Category Archives: Books

American Dirt

Author: Jeanine Cummins

I loved this book and couldn’t read it fast enough. All the way through I struggled not to go to the end and see how it turned out.

Lydia and her son, Luca, fear for their lives after their entire family are murdered by the leader of a Mexican cartel. Lydia feels the only safe place for them is in the United States. This is an horrendous journey and every decision she makes has life and death consequences.

Quote from the book:

As Rebeca reveals what scraps of story she does have to Luca, he starts to understand that this is the one thing all migrants have in common, this is the solidarity that exist among them, though they all come from different places and different circumstances, some urban, some rural, some middle-class, some poor, some well educated, some illiterate, Salvadoran, Honduran, Guatemalan, Mexican, Indian, each of them carries some story of suffering on top of that train and into el norte beyond.”

Quote from the author:

One thing I had to learn while doing research for this book was to strangle the word American out of my own vocabulary. Elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere there’s some exasperation that the United States has co-opted that word, when in fact the American continents contain multitudes of cultures and peoples who consider themselves American, without the hijacked cultural connotations. In my conversations with Mexican people, I seldom heard the word American used to describe a citizen of this country — instead they use a word we don’t even have in English: estadounidense, United States-ian.

What this woman and her son endured is probably very common among immigrants. And I’m going to try to stop using the word American for people from south of the border.

Goodreads Rating: * * * * *

Dear Evelyn

Author: Kathy Page

I don’t recall where I first heard about this book but I think I may have been misled or I misunderstood. My understanding before starting to read was that it was going to be mainly letters written by the author’s father to her mother. Although there are some quotes from actual letters written into the story for the most part it is all fiction.

It was a nice story about the changes a marriage goes through over seventy years. It also seemed to point out the changes that don’t happen for the people involved – one stubborn from the get-go and one trying their best to make things work.

Goodreads Rating: * * *

the punishment she deserves

Author: Elizabeth George

Quite some time ago Stacia mentioned that she thought her shoulder problems were related to the heaviness of the book she was reading. Of course I needed to find out what that book was.

At some point I ordered it from the library and it wasn’t until they did a soft opening during the pandemic that they called to let me know it was available.

I can see what Stacia meant by the size of the book affecting her shoulder. At almost 700 pages it wasn’t easy to find a comfortable position to sit and read, particularly since most of my reading is done in bed at night.

The author never disappoints me with her stories. I found this one to be a bit long with all sorts of sub-plots going off in various directions but, in the end, everything came together and I’ll look forward to another in the Havers and Lynley series.

Goodreads Rating: * * * *

Akin

Author: Emma Donoghue

Such a nice story. Noah is approaching his eightieth birthday and looking forward to a trip to Nice to celebrate; he was born there but hasn’t been back since he was four years old. A couple of days before he is set to leave he receives a call from a social worker who asks him to take temporary parental responsibility for his eleven-year old great nephew, Michael.

The trip the two embark on is full of memories for Noah; he hopes to solve the mystery behind several of his mother’s photos. As the two get to know one another, Michael is full of ideas about the photos that might help Noah. Though not without its problems a relationship develops between the two.

I seldom mark a quote from a book but this one really sums up Noah’s feelings about his new responsibility: “So many ways Noah couldn’t protect this boy; it was like traveling with a bag of bananas he had little chance of delivering unbruised.”

Goodreads Rating: * * * * *