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Reading Wednesday

    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka

    This lovely book is full of emotion and sorrow and should be read by every American no matter your race. A short book, I easily read it in one day, but so spellbinding you won’t forget it. Here is my book review The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka.

    Uniquely written in eight memorable sections, Otsuka follows the lives of Japanese women from all walks of life who travel to San Francisco as “picture brides” in the early 1900’s. Surviving the long boat journey is only the first of the trials this remarkable women face.

    On arrival most of the women find they have been lied to by the marriage broker and their husbands are old, poor and sometimes violent. The women endure hardships of every kind from poverty and hard work in the fields, to the birth and death of children and unrelenting racism, especially as World War II brings the unimaginable and the Japanese families lose everything.

    Much of the book is written using the “we” pronoun, in short descriptive sentences that draw the reader into the intimate details of the lives of these women. I highly recommend this beautiful story of tradition and culture, friendship and loss, endurance and hard work. Most of all, it is the American immigration story – the foundation of this country and what does it really mean to be an American.

    *****Five stars for The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka. Thank you for reading my book review The Buddha in the Attic by Julie Otsuka. We love it when you pin and share our book reviews. Thank you.

    See last week’s book review Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron.

    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron

    This book. Wow. I loved it…but I also struggled with it. It is long (500 pages), beautifully written but occasionally somewhat long-winded. Published in 2001 it received acclaim in Europe before being translated into English in 2004. Here is my book review The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron.

    Young Daniel and his father run an antique bookstore in Barcelona during a time when Spain and the city is reeling from war. Daniel has lost his mother, and in his grief he finds solace in a mysterious book – The Shadow of the Wind – discovered in The Cemetery of Forgotten Books (a series also by Carlos Ruiz Zafron).

    Daniel becomes obsessed with finding the missing author of The Shadow of the Wind, despite all the danger that seems to surround the mystery. The missing author, Julian Carax, has seemingly disappeared from the face of the earth, and simultaneously all of Carax novels have also disappeared…some through unsolved arson’s throughout Barcelona.

    As young Daniel finds himself deeper into a dangerous and intriguing mystery, he stumbles on a cast of fantastic characters, some helpful and others menacing and murderous. Daniel begins to unravel a very dark story of passion, love, friendship, madness and murder.

    Who will live to tell the tale? Thank you for reading my book review The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron.

    ****Four stars for The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafron.

    See last week’s book review The House of Eve by Sadequ Johnson.

    We love it when you pin and share our book reviews. Thank you.

    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review The House of Eve by Sadequ Johnson

    Unfortunately I was expecting more from this book, given it’s reviews. But for me it fell a bit flat. Sorry to those of you who loved it, I just didn’t. Here is my book review The House of Eve by Sadequ Johnson.

    In The House of Eve we follow to parallel stories set in the 1950’s. First we meet Ruby in Philadelphia, a fifteen- year old girl who is destine to become the first in her family to attend college. No thanks to her mother, who has essentially abandoned her and she is living with her aunt. Ruby is totally focused on the scholarship she must have to go to college. Until she Ruby, who is black, falls in love with a white Jewish boy named Shimmie. Her story and her life will take a definite right hand turn.

    We also meet Eleanor. Arriving in Washington DC to attend Howard University after a rural up bringing in Ohio. Eleanor meets and falls head over heels with William. But William hails from one of the cities most affluent black families, and Williams mother will make Eleanor’s life miserable, as she and William marry and Eleanor becomes pregnant.

    The plot can be intriguing at times, but I was very annoyed with some of the characters; William and his horrible mother, and Ruby’s horrible mother as well. I found the ending a bit too contrived for the convenience of the storyline and unrealistic. Perhaps the author is hoping for a sequel…?

    ***I can only give this book three stars…although I know many people will love this book.

    Three stars for The House of Eve. Thank you for reading my book review The House of Eve by Sadequ Johnson.

    Read last week’s book review Victory City by Salman Rushdie

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    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review Victory City by Salman Rushdie

    A couple years ago I read The Enchantress of Florence, the only other Salman Rushdie novel I have read. I loved that book. So I decided to read Rushdie’s newest work, after my husband read it and raved about it. So here is my book review Victory City by Salman Rushdie.

    In true Rushdie fashion, Victory City transports the ready completely to another realm. In this story it is fourteenth century India where we meet a nine year old girl named Pampa Kampana. The young girl has witnessed her mothers death and during her grieving a goddess takes over her little body. The goddess tells Pampa Kampana that she will be a great Queen and create a wonder of the world from the barren sand. This wonder will become the great city of Bisnaga (Victory City).

