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Showing posts with label Annie Barrows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Annie Barrows. Show all posts
Thursday, September 04, 2025
The Bookish Books Reading Challenge: September Book Ideas and Link-Up for Reviews
9:56 PM
I'm late to post again this month. September is already getting away from me and it's barely even started. Yikes! This is going to be a quick post, too, because I only read two bookish books in August. They were:
The Truth According to Us by Annie Barrows—This historical novel, which I listened to on audio, takes place in a small West Virigina town in 1938. When a wealthy socialite from Washington, D.C. is cut off by her father, who insists she needs to learn how to live independently, she is forced to take a job with the Federal Writers' Project. She is tasked with writing a town history of a berg in the middle of nowhere, exactly where she does not want to be. As she gets to know the quirky Romeyn family, however, she finds her attitude toward many things changing.
Writers and Liars by Carol Goodman—Goodman's newest mystery/thriller stars an antiquities museum director who is invited back to the privately-owned Greek island where she once lived for a summer during a writers' retreat. Unable to write after suffering a heartbreaking betrayal, she has done her best to put the whole terrible experience behind her. Now, fifteen years later, she vows to go back and confront those who did her wrong. She counted on drama, but not a dead body...
Those are the only bookish books I read last month. How about you? What bookish reads did you enjoy in August?
I'm not sure yet what exactly I'll be reading this month. Here are three possibilities:
The Lamplighter's Bookshop by Sophie Austin—I like the sound of this historical novel. It's about a woman who is left penniless after her father wracks up enormous debts with his gambling, leaving her and her mother destitute. In order to keep them from the poorhouse, the daughter applies for a position at a bookstore. Much to her chagrin, she's not the only one who wants the job. Can she and her handsome, enigmatic competitor find a way to work together so they both win?
The Librarians by Sherry Thomas (available September 30, 2025)—I was fortunate to receive an e-ARC of this novel from NetGalley. When a murder at their workplace shatters the peace and refuge they've found at the library, a ragtag group of librarians must band together to save the library they love.
The Sisters of Book Row by Shelley Noble (available March 3, 2026)—Okay, so I don't actually have a copy of this book, which doesn't come out until next year, but I'm praying to the gods of NetGalley and Edelweiss that I can snag an e-ARC. It sounds like a great bookish read.
Based on real circumstances, this historical novel is set in 1915 Manhattan where a vicious censor named Anthony Comstock is eagerly outlawing the publication of any works he deems inappropriate or dangerous. The three Applebaum sisters, owners of a Book Row bookstore, are determined to stop him at any cost.
What about you? What bookish books are you planning to read in September?
If you are participating in the 2025 Bookish Books Reading Challenge, please use the widget below to link-up your September reviews. If you're not signed up for the challenge yet, what are you waiting for? Click here to join the party.
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Top Ten Tuesday: The Longest Books I've Read in 2025 (So Far)
6:18 PM
Today's TTT prompt—Top Ten Books With a High Page Count—is all about lengthy books. Are you a fan of thick, detailed door stoppers or do you avoid them like the plague? For me, it just depends. If a book is keeping me engaged and entertained, then I'll continue reading it no matter how many pages it has. If a book isn't holding my attention, then it doesn't matter if it's 50 pages or 5000, I'm going to DNF that sucker! I always read a mix of adult and children's books, most of which are mysteries/thrillers, historical fiction novels, or historical mysteries. Depending on which authors you read, these genres don't tend to produce the kind of epic tomes you see in the sci-fi and fantasy genres. I'd guess the page count of the books I read in any given year is around 200-250. Most years, I do take on a few thicker tomes, which for me usually means around 500 pages. This year, I've picked up more of them than I usually do, so for my list today, I'm going to share the ten longest books I've read in 2025 so far.
As always, Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by the lovely Jana over at That Artsy Reader Girl.
Top Ten Longest Books I've Read in 2025 (So Far)
- from longest to shortest (of the longest) -
1. The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7683524304
Genre: nonfiction/U.S. history/Black history
What it's about: the massive migration of Black people out of the American South to northern, western, and midwestern states, from about 1910 to the 1970s
Page count: 622
Read for: book club
Affect of page count on reading experience: This book is interesting, but it definitely feels overly long and tedious. Other than the woman who recommended it, I'm the only one in my book club who finished it. Everyone else got too bored with it to read to the end.
