On my recent vacation to Mexico, I got so much reading done; even for me, it was a lot. There are a few reasons for this: a) I get up way earlier than anyone else in our group, and so I read until breakfast and then I read until our friends finished breakfast, b) we had one day of rain and wind, and the best thing to do was to curl up on our sheltered balcony and read while our friends did some work, c) uncharacteristically, I wasn’t really interested in getting into too many involved conversations with strangers, and d) we had a lot of travel time. Shortly after we got to the airport in Kelowna the prescribed two hours prior to takeoff, it was announced that our flight was delayed two hours. Since the flight itself was six hours long, I basically spent ten straight hours reading. Similarly, on the way home, we arrived at the airport a stunning three and a half hours prior to takeoff, as the road traffic was unusually light, and then we sailed through security in under ten minutes.
I also read books that were not difficult or overly involved, and mostly quite short. I also had three – THREE! – DNFs, which is a new record for me. Two of them – The Good Part and The Seven Year Slip – involved magical time travel, which is a hard no for me. The third – Just Haven’t Met You Yet – was not interesting to me. Why I downloaded these books on Libby in the first place is somewhat of a mystery, but I’m proud of myself for just saying no.
Winter in Paradise. This was exactly like reading a soap opera! A woman gets a call to discover her husband is dead, at which point she learns a) he has a $15 million dollar villa in the USVI, and b) he has another family. So that’s where we start and there’s lots of details to uncover, but the ending is clearly setting up for a series and you know what, I was not into it. It was fine for the plane though, but I’m not tempted to read more.
All The Lonely People. This had all the elements of a good read for me: sympathetic characters, a lonely elderly man who wants to make friends before his daughter visits him, so she won’t be worried, a theme of community and different generations coming together to combat isolation and loneliness. HOWEVER. There was a twist near the end which was SO VERY STUPID that it completely wrecked the book for me. Honestly, it was so dumb that I wondered how on earth it even got published. Sometimes I despair thinking of all the lonely writers out there who are desperate to get published, and then I read something like this, and it pushes the despair into white-hot rage.
Small Things Like These. I had not heard the term Magdalen laundry before; these were institutions run by the Catholic Church in Ireland, for unwed mothers. It’s unknown how many babies and young women died in these institutions, but it’s thought to be in the tens of thousands. This book is about one such place, and a man who is living the very saying “there but for the grace of god go I.” It’s a very thoughtful little book, well written and moving.
What Alice Forgot. I’m continuing my revisiting of Liane Moriarty! Imagine suddenly having every memory for the last ten years erased; that’s the premise of this book. It’s a reread for me and it was a good one! A woman suffers a head injury and wakes up to discover her life is unrecognizable – she has three children and is the midst of divorce. Think of what your life was in 2015, imagine you couldn’t remember anything from the last decade. I mean, some things I would rather forget, it’s true, but still. Wouldn’t it be bizarre to wake up and discover what had happened even in the last five years? You’d never believe it if someone told you about the pandemic, for example. I really like this book and it was definitely worth the reread.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. I had heard about this book for decades and hadn’t yet read it. It was worth the wait! I really enjoyed this book; it was written from the perspective of a 15 year old boy with autism. In trying to find out who killed the neighbourhood dog and why, he discovers a lot more. The writing style is so interesting and compelling.
Just As Long As We’re Together and Here’s To You, Rachel Robinson. Recently Sarah (HI SARAH) mentioned these books and I had to go back and reread them. I downloaded everything Judy Blume I could, including Blubber, which is still a wildly upsetting book, but it only took me about forty-five minutes to read and contains the great line “It’s pretty hard to be on the other side, isn’t it?” Truth. These books about a trio of friends were perfect for a poolside read. Judy Blume was really the master of empathy and showing that people can be many different things. Also, we are all carrying burdens that no one else can see.
My Darling Wife. Thrillers are not usually my jam, so I have no idea how or why I downloaded this from Libby. Are we sensing a theme here? Was I drunk when I loaded up my Libby prior to vacation? I don’t remember doing that, but I guess I wouldn’t, WOULD I? Or maybe someone recommended this? I DON’T KNOW. Anyway, I’m not generally a fan of thrillers but this was diverting enough. It follows a married couple who seem to find murdering young girls an aphrodisiac. They try to pin these murders on a serial killer but things, as they are wont to do, go askew. It’s pretty creepy and twisty, so if that’s your thing, you’ll probably enjoy this. It was too creepy for me, but maybe that’s a selling point for you thriller lovers out there.
