Shelf Control is a feature where bloggers pick an unread book from their shelves and talk about it. Shelf Control is hosted at Literary Potpourri
Book Reviews, mystery novels, memoirs, women's fiction, literary fiction. adult fiction, multicultural, Asian literature
Jan 18, 2023
Wednesdays: Shelf Control Meme
Jan 14, 2023
Sunday Salon: Ghost Girl, Banana by Wiz Wharton
My comments:
Memes: The Sunday Post hosted by The Caffeinated Bookreviewer. Also, It's Monday: What Are You Reading, and Sunday Salon, Stacking the Shelves, Mailbox Monday
Jan 13, 2023
Book Beginning: If You Are Lonely....A Short Story by Yiyun Li
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Gordon, a single divorced man, has as his only companions a foster pit bull disliked by the neighborhood, and an elderly widow who rents him the bungalow on her property. These contacts seem to be enough for him at the moment, as he goes out of his way to avoid conflicts with the neighbors re his dog, and continues taking care of his crochety landlord by doing her chores and creating a garden on the property.
Book beginning:
"She should've given you a different name," Gordon said. "No offence, but Ajax is a terrible name. A terrible role model for anyone. What about Odysseus, with some brains at least?"The dog's eyes, limpid and devoid of self-doubt, did not show any recognition of the misfortune of his name....
Visit Book Beginnings at Rose City Reader for this meme.
Jan 12, 2023
End of Year Book Meme, Using Books Read in 2022
I've done this meme several years, but not recently.
Thanks to The Boston Bibliophile for sharing and reviving the meme this year. I'm using her outline.
Use titles of books you read in 2022 to answer the questions:
Jan 7, 2023
Chinese Asian American Authors: Literary Fiction
Yellowface
This title seems to fit the novel, as a non-Chinese, June Hayward, steals an unpublished manuscript from her famous Chinese-American author friend, Althea Lui, passing it off as completely her own.
As Althea has died, June profits from the manuscript's publication, gaining fame and wealth, while she also pretends to be of Chinese origin, taking advantage of the publishing world's current interest in diversity in authors and books they publish.
My complete review of the book is here
Four Treasures of the Sky by Jenny Tinghui Zhang , April 5, 2022, Flatiron Books
Memes: The Sunday Post hosted by The Caffeinated Bookreviewer. Also, It's Monday: What Are You Reading, and Sunday Salon, Stacking the Shelves, Mailbox Monday
Dec 31, 2022
Sunday Salon: First Books of the New Year and Last Books of the Old Year
Wishing you lots of great books in 2023!
For the very first read in 2023, these three are on my list! Which would you choose?
1) a thriller
The Personal Assistant (review)
Safe With Me
The Villa
A Novel
by Rachel Hawkins
My last books in 2022 were:
Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Not exactly historical fiction, as this novel is set in the 1960s, but it does detail how old fashioned attitudes to women discriminated against them in all areas. It shows that misogyny and inequality prevented many women from advancing in their careers, especially in the sciences. Also, abuses, physical and mental, they had to endure that put and kept them down.
The story is moving and infuriating both, and we cheer on the main character, Elizabeth Zott, who struggles after the death of her very supportive husband to raise a gifted child on her own as well as fight for her career in chemistry. The story is bittersweet and I loved the ending.
The Kimono Tattoo
The narrator was excellent, the plot added suspense and atmosphere to Tokyo by day and night, and the kimono tattoos on the body of the woman, as well as tattoo sketches found by Ruth and her friends, made this an intriguing novel. The unearthing of dark secrets in this unseen side of the city made this novel of suspense worth listening to.
Memes: The Sunday Post hosted by The Caffeinated Bookreviewer. Also, It's Monday: What Are You Reading, and Sunday Salon, Stacking the Shelves, Mailbox Monday |
Dec 24, 2022
Sunday Salon: Another Rom Com and a Thriller
Outside it's in the single digits. Inside, it's warm and cozy.
Indoor winter reading:
by Tamara Lush
Pub Date 24 Jan 2023 Wattpad WEBTOON Book Group, Netgalley
Genre: romance, romantic comedy, contemporary fiction
This romance uses many of the rom com tropes: a fake engagement to fool the family of the wealthy guy; a bedroom with only one bed while they are at the family mansion; a romantic love between the two fakers that it takes the entire book for them to acknowledge.
Nevertheless, the tropes work in this story, the way it's written. how the plot and main characters are developed. It was an enjoyable novel, with enough humorous moments to be labeled romantic comedy.
My only reservations about the book: the open door sex descriptions were a bit overly graphic and descriptions could be way shortened. We got the idea in the first several paragraphs.
The Only Survivors: A Novel
Publication: April 11, 2023; Scribner, NetgalleyGenre: thriller, suspenseA thrilling, suspense novel where a group of nine high school classmates bond as survivors of a school van crash that had sent them hurling into a raging river in the Tennessee mountains. Now in their twenties, the group continues to meet for a week every year at an isolated house, strengthening their bonds and their pledge to each other to keep the secrets of that horrific van crash that had killed 12 of their other classmates.
After two of the group die, the rest are uneasy and don't know if they can still trust each other, suspecting that one of them might be a murderer.
I like that the story of the crash is told in bits and pieces throughout the book and we get the full and complete story of what happened only at the end, This way of telling the story adds to the suspense and kept me guessing. The ending was not a total surprise to me, but still a good one.
Stay well, especially if you're in the middle of the snow bomb!
Memes: The Sunday Post hosted by The Caffeinated Bookreviewer. Also, It's Monday: What Are You Reading, and Sunday Salon, Stacking the Shelves, Mailbox Monday
A thrilling, suspense novel where a group of nine high school classmates bond as survivors of a school van crash that had sent them hurling into a raging river in the Tennessee mountains. Now in their twenties, the group continues to meet for a week every year at an isolated house, strengthening their bonds and their pledge to each other to keep the secrets of that horrific van crash that had killed 12 of their other classmates.
After two of the group die, the rest are uneasy and don't know if they can still trust each other, suspecting that one of them might be a murderer.
I like that the story of the crash is told in bits and pieces throughout the book and we get the full and complete story of what happened only at the end, This way of telling the story adds to the suspense and kept me guessing. The ending was not a total surprise to me, but still a good one.
Stay well, especially if you're in the middle of the snow bomb!
Memes: The Sunday Post hosted by The Caffeinated Bookreviewer. Also, It's Monday: What Are You Reading, and Sunday Salon, Stacking the Shelves, Mailbox Monday |
Sunday Salon: Letting Go of September by Sandra J. Jackson
Books reviewed Letting Go of September by Sandra J. Jackson, July 31, 2024; BooksGoSocial Genre: thriller , family drama Themes: reflectiv...
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You Will Never Be Me by Jesse Q. Sutanto Publication: August 20, 2024; Berkley Genre: women's fiction, thriller, suspense, adult con...
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Claws of the Cat (Shinobi Mystery #1) by a uthor Susan Spann is being re-released by Seventh Street Books; Reprint edition (April 23...
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These two domestic thrillers with the same theme and title are as similar as they are different. The House Swap by Rebecca Fleet May 22, 2...