It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

The Its Monday! What Are You Reading meme is hosted at Book Journey.

Life…

Ugh, I’m sick. You may remember that last week I returned home from a weekend away to find my husband and 2 of the children coughing and spluttering all over the place. Twenty four hours later I felt like I’d been swallowing razor blades and my head was pounding. Even though it has been almost a week I am still struggling with a claggy head, a nagging cough and a runny nose.

School holidays began today which means a houseful of children demanding to be entertained. I really don’t have the energy so I am bribing them with unlimited Netflix viewing.

What I Read Last Week

 

Red Sand Sunrise by Fiona McArthur

Let Her Go by Dawn Barker

Lost and Found by Brooke Davis

Little Mercies by Heather Gudenkauf

What Came Before by Anna George

My Salinger Year by Joanna Rakoff

 

New Posts

(click the titles to read my reviews)

AWW Feature: What Fiona McArthur, author of Red Sand Sunrise, is reading…

Review: Red Sand Sunrise by Fiona McArthur ★★★1/2

Review: Lost & Found by Brooke Davis ★★★★

Review: Let Her Go by Dawn Barker ★★★★1/2

Review: Little Mercies by Heather Gudenkauf ★★★★

Review: What Came Before by Anna George ★★★★

 What I Am Reading Today

 Former folk singer Helen Sear was a feminist wild child who proudly disdained monogamy, raising three daughters—each by a different father—largely on her own. Now in her sixties, Helen has fallen in love with a traditional man who desperately wants to marry her. And while she fears losing him, she’s equally afraid of abandoning everything she’s ever stood for if she goes through with it. Meanwhile, Helen’s youngest daughter, Liane, is in the heady early days of a relationship with her soul mate. But he has an ex-wife and two kids, and her new role as a “step-something” doesn’t come with an instruction manual. Ilsa, an artist, has put her bohemian past behind her and is fervently hoping her second marriage will stick. Yet her world feels like it is slowly shrinking, and her painting is suffering as a result—and she realizes she may need to break free again, even if it means disrupting the lives of her two young children. And then there’s Fiona, the eldest sister, who has worked tirelessly to make her world pristine, yet who still doesn’t feel at peace. When she discovers her husband has been harboring a huge secret, Fiona loses her tenuous grip on happiness and is forced to face some truths about herself that she’d rather keep buried.

What I Plan To Read This Week

(click the covers to view at Goodreads)

 In a small New Zealand town, four women find their lives inextricably linked by a secret that could bring about their undoing… or set them free. Serena Freeman, a once-promising high school student, has started to retreat from life and one night does not return home. Her sister, Lynnie Freeman, is carving out a successful career and is desperate to distance herself from her troubled past. But on hearing of Serena’s disappearance, Lynnie is forced to return to the town of Alexandra to look for her. The only link to Serena’s disappearance is Ilse Klein, a quietly dedicated English teacher who longs for her lost childhood in Germany and the sense of belonging it gave her. She lives with her mother, Gerda Klein, who is beset by a devastating depression each winter and plagued by memories of Stasi Germany. The Kleins learned long ago that there is safety in silence, can they break a lifelong habit? Haunting and compelling, Swimming in the Dark explores the nature of guilt and fear, the power of friendship and the strength of the human spirit.

A mom, a dad, a baby…and another dad. Laurie and Alan are expecting, again. After two miscarriages, Laurie was afraid they’d never be able to have a child. Now she’s cautiously optimistic — the fertility treatment worked, and things seem to be different this time around. But she doesn’t yet know how different. Jack can’t seem to catch a break — his parents are on his case about graduating from college, he’s somehow dating two girls at once, and he has to find a way to pay back the money he borrowed from his fraternity’s party fund. The only jobs he is qualified for barely pay enough to keep him in beer money, but an ad for the local sperm bank gives Jack an idea. Laurie and Alan’s joy is shattered when their doctor reveals that Laurie was accidentally impregnated by sperm from a donor rather than her husband. Who is Donor 296. And how will their family change now that Donor 296 is inarguably part of it?

In early 2009 a strange sort of business plan landed on the desk of a pinstriped bank manager. It had pictures of rats and moles in rowing boats and archaic quotes about Cleopatra’s barge. It asked for a GBP30,000 loan to buy a black-and-cream narrowboat and a small hoard of books. The manager said no. Nevertheless The Book Barge opened six months later and enjoyed the happy patronage of local readers, a growing number of eccentrics and the odd moorhen. Business wasn’t always easy, so one May morning owner Sarah Henshaw set off for six months chugging the length and breadth of the country. Books were bartered for food, accommodation, bathroom facilities and cake. During the journey, the barge suffered a flooded engine, went out to sea, got banned from Bristol and, on several occasions, floated away altogether. This account follows the ebbs and flows of Sarah’s journey as she sought to make her vision of a floating bookshop a reality.

There is nothing hidden that will not be revealed . . . On an autumn day in 1686, eighteen-year-old Nella Oortman knocks at the door of a grand house in the wealthiest quarter of Amsterdam. She has come from the country to begin a new life as the wife of illustrious merchant trader Johannes Brandt, but instead she is met by his sharp-tongued sister, Marin. Only later does Johannes appear and present her with an extraordinary wedding gift: a cabinet-sized replica of their home. It is to be furnished by an elusive miniaturist, whose tiny creations mirror their real-life counterparts in unexpected ways . . . Nella is at first mystified by the closed world of the Brandt household, but as she uncovers its secrets she realizes the escalating dangers that await them all. Does the miniaturist hold their fate in her hands? And will she be the key to their salvation or the architect of their downfall? Beautiful, intoxicating and filled with heart-pounding suspense, The Miniaturist is a magnificent story of love and obsession, betrayal and retribution, appearance and truth.

Grandmother Ruth Sutton writes to the man she hates more than anyone else on the planet: the man who she believes killed her daughter Lizzie in a brutal attack four years earlier. Ruth’s burden of grief and hatred, has only grown heavier with the passing of time, her avid desire for vengeance ever stronger. In writing to him Ruth hopes to exorcise the corrosive emotions that are destroying her life, to find the truth and with it release and a way forward. Whether she can ever truly forgive him is another matter – but the letters are her last, best hope. Letters To My Daughter’s Killer exposes the aftermath of violent crime for an ordinary family and explores fundamental questions of crime and punishment. How do we deal with the very human desire for revenge? If we get justice does reconciliation follow? Can we really forgive those who do us the gravest wrong? Could you?

While you are here…

 

Thanks for stopping by!

11 thoughts on “It’s Monday! What Are You Reading?

  1. Oh dear, family love sharing the germs! Hope you are well soon. We are a week after you so we have our school hols next week. I sure am looking forward to them. Get well soon.

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  2. Oh being sick for school holidays is awful timing .. netflix to the rescue, I’m sure the kids don’t min lol. Get better soon and happy reading 🙂

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  3. Sorry you are feeling sick 😦 Speedy recovery wishes. I am intrigued by a bunch of your books that I never heard of but sound oh so good. Will be checking them out further. Mating for Life and Swimming in the Dark jumped out at me. Feel better, enjoy your week with the kids.

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  4. Just wondering do you read a book a day wish i could find that much time to read have a good day  Julie   From   Julie Steele

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