I’ve got some great, non-vacation books to talk to you about next week. Don’t forget that Daylight Saving Time starts THIS WEEKEND JUST KILL ME NOW. Honestly, there are currently hundreds, perhaps even thousands of things that we could all rage about every minute of the day, but this is the hill I am going to die on today. WE NEED TO STOP THE MADNESS. If you have ten minutes, listen to the episode of the Wirecutter podcast, entitled “How To Survive Daylight Saving Time.” Lots of helpful advice, as well as empirical evidence that affirms what I have always believed, and that is that DST and time change is terrible for our health and well-being. RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE! It is possible I am projecting my feelings about the international situation, such as it is, on to the concept of time change, but so be it. Take care of yourselves, friends. Reading is a great distraction; tell me if you’ve read anything good lately, or bad, or ugly. Any DNFs? Tell me everything. xo
Hee hee… I like that mug.
What Alice Forgot- such a good book. I love the little details, like she can’t remember that she now drinks coffee and can’t figure out why she has such a headache. Or, she forgot that she is now a runner- she goes for a walk and finds herself mysteriously bounding down the street. Those parts made me laugh.
Judy Blume!!! On the Happier Podcast, Gretchen and Liz just interviewed Judy Blume and it was good. I loved her books so, so much. And yes, I did reread Blubber as an adult. It reminded me that in the 1970s there was a strange lack of supervision in the schools (like, most of the really bad stuff in Blubber happens when the kids were eating lunch in the classroom WITH NO TEACHER AROUND.) I guess that’s one thing that’s better now- the school have really cracked down on bullying.
Anyway- I’m very envious of all this reading time you had! I want a vacation like that!
I learned about the Magdalene laundries from the Joni Mitchell song of the same name. It’s on Turbulent Indigo.
A friend of mine has recommended The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night to me multiple times. Maybe I should read it.
I remember reading What Alice Forgot and enjoying the story. It got me thinking back to who I was 10 years ago and how that version of me would be lost now. I read The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night also. I don’t remember a thing about it, so I guess I didn’t find it as compelling as you did.
Oh, I LOVED Curious Incident, what a wonderful book. I’m glad you read it.
I really enjoyed What Alice Forgot, too. You said go back to 2015…wow. I would have never met Mulder (he was born in April 2015, we met him in October), and my Dad was still alive and very healthy and traveling the world.
I haven’t read those two Judy Blume books, they came out when I was an adult. Maybe I should give them a try, I loved Judy Blume when I was a teenager/tween.
I DNF a book recently, The Anthropocene Review, by John Green. It’s essays, and I liked the ones I read, but I got tired of it and gave up.
I’m currently reading Ina Garten’s memoir, and I was loving it at first but now it’s feeling a little rushed and disjointed to me. Still a good read. I’m listening to The Heart’s Invisible Furies, which is about a man who was adopted in Ireland, though not from one of the Magdalene laundries. I had heard about those horrible places before, but I don’t remember hearing that term.
Is it weird that ten years ago my life was basically the same, minus a dog? I would be GLEEFUL to discover a dog.
I need to be better about DNFing, Nicole. I NEED TO BE BETTER. I am listening to a Big Book and I sort of don’t like it, but now I’m halfway through and I just keep thinking “there’s only fourteen hours left,” but that’s FOURTEEN HOURS. Why did I start my Big Books with Gone With the Wind? Nothing can be as good as that?
Nicole, this phenomenon you describe of being drunk or unconscious whilst downloading books from Libby is VERY FAMILIAR to me. I will go on vacation and open up my kindle and there are so many books I have never heard of and have no idea why I would want to read them. Mysterious. I think it must be some sort of fugue state of pre-vacation panic, wherein I think I will RUN OUT OF BOOKS, which would be pretty terrible, so I start downloading whatever is available with wild abandon.
Loved the Moriarty and of course the Judy Blume. I haven’t read Curious Incident in a very long time but I kind of want to read it with/to my kid? I wonder if she would like it?
I have no intention of reading All the Lonely People and I want you to spill the tea about the terrible twist!!!
I love seeing the pictures of your KOBO with palm trees and water in the background! This sounds like the ultimate vacation to me, with lots of reading time! I just started listening to The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie, a lovely non-stressful story read by a lovely narrator, Alison Larkin.
Gosh, now I’m SO curious about that bad ending that made you so angry!
And I’m dying on the DST hill with you, Nicole. It has me feeling enraged as well.
Well, color me surprised that you disliked the Hilderbrand book but loved Curious Incident! Because I’m a big stan for everything Hilderbrand but I can’t even tell you how much I hated Curious Incident. I think it irritated me because it painted a picture of autism (in 2003, the diagnosis was still not common) that was so extreme and clearly, the author was not an expert in the field. And good grief on the profanity!
I’m all about Judy Blume, so I’ll check that out! I’m currently reading one of my fave author’s short story collections, Curtis Sittenfeld’s Show Don’t Tell. So FREAKING good! And I just finished Yellow Face, which I disliked. Have you read it?
