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Sheri's Modest Climb in Long Strides
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Sheri
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Nov 17, 2020 05:12PM

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2. All the Devils Are Here Louise Penny This book started a bit slowly for me, and I was beginning to wonder if Penny had lost her touch. But no. Absolutely not. I could not read the second half of the book fast enough (although it did not take me until then to get into it). I think I do have to suspend my belief with her a bit regarding the situations Gamache and others find themselves in and especially how they manage to successfully get through them, but I am definitely up for it! I do appreciate how she weaves the family and friendship relations into her plot without sacrificing the crime story.



I believe I read somewhere that this book did help bring about some medical reforms in England. All in all, I'm glad to have read it.

I'm not sure what I expected--I think maybe more time in South America at the first--but I liked this book more than I thought I might. I don't really read "scary" books, but I didn't find it terrifying. And the story is very well told. We are introduced to characters and want to know more about them, so we keep reading. Amy is described on the first page in some very interesting terms, but we are told this is before and we want to know how she came to merit that description and what it all means. I also enjoyed all the biblical symbolism he worked in. He admits to it somewhat in the author interview at the end, but is a bit cagey as to what he himself believes. And unfortunately, he doesn't seem to have inhibitions about using inappropriate expletives. I relaxed some in the middle section of the book where the chosen exclamative word had no negative connotations for me. But even with that, I was so interested in the story that I bought the next two books full price instead of waiting for a sale. So if there is time left in the year after making it up this TBR mountain....





I am so glad to have finally finished this book! Don't get me wrong--it was quite good. But I have been reading it since January. Non-fiction generally takes me longer to read anyway, and although the language is accessible, the book is very well researched and the footnotes slowed me down, especially when reading on my Kindle Paperwhite (if the footnote link numbers were near the sensitive areas for the page turns, it was difficult to get to the footnote and not just turn the page). And over 40% of the book was made up of the footnotes and bibliography! I liked that the author interacted with other scholars, mentioning various interpretations that are postulated for each parable, although of course he explains his own position and gives his reasoning. I also appreciate that he emphasized understanding the parables and their intent in their original context, yet also gave a brief and somewhat devotional thought at the end of each discussion on how the parable applies to our (the readers') lives.


It took me a while to get through this book. It was by no means boring, but it did go at a slower pace, and the writing deserved being read a bit more carefully than some books I have read this year. Elizabeth Goudge expresses herself very well, and I have recorded several quotes in my reading journal. Yet every once in a while I felt she had tried a bit too hard to turn an interesting phrase and muddled it. She writes from a basically Christian world-view, too, although one or two unorthodox ideas show through in her writing. I own a few more books by Elizabeth Goudge (and have read others by her), and I hope to eventually read those also.
Note: Although the link says part one of two, I think my edition is the whole book together).

I had this book in a physical copy, which I sold or donated when I got a "complete works" on my Kindle, but I actually read it by audiobook. I am finding I enjoy 19th century British literature on audio--maybe because many books of that time were published in serial form and probably often read out loud by one family member to the rest.
I really enjoyed this book. I have read The Moonstone two or three times, and I have also read The Woman in White, which evidently did not impress me as much, as I can't remember anything about it. But after this book, I am ready to read more Collins! Dickens remains my favorite from this time period, but Mr. and Mrs. Wragge were almost worthy of Dickens. And like Dickens, the novel is partly a commentary on a social problem. However, it was evidently seen as scandalous in its day.
At times it was difficult to find someone to root for. The only really upright character(s) get very little "screen time". Yet even though Magdalen does some reprehensible things, we do hope it doesn't go too badly for her at the end. The ending was perhaps a little too rapidly forgiving, but I still liked the book. I enjoyed the transition between the sections of the book, given in the form of correspondence between the different characters.

An entertaining time-travel book, which could have gone creepy but didn't. I had to suspend belief about the extremely blithe manner in which one of the protagonists accepted a suddenly found ability, but overall, I really enjoyed the book. The time-line concepts were interesting. I think it would make a good movie--maybe not a blockbuster, but one that I would enjoy. And while not overtly Christian, the author explains some of his intended symbolism in an afterward.


Of course there was language and some scenes and descriptions I blipped over, all in all I enjoyed the book. I thought the translation managed to keep the Spanish flavor of the book while making it accessible in English. I suspected who was destroying the books, but "why" was the question the book eventually answered. The story was interesting and very well written.


My first Nordic noir. I enjoyed it more than I thought I might--it really kept me turning the pages--but I didn't like the casual sex (although at least there weren't pages and pages of too much information). The nature of the crimes themselves (not the financial ones) was horrendous, of course, but even the murders in a "cozy" mystery should make us reflect on the horror of sin, if we really stop to think about it. The author did an excellent job of bringing the story lines together. Yet he did leave me with many questions about Lisbeth. So I will be continuing with the series.


This is the second in her series focusing on Thomas Cromwell. This book covers the transition from Anne Boleyn to Jane Seymour. There are things I dislike about these books--the present tense narration, for one, although after a while it stops jarring so much. And the characters tak among themselves at times like Shakespeare at his most bawdy. But Mantel manages to keep me reading despite all that because the court intrigue is so interesting. Cromwell comes across in this book and especially the next as a complex character. And that Mantel can make me sympathize at all with Cromwell, given how much I love the movie (and the play) A Man for All Seasons, where he is definitely a villian, is saying something!
22. The Mirror & the Light Hilary Mantel I continued right into the last entry, so that I wouldn't have to get used to her way of writing again! In this volume Jane Seymour exits and Anne of Cleves enters...and exits, but alive. And Thomas Cromwell's story comes to its end. But there is a lot of good reading along the way. It saddens me though, that her version of Cromwell seems very interested in further reforming the church, but has so many things in his character that do not reflect a good understanding of what God wants. It saddens me because proclaiming one thing and doing another is such a common failure for all of us, some more blatantly than others, perhaps, but it is a very common temptation.


For some reason I forgot to list this in my last update. This was a short book and it started out pleasantly and positively, with not much I hadn't considered before. But it got into deeper waters when addressing grandparents who have been expecting a grandchild and then there was a miscarriage, or grandparents who are not allowed contact with their grandchildren. I realized that I am truly blessed. Input from other grandmothers added some variety to the book. There was also a chapter about grandparenting when the grandmother has physical challenges. All in all, I felt it covered a good bit of territory for a fairly short book.

25. TEN: Laws of Love Set in Stone J. John
This was a very accessible treatment of the 10 commandments. Rather than starting from the top as they are presented in the BIble, the author chose to begin with commandment #10 and work up. He did emphasize the interconnectedness of the commandments and pointed out that in breaking one, we often break others with the same act. His emphasis is on recognizing our failures and correcting them, and he manages to be neither too condemning nor too tolerant of our tendency to mess things up. I would be interested in reading more by this author.







The Big Book of Christmas Mysteries Otto Penzler For a collection of mysteries, this was pretty good--only one or two weak entries, and it was a big book. Some I had read before in smaller collections, but it had been a while, so that was fine.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
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