Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Finlay Donovan books are a blast. It's a single mom who accidentally becomes a hit person. I can't remember if there are 3 or 4 of them, but I adore them.
Also, read The Bee Sting. It has 4 main characters and is just so fantastic.
Interesting. I started the first one and got a little over halfway before I gave up because I really disliked her.
Anonymous wrote:I just remembered one I read a few years back.
It is Called "Pieces of Her" by Karin slaughter.
It is about a young woman who learns that her mom was a terrorist before she was born.
Anonymous wrote:We Carry Their Bones - nonfiction written by a forensic anthropologist who investigated the deaths of students at a juvenile reform school in Florida
The Invention of Wings - novel about an enslaved woman and a white woman who feels constrained by wealthy Charleston society
Manhattan Beach - novel about a woman in NY who becomes a diver during WWII
What You Have Heard is True - nonfiction by a woman who traveled to El Salvador to learn/write about the country's political situation
The Enchanted - novel about a woman who investigates the pasts of death row inmates
Just Kids - Patti Smith memoir
While Justice Sleeps - mystery/thriller written by Stacey Abrams. Honestly not very good, but the protagonist is a law clerk trying to unravel a mystery involving supreme court justices, wealthy corporate interests, etc.
Rough Magic - non-fiction by a young woman about her participation in a 1,000 kilometer horse race across Mongolia
Anonymous wrote:The Finlay Donovan books are a blast. It's a single mom who accidentally becomes a hit person. I can't remember if there are 3 or 4 of them, but I adore them.
Also, read The Bee Sting. It has 4 main characters and is just so fantastic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spend way too much time recommending this but I loved it and most people haven’t heard of it so: Truth Be Told by Bev McLachlin — she was Chief Justice on the Canadian Supreme Court and this is her memoir. It’s fascinating and I found it very engaging. I bought the audio book; not sure if it’s on any of the usual listening services, sorry.
On a much lighter note, I’ve recently been rereading Elizabeth Peter’s Vicky Bliss mysteries which are about an art historian who occasionally solves crime.
Wow Truth Be Told is amazing. I'm almost halfway through it now. I'm a Canadian who lives in Alberta AND works in Family Law and had never heard of it! Lawyers I work with also didn't know about it. It's so good so far, thanks for the fabulous rec! 🥲
Anonymous wrote:Haha I have been Audibling (for free), the Sister Jane mystery series, about Sister Jane, MFH, the 70-year old master of the Jefferson Hunt set in Albemarle County. The books are really about foxhunting in the Virginia countryside. The animals in the books talk to each other.
Anonymous wrote:I spend way too much time recommending this but I loved it and most people haven’t heard of it so: Truth Be Told by Bev McLachlin — she was Chief Justice on the Canadian Supreme Court and this is her memoir. It’s fascinating and I found it very engaging. I bought the audio book; not sure if it’s on any of the usual listening services, sorry.
On a much lighter note, I’ve recently been rereading Elizabeth Peter’s Vicky Bliss mysteries which are about an art historian who occasionally solves crime.
Anonymous wrote:Non-Fiction/Memoir: West with the Night by Beryl Markham.