I started to tag the recommendation source for books so I can figure out what prompted me to read the book! You might have heard about “The Seven Year Slip” from Stephany or me. I read and liked it even though I usually don’t like time travel/magical realism. But I’ve given up on that author as all of her books seem to involve ghosts or some other magical realism and my brain just cannot go there!!
That Hilderbrand book reminds me of The Pilot’s Wife. Did you read that? I read it in college and thought it was such a page turner! Imagine finding out your husband had another wife after he dies. Gah. I can’t even.
I expect that I will do a ton of reading on our Mexico trip, too, since I tend to wake earlier than my husband. I can’t just lay in bed awake – I have to get up and do something! Last time we were in Mexico I would go get a latte and then sit on the beach and read/stare at the rising sun.
Ugh. Springing ahead. I actually prefer this to falling back though because falling back = extra hour/hours of parenting! We don’t do anything with the kids bedtimes. We just make them adjust and deal with some cranky days. I was going to have a double whammy of a 7am flight to NYC on Monday but I was able to move it back as the sales team doesn’t need me for meetings that day. Phew. Because getting up at 4:30 is hard enough for me WITHOUT THE GD TIME CHANGE. Yes, this is a hill I will die on as well.
I just read The Drift, by CJ Tudor, and it is so far outside what I normally read that I thought I would DNF it…. but it was really compelling! I’m not normally a standard thriller type of reader, but this one is extremely well done. I figured it out but it takes time and you realize very slowly what is happening, and more so the further you get as little pieces get revealed. It’s kind of a pandemic/apocalyptic book that follows three groups of people as the world is falling apart around them. I do recommend it!
Since you read Alice again I get to tell the story of what that book means to me again. It was a good ten years ago, and I was barely reading fiction. A blogger raved about Alice, so I decided to try it and I simply adored it. I know that there a good number of people out there who don’t like it, and other Moriarty books haven’t been as successful for me, but Alice was the gateway for getting me back into fiction and it is a book that I will always have the special feels for.
I agree that My Beautiful Wife was a little too creepy, but I still enjoyed it very much at the time.
Lately I’ve had a slew of books that were in the gray area between DNFing and continuing to read. I read ’em, but they weren’t the best.
I’m not looking forward to losing the morning light with the time change, but at least it’s another marker that we’re wrapping up winter so I will take it.
I have All the Lonely People on my TBR, and I’m glad I read this spoiler. I hate this twist as a plot device and it’s not even original! I can think of three other books right off the bat that use this same twist. I have liked all of Claire Keegan’s “books” (in quotes because they’re all just really long short stories) so definitely pick up her others if you haven’t already.
He Who Shall Not Be Named has talked about stopping daylight savings time and honestly that is the ONLY thing I want him to do, so he probably won’t. I’ve been trying to get up 10 minutes earlier each day to prepare but so far it’s just shifting the misery to a different week.
Well more books are now on hold for me. I read both What Alice Forgot & Curious Incident years ago — don’t remember anything about the books but know I enjoyed both. I have had THREE DNF’s in the past two weeks. I read a lot when we are in Mexico for 3 months (not Nicole volume reading but 7-8 books a month) but had three in a row I couldn’t get into (The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, The Driver & Family Family). It could be that our son, daughter in law plus 2 1/2 year and 9 month old grandsons visited for the same 2 weeks. I never had more than 15 minutes at a time to read….so that could be it. It was however so much fun & better than reading). My fave books in the past month were How to Read a Book by Monica Wood, Strange Sally Diamond by Liz Nugent & Piglet by Lottie Hazel. Who knows, they may have been your recommendations but I’m terrible at tracking that.
I have Small Things Like These on hold. It’s been made into a movie starring Cillian Murphy. I new about these laundries from a previous movie, The Magdalene Sisters, I watched years ago. Did you know the last Magdalene Laundry closed in 1996??!! Shocking and sad what these places did to the psych of these young girls.
The Moriarty book sounds interesting and I’ll add to my TBR list. I read Curious Dog when it first came out and really enjoyed it. I’m glad you found it worth the wait!
I read Flowers in the Attic and can see why it was so appealing to the early teen set. I found the last half a slog, so skimmed and checked Wikipedia to see if I missed any pertinent plot details – I didn’t – and decided that I would not continue on with the 4 other (bonkers!) books in the series. Was fun to see what all the fuss was about!
I am not a huge thriller reader, but I just finished Two Nights in Lisbon by Chris Pavone and really enjoyed it. I’m currently reading The Glassmaker by Tracy Chevalier and have Margo Has Money Troubles and The Wedding People lined up next – both recommended by you.
