Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an older book but I read it this year and recommend it. It’s called Notes on a Silencing by Lacy Chabert about her experiences at St. Paul’s School after being sexually assaulted. Very eye-opening and well-written.
Just looked tbis book up-
It says the author is Lacy Crawford
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an older book but I read it this year and recommend it. It’s called Notes on a Silencing by Lacy Chabert about her experiences at St. Paul’s School after being sexually assaulted. Very eye-opening and well-written.
I read that book last year and I still think of it frequently. I read that her manuscript was rejected many times as just another rape story. So she had to think about how to reframe the entire thing. It really sets a high standard for reflective memoir.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent most of last year and the first few months of this year reading every book written by Mary Kay Andrews. My favorite of all her books is "The Santa Suit", which was a romance novel. It was about a woman who bought a house in a rural area because she had always wanted to raise chickens. She finds a Santa suit in a closet, and later finds a Mrs. Santa suit in the attic. As she asks people around town what is up with the Santa suit, she makes friends. Eventually she gets a new job and falls in love. She and her new sweetheart play Santa and Mrs. Santa at community events for the rest of their lives.
Other favorites this year --
One Italian Summer. Woman goes on vacation to Italy after her mom dies. She sees her mom there, except her mom is 30 years old.
An Elderly Lady is up to no Good. Which is about an elderly lady who is up to no good.
The Four Winds. Which was about the dust bowl and the depression and poverty. The book went on and on but now I know all about what the dust bowl was about.
Orphan Trains -- Riding the Rails to a New Life. This was a true story book written for kids about orphaned or abandoned New York City kids who were sent west on trains to be adopted by farm families from the 1850's to the 1920's. I liked it because I learned what the orphan train movement was all about.
The Orphan Collector. Which was about the Spanish flu epidemic in Philadelphia in 1918. I liked it because it was an engrossing book and I also learned what the Spanish Flu epidemic was all about. This book (and the book Angela's Ashes which I read many years ago) made me so grateful to live in a time when we take indoor plumbing for granted.![]()
Thanks for the orphan train rec! I read a kids book (fiction) about them years ago and would love to read more.
Anonymous wrote:I spent most of last year and the first few months of this year reading every book written by Mary Kay Andrews. My favorite of all her books is "The Santa Suit", which was a romance novel. It was about a woman who bought a house in a rural area because she had always wanted to raise chickens. She finds a Santa suit in a closet, and later finds a Mrs. Santa suit in the attic. As she asks people around town what is up with the Santa suit, she makes friends. Eventually she gets a new job and falls in love. She and her new sweetheart play Santa and Mrs. Santa at community events for the rest of their lives.
Other favorites this year --
One Italian Summer. Woman goes on vacation to Italy after her mom dies. She sees her mom there, except her mom is 30 years old.
An Elderly Lady is up to no Good. Which is about an elderly lady who is up to no good.
The Four Winds. Which was about the dust bowl and the depression and poverty. The book went on and on but now I know all about what the dust bowl was about.
Orphan Trains -- Riding the Rails to a New Life. This was a true story book written for kids about orphaned or abandoned New York City kids who were sent west on trains to be adopted by farm families from the 1850's to the 1920's. I liked it because I learned what the orphan train movement was all about.
The Orphan Collector. Which was about the Spanish flu epidemic in Philadelphia in 1918. I liked it because it was an engrossing book and I also learned what the Spanish Flu epidemic was all about. This book (and the book Angela's Ashes which I read many years ago) made me so grateful to live in a time when we take indoor plumbing for granted.![]()
Anonymous wrote:This is an older book but I read it this year and recommend it. It’s called Notes on a Silencing by Lacy Chabert about her experiences at St. Paul’s School after being sexually assaulted. Very eye-opening and well-written.
Anonymous wrote:This is an older book but I read it this year and recommend it. It’s called Notes on a Silencing by Lacy Chabert about her experiences at St. Paul’s School after being sexually assaulted. Very eye-opening and well-written.
Anonymous wrote:Favorite “new” books
Trespasses by Louise Kennedy - love story set in the Troubles in Northern Ireland
Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine - finally tried this and was surprised how much I loved it!
Will and Testament by Vigdis Hjorth - challenging look at abuse, spare writing, grew on me
I Have Some Questions for You by Rebecca Makkai - appealed to me as a fellow woman who grew up in the 90s, look at what we used to accept as "normal" in male/female interactions
Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt - a book with a talking octopus? I thought it would be too cutesy, but absolutely loved it.
The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donaghue - page turner set in the 1918 flu epidemic in a maternity ward
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett - beautiful story of mother/daughter relationships set with the covid pandemic in the background
The House of Doors by Tan Twan Eng - historical fiction set in Penang that revolves around Somerset Maugham and his interaction with a couple in that city. One of my favorite authors.
Favorite “classics”
Anne by Constance Fenimore Woolson - little-known American woman author - I LOVED this book and flew through it to find out what happened to Anne
To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf (reread) - no one does stream of consciousness and imagery better
The Summer Book by Tove Jansson (reread) - charming Finnish book about a crabby grandmother and her young granddaughter
Irretrievable by Theodor Fontane - German book about a failing marriage in a beautiful setting
Persuasion by Jane Austen (reread) - probably my favorite Austen, that letter . . .
A Dream in Polar Fog by Yuri Rytkheau - a little out there, the story of an American explorer who gets stranded in Russia with the Indigenous Chukchi people. As he assimilates to their culture, he finds a beauty in their interactions and can't imagine returning to his previous life.
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen (reread) - the most youthful, fun Austen novel
In This House of Brede by Rumer Godden - a novel about nuns! And I loved it! Beautiful look at relationships within a closed circle. I can imagine rereading this.
Favorite Non-fiction
Devil in the Grove by Gilbert King - racism in Florida during the Jim Crow Era, shocking and disturbing and necessary reading
What Matters in Jane Austen by John Mullen - fun series of essays for dedicated Austen readers
Know My Name by Chanel Miller - a rape survivors manifesto, must-read
These Precious Days by Ann Patchett - lovely series of essays, works really well on audio read by the author