Sunday, February 1, 2026

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This week has been a tough one for us weather wise. On Sunday and into Monday, we got over a foot of snow, taking a while to dig out - luckily it was the light fluffy snow!


This week was also the 40th anniversary of the Challenger explosion. I was in 6th grade in NY at the time, but the teacher that was part of the launch was from NH. This was one of those moments, for me, where I can tell you where I was exactly when it happened. 

I'm currently reading Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler (I'm VERY late to the game but better late than never) and listening to Careless People

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

REVIEW Broken Country by Claire Leslie Hall

 


This was the book selection for our book club this month and I enjoyed it, although I wish that I had read it not back to back with Cursed Daughters because there was some overlap in themes and tropes. Beth and Frank are living what to, many people, appear to be a fulfilling life. They love each other and work together on the farm that they own, very closely. They seem to share everything and lead a life that many would envy. However, two years previously, their son Bobby died on the farm and Beth blames Frank for that tragedy as Frank was supposed to be watching out for their son. One day, a man and his son come to the farm after their dog escapes, gets onto Beth's farm and is shot. The man is Gabriel Wolfe, Beth's first love. And so begins a love triangle that literally changes lives. 

I definitely enjoyed this novel, but I think that I would have enjoyed it more if I had read it at a different time then directly following Cursed Daughters.  Hall uses dual timeline narrative, which I always adore because it is a very effective way to keep me, the reader, hooked into things and wanting to know more about how we got to where we got. I found it very easy to empathize with the characters, the decisions that they were making and the justifications that they had for their actions. At the heart of this novel are themes of love and loyalty: to family, to partners and children, to values.  

There were also elements of a thriller that made this novel very enjoyable to me. The plot had twists and turns that I didn't always figure out. I definitely also felt that I was immersed in the lives of the characters: it was easy to picture myself at the farm or in the pub with the characters, hearing, seeing and smelling what they were.  Definitely one to read.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

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We've had a lot of snow this week and celebrated Civil Rights Day on Monday. My son also visited Montreal for the first time on his own to visit a friend at McGill.



I hope everyone had a good week. We are experiencing a massive storm and very, very low temps.  Fingers crossed we survive without losing power OR having frozen pipes. We're looking at over a foot of snow here. In that vein, here are the ten worst blizzards in US history

  1. Our Episcopalian bishop made national news.
  2. Are you one of these four types of introverts?
  3. Timeless female authors that wrote under male pen names.
  4. The 2026 Edgar nominations are out.
  5. 5 Booker Prize nominated mysteries.
  6. The National Book Critics 2025 list.
  7. On T Swift and the heart of reinvention.
  8. 6 books about Ohio.
  9. These look so yummy.
  10. Does Caffeine actually boost metabolism?
  11. Spotify has an audiobook sync feature.  I'm excited about this since I've been getting more into audiobooks. 
  12. Domestic dysfunction - thrillers that focus on the family. 
  13. Many Americans read zero books in 2025 (which is CRAZY to me) but a reading challenge is here to change that. 
  14. Difference between winter storm watch and winter storm warning.
  15. The best epic fantasy novels as recommended by Christopher Paolini. 
  16. 50 books from the last 50 years that we should all read.
  17. Classics that shine on audio.
  18. 6 libraries that aren't homes to books
I hope that everyone stays safe this weekend!

Thursday, January 22, 2026

REVIEW: Cursed Daughters by Oyinkin Braithwaite

 


Very few books have ever moved to tears and this was one of them. The Falodun family as at the center of this novel. All of the women in this novel share some things in common: heartbreak, sadness and the inability to hold across a man. These things are shared across generations. In 1994, 19 year old Monife meets Kalu, who is known as "Golden Boy," a man that she believes is perfect. We know that the relationship doesn't end well because in the first chapters, Monife has committed suicide by drowning herself. Their love story is rolled out over the course of approximately 350 pages. Monife's death is perhaps the biggest character in the novel because it follows her cousin, Ebun, around and her daughter, Eniiyi, looks eerily like her (she's also born on the day of Monife's death). Eniiyi falls in love with Zubby, who she saves from drowning and, during the relationship, has visions of Monife. 

This was, surprisingly, a quick read for me, given the length of the novel.  Braithwaite's graceful writing touched upon topics that were visceral to me - the relationship between mothers and daughters, our relationship to the past, familial relationships and the ability to learn from major and tragic mistakes. The characters were interesting and fairly well developed, although one or two were pretty predictable (Golden Boy's mother for one). I won't lie - Ebun's relationship to her daughter reminded me of my relationship to Eniiyi in that I got it on an almost cellular level. 

