.

.

Stuff and Nonsense

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

March Releases

 I'm looking forward to reading these books releasing this month!


Promise Me Sunshine by Cara Bastone. The Dial Press, 4 March 2025.

Grieving the loss of her best friend, a young woman’s life is turned upside down when she meets a grumpy stranger who swears he can help her live again, in this heartwarming, story by the author of Ready or Not.


Kate & Frida by Kim Fay. G.P. Putnam's Sons, 11 March 2025.

From the author of instant national bestseller Love & Saffron, this bright and comforting novel follows the surprising friendship between two young women in 1990s Seattle and Paris, illuminating the power of books to change our lives.


The Boxcar Librarian by Brianna Labuskes. William Morrow, 4 March 2025.

Inspired by true events, a thrilling Depression-era novel from the author of The Librarian of Burned Books about a woman’s quest to uncover a mystery surrounding a local librarian and the Boxcar Library—a converted mining train that brought books to isolated rural towns in Montana.


Pomona Afton Can So Solve a Murder by Bellamy Rose. Atria Books, 18 March 2025.

A spoiled heiress must investigate her grandmother’s death in order to gain back her trust fund, all while discovering how to be her own person and maybe even in falling in love in this rom-com meets murder mystery.




Friday, February 28, 2025

February Favorites

 Hall, Rachel Howzell.  The Last One.  Entangled Publishing, 3 December 2024.

This unputdownable fantasy begins when Kai wakes up not knowing who, or where she is, but she knows she's been assaulted because her attacker is still on top of her. Frustratingly, she must depend upon this attacker to find out who she is.


****

Heath, Sue.  The Secret Ingredient. One Last Chapter, 18 January 2024.

Kate is having a hard time recovering from her husband's death in a car accident.  Just over three years later, with the help of friends and neighbors, she begins to find herself again.  


****


MacDonald, Janice.  Victor and Me in Paris (An Imogene Durant Mystery).  Ravenstone, 15 November 2024.

Novelist and retired professor Imogene Durant rents an apartment in Paris to heal from her divorce and find inspiration for a new novel. She didn't expect to get involved in a murder investigation...

****


Simonson, Helen.  The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle and Flying Club.  


Spending the summer of 1919 as a companion to a rich, elderly woman would be more enjoyable for Constance if she weren't worried about how she'd survive when summer ended. Then she meets Poppy, who scandalously wears trousers and drives a motorcycle...

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Book Review - Dressmakers of London

 The Dressmakers of London by Julia Kelly.  Gallery Books, 18 February 2025.


Julia Kelly specializes in historical novels with strong female protagonists, and so far, I’ve loved every one of them.

It’s November of 1941.  Twenty-eight-year-old Isabelle Shelton is content to work in her mother’s dressmaking shop in London.  Her older sister Sylvia had been married wealthy Hugo Pearsall for several years, and due to the difference in their lifestyles, the sisters had drifted apart.

That all changed when their mother Maggie passed away in her sleep, leaving the shop to both of her daughters. 

Izzy is shocked and hurt.  She’d been working for her mother since she was fourteen, while Sylvia had never shown any interest in the business. She’s determined to buy out Sylvia’s share of the shop, but when she’s conscripted to join the WAAF, she’s forced to accept Sylvia’s help to keep the shop open.

While this is a story of the relationship between the two sisters, there are several other themes here.  We all know about the rationing of food, medicine, and other necessities, but fabric and notions for making clothing were also rationed. 

We also learn about the travails of the young women who were called up to serve in the war.  Isabelle’s unit works on testing and repairing barrage balloons, and we learn much about their living circumstances, including the fact that the female conscripts had to wear ill-fitting and uncomfortable uniforms sized for men.

I finished this gripping novel in a day, and I recommend it highly!

 

Many thanks to Edelweiss for the e-galley.


Monday, February 3, 2025

January favorites

 Bivald, Katarina.  The murders in Great Diddling.  Sourcebooks, 13 August 2024.

Johnson, Debbie.  Statistically speaking.  Harper Muse, 3 December 2024.

Kelly, Julia.  The dressmakers of London. Gallery Books, 18 February 2025.


Loigman, Lynda Cohen.  The love elixir of Augusta Stern. St. Martin's Press, 8 October 2024.

Martin, Madeline.  The booklover's library.  Hanover Square Press, 10 September 2024.

Thompson, Kate.  The wartime book club.  Forever, 9 April, 2024.




Tuesday, January 28, 2025

2024 Favorites - Fiction Edition

Birkelund, Elizabeth. A Northern light in Provence. Ballantine Books, 21 May 2024.

Burr, Samuel. The Fellowship of puzzlemakers. Knopf Doubleday, 9 April 2024.

Fortune, Carley. This summer will be different. Berkley Publishing, 7 May 2024.


Linden, Rachel. Recipe for a charmed life. Berkley Publishing, 9 January 2024.

Miller, Kirsten. Lula Dean’s little library of banned books. William Morrow, 18 June 2024.

Storey, Kate. The memory library. Avon Books, 1 February 2024.




Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Bouchercon 2024 - Day 2 - Thursday, August 29

 I know, I know.

I posted on August 30 that I'd continue my Bouchercon recap the next day, and here it is more than a week later.

In my defense, we rose before dawn on August 31 to catch a 6 a.m. flight home.  Which meant that although we arrived home by 9:30, we  spent a good deal of the remainder of the morning catching up on sleep.

And then I woke up the next day coughing and sneezing.  I'm still coughing a bit, but feeling much more energetic.

So... Thursday at Bouchercon, there were few panels that caught my interest, except for the guest of honor interview:  Andrew Child (aka Andrew Grant) interviewed historical author g.o.h. Kelli Stanley.  

The subject matter ranged from Kelli's childhood in Northern California to her interest in history and classics, which eventually led to Kelli writing two  historical fiction series.  



Kelli is also an activist, and created Nasty Woman Press, which in 2020 published the Anthony Award-winning anthology Shattering Glass.

Kelli was  the brains behind the Free Books event scheduled for the next evening, which both Andrew and I were participating in (to be covered in another post).

That interview was really the only event I attended that day.  I did scour the book room, but mostly I hid in the hotel room and tried to get over the jet lag.


More to come...