Book Arrival:
Death Doesn't Forget
(TAIPEI NIGHT MARKET #4)
Jing-nan, the proprietor of a food stand at Taipei's largest night market, is framed for a string of high-profile murders in the city.
Book Reviews, mystery novels, memoirs, women's fiction, literary fiction. adult fiction, multicultural, Asian literature
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About the book: A high-altitude thriller that will take your breath away--Journalist Cecily Wong is on her most dangerous climb yet, miles above sea level on a mountain in Nepal. But the elements are nothing compared to one chilling truth: There's a killer on the mountain.
I'm half way through, and find it very suspenseful and informative about the dangers and thrills of alpine climbing and mountaineering.
And now for another rom com,
What are you reading this week?
Books received for review:
What are you reading this week?
About the book: A luxurious African safari turns deadly for a Hollywood starlet and her entourage in this historical thriller set in Tanganyika, now Tanzania.
Book beginning/First paragraph:
Katie Barslow
She was watching the giraffes at the watering hole after breakfast, no longer as awed by their presence as she had been even four days ago, when she'd had first seen a great herd of them eating leaves from a copse of tall umbrella acacia, their heads occasionally bobbing up to stare back, unfazed and not especially alarmed by the humans.
Page 56:
"No," she told him, feeling more like his mother than his wife. "You're right to be scared. We should be. But..."
Click on the title, The Lioness, to see my Goodreads review.
Would you read on?
The Friday 56. Find any sentence that grabs you on page 56 of your book. Post it, and add your URL to Freda's Voice. Also visit Book Beginnings at Rose City Reader.
"Ladies and gentleman, I have an announcement," I said grandly.My friends paused from wolfing down various decadent desserts and glanced at one another skeptically. They were not used to me saying anything grandly...."My search for a blueberry buckle worthy of our upcoming Fourth of July is finally at an end," I said, still in grand mode.
About the book: The night fourteen-year-old Chanie Nyrider ran away from her abusive parents, she was saved by an older woman who offered Chanie a new life working as a prostitute. With nowhere to turn, Chanie was drawn into Edmonton’s dark underbelly, where she survived until arrested four years later. She was given two options: jail or a high school program for troubled youth. Mud Lilies is the powerful story of a young woman finding a path of hope in the darkest of places and defiantly choosing to pursue it.
“Harrowing, hopeful, and informed by Ramayan's own experiences as a runaway to Edmonton, Mud Lilies is a hymn to the power of one young woman's defiant spark of life, a story of grit and wisdom set against a backdrop of cruelty and indifference.” — Grace O’Connell, Open Book
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Harvee rated a book it was amazing | |||||
It's amazing that a chance encounter with a stranger, Zhang Fujian, carrying a small fortune in his bag would lead to the downfall of the Chao family patriarch, owner of the Chao restaurant, and lead to suspicion falling on the three sons. I enjoyed the characterization of each son, so different from one another, and the denouement of the plot in this domestic drama. There is a murder to be solved, also, but I liked that the brothers join together in the face of being children of immigrants in a small American town, and in the face of possible, pending tragedy. | |||||
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Harvee rated a book | |
The romance between Max and Joelle began and blossomed early in the book, which surprised me, as I wondered, where the story would go from there. I liked that family plays such an important role in Joelle's life and that Max comes to value the idea of family as something he never had. I also liked that problems with Max's bookstore and Joelle's bakery also moved the story forward. The romance could have had more internal challenges, however, instead of all from outside conflicts. Also, the constant praises for Joelle as a dutiful daughter, praises from Max and from her family were a little overdone throughout the book. But overall, this was a pleasant read, a contemporary young romance novel. |
What are you reading this week?
Books reviewed Letting Go of September by Sandra J. Jackson, July 31, 2024; BooksGoSocial Genre: thriller , family drama Themes: reflectiv...