.  And while the bootleg running men of Appalachia are always what's portrayed, it was many women who actually distilled in their basements and barns while distracting law enforcement with good manners.  

I first saw this book on display at a local distillery.  Unfortunately, it was a limited print.  Amazon told me it would be back in stock soon, so I regularly checked and finally it was last week.  

This is a great book to examine women's history in America (along with Ireland and Scotland) through the lens of spirits as an extension of the kitchen and domestic responsibility then up the ladder to corporate leadership.  As I consider where to shelve this, it could find its home in History, Crime & Punishment, or Women's Studies; all topics which frequently demonstrate the intersectionality of a woman's place in our history.  I could see excerpts being used in several courses.

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W.