2. Shift by Hugh Howey (SILO trilogy #2)
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7362810129
Genre: Dystopian/sci-fi
What it's about: With the world on the brink of certain destruction, select groups of people are invited underground to live in protected silos. Generations later, it's forbidden to even talk of the outside world, but there are always those whose curiosity and desperation get the better of them. What do they find beyond the silos? No one knows because those who leave never come back...
Page count: 579
Read for: I've been wanting to finish this series, which I started in 2018.
Affect of page count on reading experience: Although I really like the SILO books, there's no doubt that they get REALLY long. Longer than necessary. They don't have much plot to them, really, so the stories do get tedious and dull in places.
3. It Happened On the Lake by Lisa Jackson
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7528355859
Genre: mystery/thriller
What it's about: Harper Reed Prescott owns a large Victorian home on a beautiful private island which is also hers. She has no interest in either. After the mysterious deaths and other happenings that have occured there, she just wants to sell the whole property and be done with it. Unfortunately, there is much in her past and that of her family that still needs to be reckoned with...
Page count: 586
Read for: NetGalley review
Affect of page count on reading experience: This book is overwritten in every possible way. It was a huge slog for me and I'm still not sure why I plowed through the whole thing!
4. The Ask and the Answer by Patrick Ness (Chaos Walking series #2)
My original blog review (2011): http://www.blogginboutbooks.com/2011/01/i-mean-seriously-could-patrick-ness-get.html
My Goodreads review (2025): https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7717949658
Genre: YA dystopian/sci-fi
What it's about: Todd Hewitt has grown up on a planet other than Earth. Viola has come to his planet because Earth is no longer habitable. Todd's world is at war. Can he and Viola stop the violence, save their civilization, and protect the refugees from Viola's spaceship who are hurtling toward them hoping for peace and safety?
Page count: 553
Read for: re-reading the series because I LOVE it
Affect of page count on reading experience: The tension and action in this book are so unrelenting that the pages fly by. You barely notice how long it is.
5. The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness (Chaos Walking series #1)
My original blog review (2011): http://www.blogginboutbooks.com/2011/01/knife-of-never-letting-go-leaves-me.html
My Goodreads review (2025): https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/874857816
Genre: YA dystopian/sci-fi
What it's about: Todd Hewitt's parents came to a new planet to find refuge away from a dying Earth. Now an orphan, Todd has become disillusioned with the rules of his town. He is running away when he encounters Viola, whose scouting ship has just crashed nearby. Together, the parentless teens flee toward a city where they've heard they can find safety. The mayor of Todd's town, who isn't about to let them go, is in hot pursuit, determined to catch them no matter the cost.
Page count: 528
Read for: re-reading the series because I LOVE it
Affect of page count on reading experience: Ditto what I said above about The Ask and the Answer.
6. Wool by Hugh Howey (SILO trilogy #1)
My original blog review: http://www.blogginboutbooks.com/2018/01/subterranean-dystopian-trilogy-starts.html
Genre: Dystopian/sci-fi
What it's about: See summary for Shift above.
Page count: 509
Read for: I want to finish the SILO trilogy, which I started in 2018.
Affect of page count on reading experience: Wool moves at a faster pace than Shift, so it doesn't feel as long, but it does get slow in places.
7. The Burning Library by Gilly Macmillan (available November 25, 2025)
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7573787746
Genre: Mystery/thriller
What it's about: When Dr. Anya Brown publishes a translation of an ancient folio, she receives the attention of a secret women's organization that has been hunting for a certain book of power for over a century. A rival group also wants the tome. Caught in the middle of a deadly fight she doesn't understand, Anya has to figure out how to get herself out of it—before she's the next person to be mysteriously murdered.
Page count: 496
Read for: pleasure - Macmillan is one of my go-to mystery/thriller authors
Affect of page count on reading experience: Macmillan usually writes contemporary mysteries and thrillers that are quick-paced and engrossing. This book is a big departure from her norm. Unfortunately, I found The Burning Library overly long, tedious, confusing, and boring.