Sounds like you had a lovely vacation!
Well, wonder no more! The Good Part and Just Haven’t Met You Yet are both Sophie Cousens books I highly recommended to you. 😂 It is interesting to me that you loved What Alice Forgot but couldn’t abide The Good Part; the plots are quite similar (VERY, IMO, but I read What Alice Forgot a lot of years ago), and it isn’t clear in The Good Part until the end (I think??) whether there’s magic involved. But that’s the way it goes with books! I am normally very very anti-magic myself (I do not read fantasy except Lewis and Tolkien) but that one worked for me (as have several other time-travelly ones) because the rest of the story was so grounded.
Regardless! We got delayed when we went there for our honeymoon too, and didn’t end up getting to our room until 2:00 in the morning. And I got food poisoned for a day. But I would still go back in a heartbeat! Such a beautiful place.
Wow! You really did read a lot! Good for you! I heard What Alice Forgot is good. But that mug..just perfect..lol!
What Alice Forgot was my first and favourite Moriarty (I think I have read all her books now), I loved it so much.
I’m in a bit of a reading slump at the moment so considering a re- read…
What a lot of books, Nicole!! Haven’t read a lot of these…
_Curious Incident_ really took me back! I remember thining it was very clever and loving it when I first read it, but I wondered how it holds up given all the insights and activism that have sprung up around Autism. And there’s a Broadway show based on the book too!
Your mug is TFF!! My “mug” when I read the second line :D!
Wow! That is a lot of reading. What a good idea to list/review them on your blog; it’s a great way to keep track of them. Also love the mug and can fully relate in these days of whiplash news reports. Who knew the “Shawinigan Handshake” would become a news item once again? Crazy. Book recommendations from me: Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus – total chick lit cover which would normally turn me off (don’t know why because I really am not a book snob) but the book is such a fun, emotional, lovely read and it has an amazing dog character who I loved and also I could relate so much to the treatment of women in the workplace and Garmus can write about that without descending into a screed or a rant (whew. Now there is a wonderful example of a run on sentence). The Midnight Library by Matt Haig – I underlined, I copied sentences and paragraphs into my journal, I cried. Loved this book so much and related to it so much. The Moon of the Turning Leaves by Waubgeshig Rice – a cataclysm results in a blackout and a community moves north and back into the bush where they are safe and can rekindle their Anishinaabe traditions. As resources start being used up, they realize they must venture to the more dangerous south in order for their younger members to thrive. There’s three from the top of my head. Now to start noting the next books on my blog! Thanks for the inspiration.
I am sorry! Moon of the Turning Leaves is the sequel to Moon of the Crusted Snow. I would totally recommend to read Moon of the Crusted Snow first. It gives the origin story and the background to the characters. Even though Moon of the Turning Leaves is good, I think the Moon of the Crusted Snow is much, much better. And I love the titles. So romantic and evocative and descriptive.
Sometimes it is just nice to have a beach read, which I never really think of as anything serious, and usually they are kind of crap, but they are easy to get through! Have you ever read Marian Keyes? She is an Irish writer who writes fluffy stories of romance and families being families set in small Irish towns. I think my average rating for her is about a 3 (out of 5) but I have read a lot of them on the beach, and keep reading them!
My favorite book last month was Brain on Fire, but it is not a fun, light read! I also enjoyed Home Stretch. I had no DNFs in February! Yay. 🙂 Oh, and I remember reading the Curious Incident, gosh, maybe 20 years ago (?) and really enjoying it! It was actually one that stuck with me.
I loved Curious Incident when I read it years ago. They also made it into a play that was very … kinetic. Brilliant, but busy. Also very funny.
I’ve been wanting to read Small Things Like These for ages, but I can never get a copy of it from the library.
I wish Libby had a way of making notes on books because I would love to note where I hear about books. For a while, I just created a tag for some of the places that I’d come across books and then tag the book twice (once for TBR and once for where I’d heard about it) but that’s too much work. I guess for now, I just try to remember. Or not.
I too have been re-visiting Judy Blume lately! I just finished Tiger Eyes which was every bit as touching and readable to me at 51 as it was at 15. I read Blubber a few years ago after intending for my then early teen daughters to read it. WOW, that was a lot. And now I hear there’s a movie of Forever coming out! Funny to think that my 1984 experience of the mothers getting together and banning us from reading it (which of course did not stop us from actually reading it) was probably something experienced all over the world.
Nicoooooole. I think it’s time to admit it: We are anti-book twins. Sigh. This is devastating to me.
I *loved* All the Lonely People (the twist was whatever, I saw it coming, but just the found family aspect made me soooo happy). I could barely get through What Alice Forgot. And I DNF-ed My Lovely Wife.
I need time to digest all of this.