Anonymous wrote:Anyone read Her Last Breath?
I just read Emma Straub's American Fantasy and meh.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone read Her Last Breath?
I just read Emma Straub's American Fantasy and meh.
Anonymous wrote:I am a huge suspense/thriller aficionado (think Freida McFadden, Ruth Ware, etc.) and I just finished reading one of the best novels in this genre.
It is titled “My Husband’s Wife” and is authored by Alice Feeney.
It begins w/a woman who goes out one evening for her regular jog.
She lives in a small village and is married w/one daughter who does not live in her home according to the story.
Well after returning home from her run, she realizes that her house key 🔑 no longer goes into the doorknob.
And also when her husband opens the door, he claims to not know who she is!
Even worse, there is another woman in the house who is claiming that she IS her husband’s wife and she is even saying that she has the same exact name as his wife who cannot figure out what is going on.
No it isn’t a case of bad amnesia nor is it a bad case of a sci-fi fantasy……
The story continues and at the end of the book all the pieces come together ➕ everything will make full sense too.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, I loved the twists and turns and will look for some of this author’s add’l novels to check out!
Very well-written, unpredictable & a believable plot!
Anonymous wrote:Reading Yesteryear- 100 pages in and so far it's just ok. Hoping it gets better.
Listening to London Falling. It's a true story about a young man in London who assumes a fake identity and gets mixed up with a group of wealthy scammers and dies at the age of 19 after "falling" off a balcony into the Thames.
Anonymous wrote:"Mastering the Art of Soviet Cooking" recommended on here!
It is "a memoir of food and longing" written by a russian cookbook author who emigrated to the US with her mother when she was a child.
I love it. It is everything I like in a book. History, food and Russia (and why it is the way it is)
Anonymous wrote:I’m reading The Book of Guilt by Catherine Chidgey. I’m liking it so far (about 1/3 through), though it’s feeling a little bit like a reworked Never Let Me Go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:North Sun, or The Voyage of the Whale Ship Esther by Ethan Rutherford
It's just . . . wow . . . read it in two sittings because it's that good. To say it's an allegorical whaling adventure doesn't quite do it justice. It's a story well told, with elements of myth and magical realism, that highlights the depravity of the whaling industry and its deleterious effects on both the animals and the men it exploited for profit.
Is it fiction or nonfiction? Sounds intriguing.
Anonymous wrote:North Sun, or The Voyage of the Whale Ship Esther by Ethan Rutherford
It's just . . . wow . . . read it in two sittings because it's that good. To say it's an allegorical whaling adventure doesn't quite do it justice. It's a story well told, with elements of myth and magical realism, that highlights the depravity of the whaling industry and its deleterious effects on both the animals and the men it exploited for profit.