8. The Truth According to Us by Annie Barrows
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7843112501
Genre: historical fiction
What it's about: When her father cuts her off, insisting she become financially independent, Layla Beck is forced to take a job with the Federal Writers' Project. Tasked with writing a history of backwards Macedonia, West Virginia, she is unenthusiastic to say the least. As Layla gets to know the Romeyns, the quirky family with which she's boarding, her attitude slowly changes. She changes their lives as well, bringing unwanted tension, unwelcome questions, and unasked for observations that force the Romeyns to acknowledge some painful truths.
Page count: 486
Read for: pleasure and for the Literary Escapes Reading Challenge
Affect of page count on reading experience: Overall, this novel is quite charming and engaging. It is excessively long, though, and definitely would have benefitted from some serious trimming.
9. The Women by Kristin Hannah
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/5736912487
Genre: historical fiction
What it's about: The life of a privileged young nurse is changed irrevocably when she volunteers to serve in the Vietnam War. When she returns home to California after two tours expecting a hero's welcome, she's dismayed to find her family dismissive of her experiences and her countrymen critical. Dealing with PTSD and these issues takes her to the very edge of her sanity. Can anything bring her back?
Page count: 471
Read for: pleasure
Affect of page count on reading experience: This is another book that is way longer than it needs to be. There's no real plot, so it feels episodic, repetitious, and dull, especially in the latter half when the main character is back in the U.S.
10. The Boxcar Librarian by Brianna Labuskes
My Goodreads review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7136265693
Genre: historical fiction
What it's about: After being involved in a political scandal, a young writer is shipped off to Montana to work with a Works Progress Administration team to write a guide for the state. There, she encounters the intriguing mystery of a long-missing boxcar librarian. She's determined to find out what really happened.
Page count: 446
Read for: Goodreads review
Affect of page count on reading experience: This book kept my attention through all of its many pages. I enjoyed it.
I'd like to complete the Chaos Walking and SILO trilogies before the end of the year as well as a few more chunksters, so I've still got some hefty reading in front of me. What about you? What lengthy tomes have you read this year? Which door stoppers are your favorite? What's the longest book you've ever read? I'd truly love to know. Leave me a comment on this post and I will gladly return the favor on your blog.
Happy TTT!
Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Charming Epistolary Novel Warm and Fun
4:35 PM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
With World War II raging all around, British writer Juliet Ashton tried to lift people's spirits by penning humorous pieces for her newspaper column. Now that the war's over, she wants to write a novel. The only trouble is she can't for the life of her figure out what it should be about.
When Juliet receives an intriguing letter from Dawsey Adams, a dock worker who lives on the island of Guernsey, her interest is piqued. She's especially curious about The Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, a book club Dawsey and his friends formed during the war as a spur-of-the-moment excuse to explain to the occupying soldiers why they were breaking curfew. As Juliet exchanges letters with Dawsey and other colorful members of the club, she becomes fascinated by their lives, the history of Guernsey, and the people's experiences during the war. The more she corresponds with the islanders, the more she realizes she's found not only a fascinating subject for her book but also a new crop of dear, dear friends.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows is a charming novel told entirely in letters. As you can tell from the plot summary, it's a character-driven tale—and what characters they are! The beauty of this story really lies in its quirky cast. Because of the islanders' lively personalities, the letters they write to Juliet are colorful and fun. There isn't a lot of action to be had in The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, so it feels a bit slow, especially at the beginning. It gets better as it goes, however, and readers will soon find themselves wrapped up in the story of Guernsey. I knew nothing at all about the island, so the historical bits interested me. Like any book lover would, I also appreciated the novel's many nods to the power of books to bring people together, spur animated conversation, and comfort people in times of strife. While I know plenty of people who absolutely adore this book, I ended up liking it, not loving it. Still, it's definitely worth the read.
(Readalikes: Hm, I can't think of anything. Can you?)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for language (no F-bombs) and violence
To the FTC, with love: I bought a copy of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society from Amazon with a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
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