I definitely enjoyed it. 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

REVIEW I, Medusa by Ayana Gray


 

I almost didn't pick up this book - quite frankly, Medusa's nickname given to her by her sisters turned me off and made me roll my eyes. They call her "Meddy," and I didn't think I could get past it, but I'm glad that I was able to and read this novel.  I legitimately flew through this novel in about 2-3 days, which is a record for me. 

We all think we know who Medusa is right? She's the girl with hair of snakes that turns men to stone, often viciously and mercilessly. She's ultimately beheaded by Perseus. Then, in 2020 the below statue appeared in NYC. 


It was seemingly in response to the Perseus statue at the Met and was picked up as a symbol of the #metoo movement, fighting against sexual harassment, sexual abuse and rape culture.  After all, Medusa took back her power in that sculpture by beheading the original beheader. Ayana Gray attempts to tell us how Medusa came to be a powerful symbol of that movement in this novel by telling us of who Medusa was before she became the mythological creature that we all thought we knew.

This novel takes place in Ancient Greece, where Athens is the center of culture and all things wonderful. Medusa is the mortal child of two sea gods, and has grown up very isolated on an island with her parents, and two immortal older sisters. She wants more than the island can offer - adventure, knowledge. Her parents want to marry their daughters off to the highest ranking official that will them - they're objects and pawns in a game of power brokering. They exist only to serve their parents' goals. Medusa is whisked away after a situation crops up with her sister's husband to be, to train as an acolyte in Athena's main temple in Athens. Due to the color of her skin, she is "othered" and pigeonholed by the other acolytes. Her relationship with the sea god Poseidon takes form during her time in Athens, along with the presentation of a number of red flags (HINT: Poseidon is a AHOLE).  By the time we get to the last section of the novel, Medusa has reclaimed her power and accepted herself. 

I LOVED this book.  Gray seemed to really get the nuances of the complicated relationships women have with each other, even when trying to support each other. She also nails the blowback and punishment that women get when they speak out against the status quo and call BS on horrific, unfair and, quite frankly, shitty treatment at the hands of men and, sometimes, other women. This novel was a spot indictment of the many ways that women are mistreated and oppressed in their lives.  

A definite MUST READ. 

1/12 of the Library Love Challenge.

On the Popsugar Challenge, this satisfies reading a book about new beginnings AND a book about a platonic friendships between a male and female (Athena has a male best friend on her parents' island named Theo)



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I hope that everyone had a good week!  Playoff football is all the rage in our house!  I am, sadly, a Jets fan which means my team will never be in the playoffs but I live in New England, so we still watch a lot of football, particularly this season.  I have a cold that I'm fighting with.  Boooooo.  I'm generally feeling better, which I attribute to being somewhat healthy and being vaccinated. 

Please don't forget that I have a Pangobooks store and a goodreads profile! Please feel free to check out both!

Thursday, January 15, 2026

REVIEW The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon


 I am not going to mince words or waste your time - I loved this book and would recommend it to anyone. This novel is placed in time just after the American Revolution. The Bill of Rights and Constitution have not yet been ratified although they have been sent out to the States. It's so early, that the American currency has to still compete with the pound, as both are in circulation. Women are certainly still considered to be the property of their husbands or fathers or other male figure in their lives. 

The novel itself is centered on the life of Martha Ballard, a midwife who is living and practicing in VERY rural Maine (of note, she was a real midwife whose journals are one of, if not THE primary resource for life at that time.  Laurel Thatcher Ulrich wrote this book about her, which I highly recommend if you like history).  This novel fills out her character and its flaws in the telling of the story. Martha is called upon, early in the novel and in between birthing children, to examine the body of a man that has been found dead in the Kennebec River. A few months earlier, she had visited and treated the local vicar's wife, who had been the victim of a horrific gang rape. This novel is Martha's, and her community's attempt, to piece together the truth of what happened to the man in the river and the vicar's wife. 

The writing style and construct were absolutely what sold it for me.  This novel was definitely thoroughly researched but the information was presented in a readable, entertaining and very easy fashion. A non-linear timeframe was used. This is my favorite construct and I find it to be very effective in keeping me interested and guessing as to what is going on or has happened. I loved the characters and I particularly loved the relationship between Martha and her husband, which was seemingly quite egalitarian.  

Definitely a must read. 

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  This week has been a tough one for us weather wise. On Sunday and into Monday, we got over a foot of snow, taking a while to dig out - luc...