My sister, Lisa, and I share some reading time |
I saw several memes that said September 6 was Read A Book Day.
Every day is Read A Book Day for me.
(Darci, me and Lisa with our books: I have no idea why Lisa and I are in our robes outside |
Ever since I was a little girl, reading has been a favorite thing. (If only running or exercise were at the top of the list instead of such a sedentary activity like reading. Oh, well! It wasn't to be.)
Randy has come to realize that every trip to Hutchinson includes a stop at the Hutchinson Public Library. Usually, I have something on hold at the circulation desk, where they know me by name. And here must be some sort of magnetic force field surrounding bookstores for me. It's tough to walk past one without going in. I do try to minimize my book purchases. I read 80+ books a year. Purchasing that many books would literally have my house splitting at the rafters and would likely put me in the poor house. Public libraries are a treasure!
Me & Lisa again. She loves to read, too! |
But I do sometimes buy books that I can't find at my library or that I just can't seem to walk out of the store without. (Or, if it means a new book for the granddaughters. Brooke got one, too, but she had already left for her soccer game by the time I thought to take the photo below.)
I loved the chalkboard sign at Paper June bookstore in Topeka. |
That stockpile of books saved my sanity during the early days of the pandemic. All at once, libraries were closed. After I read all the library books in my stack, I rummaged through my cabinets for other options.
It was a happy day indeed when I was able to pick up books at the back door of my beloved Hutchinson Public Library, though it was still later before I could again wander the book stacks myself. I wrote about it here, It Was a Dark & Stormy Night (Afternoon). The photo below shows the pile of books I picked up that wonderful day after a long hiatus from my library.
I recently saw another Facebook meme that I'd seen before, but that never ceases to confound me:
As a lifelong reading lover, these statistics are incomprehensible to me. I can't remember a time when I wasn't a library patron. My mom took us to the old library at the Pratt County Courthouse from the time we could toddle in on our own steam.
I'm not the only reader in the family. This was Kinley at her sister's soccer game last weekend. |
It was exciting when the new library was built in Pratt. There was a whole room of children's books where I discovered Encyclopedia Brown and Nancy Drew and the Happy Hollisters. I still love mysteries and thrillers today, and I have to believe those days of uncovering clues with them had to have laid an early groundwork for this love affair that's lasted all of my life.
I've been on a streak lately of books I've really enjoyed. I will admit: I read for enjoyment. Yes, I also read devotionals, Christian-themed studies and the Bible for my spiritual growth. But I'm a voracious reader of fiction. I say that it keeps me sane. If I have trouble sleeping, the characters in a book will help my mind turn off from the issues that swirl in my brain.
However, I know that everyone has their own taste in books. I take photos of book covers and send them to Jill or to my sister, Lisa, thinking they'd like particular books. But I always find it a bit risky to recommend books to others.
I read. Randy golfs. I am a much better reader than golfer. |
But here goes. Maybe someone else looks for recommendations from someone they actually know. If you like them, let me know. And, if you don't, that's OK, too. Everyone has different genres, authors or other preferences. So find one you like and read it. And be sure and tell me: I might like it, too.
I've given an Amazon link for each one. That's not to encourage you to buy it. It just gives more of a synopsis than I've given. I'd encourage you to find the books at your local library. Or support a local bookstore and purchase locally. I also buy secondhand books through the Thriftbooks website. I also enjoy going to Bookaholic for second-hand books when I'm in Wichita. But, the vast majority of books I read are from my public library. I got every one of them below at the Hutchinson Public Library.
If you're a Stafford area person, our church has an annual book sale during Oktoberfest. This year, that's Saturday, October 1. Come to the church basement from 9 AM to 3 PM that day.
And I just got my state library card from the Nora Larabee Memorial Library in Stafford. Library cards are like gold!
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I loved this book, and I've told multiple people about it. It is a debut novel by Nikki Erlick. It made me think. It made me cry. And it was beautifully written, which means something to me.
In it, the whole world suddenly receives boxes with strings inside that let people know how much time they have left to live. Some people look inside; others don't. The book finds the connection between eight different characters. It is also timely in that it makes you think about how we segregate/separate people based on politics, religion, race, sexuality - pretty much the kitchen sink.
"We humans have an impulse to mark our existence in some way that feels permanent. We scribble, 'I was here' onto our desks at school. We spray-paint it on walls. We carve it into bark. I wanted ... to let it be known that these people lived. A testament to the fact that these humans - with their long strings and medium strings and short strings - they were here. ... All moments, big and small, can measure a life."
From "The Measure"
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Amazon link |
This is classified as Young Adult fiction, but the subject matter is definitely "adult," in my opinion. I saw this recommended on a friend's Facebook post. It's not a book I would naturally choose, but I'm sure glad I did. It was another favorite book from 2022 so far.
It's a thriller/mystery set on a Ojibwe reservation, but it also has elements of a coming-of-age story. The main character, 18-year-old Daunis Fontaine, doesn't feel like she fits in - either on the reservation or in her nearby hometown. She looks forward to starting fresh at college. But her plans change because of family circumstances. There's elements of a love story interwoven with a murder and an FBI investigation of a lethal new drug. From Amazon: "Daunis must learn what it means to be a strong Anishinaabe kwe (Ojibwe woman) and how far she’ll go for her community, even if it tears apart the only world she’s ever known."
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Amazon link |
This was another I saw on a Facebook post or blog post. At its center is the issue of immigration, which I realize is a hot button topic. And, again, it's not a subject that automatically appeals to me. But in it, Lydia, a mother in Acapulco, flees with her son, Luca, after her journalist husband is killed because of an expose he wrote about the drug cartels. Who can she trust among the many she meets along the way as she struggles to reach the U.S.?
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Amazon link |
AND
Amazon link |
True confessions: I read "Girl, Forgotten" first, not realizing at the time that it was a recurring character from "Pieces of Her." So then I read "Pieces of Her." I preferred "Girl, Forgotten" but they were both good. I love finding an author I enjoy who has multiple books out. I will be looking for more Karin Slaughter books at my local library.
I read, while Randy golfs. It's the perfect arrangement for marital bliss. |
"Pieces of Her" has been made into a Netflix show. (I wouldn't know: I can't stream here in rural America.)
In both books, Andrea Oliver is the central character. In the first, Andrea is at a bit of a standstill in life. She's living in an apartment over the garage at her mother's house. Then, one afternoon, she sees a very different side of her mild-mannered mother during a violent event at the local shopping mall. And she discovers that her mother has a past that she could never have imagined. The book is written in "current time" and "flashbacks," leading Andrea and the reader on a quest to discover the secrets before someone else gets hurt.
The Hutch library has ebooks and audio books you can download if you're ever unable to visit the library in person! Just download the app.
ReplyDeleteSo far, I'm not an e-book reader. That's pretty much how my daughter reads everything.
DeleteAlas, there are very few of these that I would enjoy. Give me a biography, travel novel or a happy, feel good book and I won't be putting it down.
ReplyDeleteI was recently staying in my sister in law's unit and spotted "An Irish Country Childhood. Memories of a Bygone Age" by Marie Walsh.
It tells beautifully a tale of times past [1930'3 - 1940's as she grew up.]It is of thatched cottages, peat firs, spring wells and fairies riding on the backs of hares. Of match making, house masses and wakes.
Our differences make the world go 'round! I read mostly fiction. I call it my escape.
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