    Pampa Kampana become immortal and never ages and as 250 years pass she will sow magic seeds as the instrument to Bisnaga’s greatness. She will have several husbands and lovers and bear several children, all of which she will outlive.

    As Bisnaga grows and the world grows more intricate, the complex tapestry of Bisnaga, its leaders, triumphs and tragedies will be guided by the hand of the great goddess.

    It’s an epic tale, beautifully told in Rushdie’s imaginative prose. Sure to win numerous awards, Victory City is on it’s way to greatness.

    *****Five Stars for Victory City by Salman Rushdie

    Thank you for reading my book review Victory City by Salman Rushdie.

    Read last week’s book review The Probable Future: A Novel by Alice Hoffman

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    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review The Probable Future: A Novel by Alice Hoffman

    I’m a big fan of the work of Alice Hoffman, especially The Dovekeepers and more recently I read The Museum of Extraordinary Things. I love her writing style, magical but not over the top, and this week I share a book review The Probable Future: A Novel by Alice Hoffman.

    Meet the Sparrow women. A family with magical gifts. Each women realizes her gift on her 13th birthday. An intriguing cast of characters pulls you into the story…both historical and present day…a haunting past and a violent present. Where does it lead?

    Meet Stella, turning 13, and discovering a power that is a window on the future, and not a pleasant one. Always at odds with her mother Jenny – Jenny can read people’s dreams. Jenny does not speak to her own mother Elinor. Elinor can tell when people are liars.

    Speaking of liars, Stella’s father is a chronic liar, causing heartache, divorce and most recently, being accused of a murder. Untrustworthy, his life begins to unravel as all the Sparrow women try to find their way in a family of secrets and mystery, intrigue and supernatural history in the town of Unity Massachusetts.

    ****Four stars for The Probable Future: A Novel by Alice Hoffman. Not my favorite Alice Hoffman, but I recommend it nonetheless. Great characters and intriguing storyline.

    Read last week’s Book Review Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman

    Thanks for reading my book review The Probable Future: A Novel by Alice Hoffman

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    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman

    My second Abbi Waxman book, I really loved The Garden of Small Beginnings by Abbi Waxman which I read a couple of summers ago. This new book, was also fun with some recurring characters from the last book. Here is my book review Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman.

    Laura Costello arrives in Los Angeles looking to get away from her overbearing mother and to start anew. After surviving a terrible car accident, she is longing for a new beginning.

    But her first week in LA her apartment catches on fire and she is forced into a living situation with a new group in a communal house. And thus her adventures begins. Her new friends include a rogue bookseller and trivia lover, a friendly land lady carrying a sad weight, an energetic women hiding a secret and a gorgeous man with a love of gardening and baseball. Laura finds friendship and healing among this eccentric group.

    Laura will make peace with her tragedy, her family, her past and build a new future in this sweet story of friendship, love and breaking free.

    ****Four stars for Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman. Thanks for reading my Book Review Adult Assembly Required by Abbi Waxman.

    See last week’s book review The Museum of Extraordinary Things by Alice Hoffman.

    We love it when you pin and share our book reviews. Thank you!

    Reading Wednesday

    Book Review The Museum of Extraordinary Things by Alice Hoffman

    I’m a big fan of Alice Hoffman, one of my all time favorite books was The Dove Keepers a few years ago. And this novel for today’s review is an earlier work of Hoffman. I also really enjoyed it. Here is my book review The Museum of Extraordinary Things by Alice Hoffman.

    Coney Island in the early 20th century was a place of freak shows and mystics. Coralie Sardie is the daughter of a sinister man who runs the Museum of Extraordinary Things. As Coralie grows and is becoming a woman, she is also becoming aware that things are not perhaps as they seem. She begins to suspect her father does not have her well-being in mind.

    When Coralie turns 13, her father puts her in the freak show, as a mermaid. But one night while training in the frigid Hudson River Coralie stumbles upon a photographer bane Eddie Cohen and she falls in love. Eddie, who photographs the horrific Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire also becomes entangled in a mystery, and that mystery will bring him to Coralie’s door. And tragedy will nearly keep them apart.

    Hoffman always leans towards the mystical and magical and she does so brilliantly in The Museum of Extraordinary Things. A time in New York’s history when things were changing, the characters in this novel share the struggles and triumphs of worker’s rights, women’s rights, disabled rights and much more.

    *****Five stars for The Museum of Extraordinary Things by Alice Hoffman.

    Read last week’s book review Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks.

    Thank you for reading my book review The Museum of Extraordinary Things by Alice Hoffman. We love it when you pin and share our book reviews. Thank you.