Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Eyre Affair

The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde (2001), 374 pages

In this very clever book, we follow Special Operative Thursday Next as she tracks down Acheron Hades before he can snatch Jane Eyre out of the novel Jane Eyre. It is a fun fantasy/sci-fi novel that imagines 1985 England as a place where people can travel in and out of time and in and out of literature. It is creative (real life bookworms!), silly, and fun for folks who love to pick up on classic literature references. My only real criticism is that the actual Jane Eyre plot line doesn't pick up until the second half of the book. I kept thinking I had missed it somewhere. Also - I listened to the audio book version. The narrator, Susan Duerden did a wonderful job. Her voice, though, has such a soothing, classic British sound to it that I sometimes felt like the characters were woodland creatures a la Peter Rabbit. 

Wreck

 

Wreck by Catherine Newman (2025) 215 pages

Wreck is the perfect title for this short novel, which follows Rocky's family, the same family that was highlighted in Sandwich. Wreck empasses the emotional aftermath of a train wreck, but also the deep concern with a health blip that turns into a full-fledged health scare. Rocky's widowed father is living in a separate building on Rocky and her husband Nick's property in Western Massachusetts. Their daughter Willa is with them as well, not having moved out post college yet. Their son Jamie is married and living in New York City, but in spite of his distance, he is a key player in this story, as well.

This story has it all - realistic, close famiy relationships, frustration that sometimes comes with such close relationships, health concerns, as well as moral concerns: do we really know the people we think we know. One does not have to have read Sandwich to enjoy this book, but having read Sandwich gave me the chance to feel that I was coming home to a family that I hadn't seen for a bit, and didn't realize how much I missed them.

Monday, June 29, 2026

The New People

 

The New People by Andrea Uptmor, 320 pages.

Newly married, Emma and Rachel have just moved from Chicago to a college town in rural Indiana, into a shoddily flipped house that was foreclosed when the housing bubble burst. Emma is uneasy in the new house, overshadowed by her wife's success and surrounded by the type of community that was not easy to grow up in for a queer girl and isn't any better in 2008. But soon the house itself starts making her uneasy, things go missing, damage and mess come from nowhere, and something always seems to be going wrong. It turns out that this is because the previous owners never left. Charlotte and Dirk have been secretly staying in a hidden attic apartment, building resentment against the women who took their house and desperately waiting for what comes next for two retirees with nothing to their names. 

This was masterfully crafted in a way that I found surprising for a debut novel. I was impressed how our two protagonist's perspectives wound together, often mirroring each other in ways that the characters themselves would be surprised by. There is a real sense of uneasiness to this book that makes it hard to tell what genre direction it was going to go in, which I think fed back into the sense of uneasiness again. There is of course something very disturbing about the idea of someone secretly living in your home who means you harm. But rather than what could have been a fairly solid suspense premise, Uptmor instead focuses on a very human element, which makes the novel shine in a way that is both more complex and interesting. Definitely a recommendation from me. 

This book will be published on 21 July 2026 

Daydream Hour

 

Daydream Hour: Doodles by Ryoko Kui, 232 pages

This is a collection of doodles, art studies, and short comics from Ryoko Kui, the creator of Delicious in Dungeon. Kui appologizes in the introduction of the book for how ridiculously self-indulgent it is, but I do think that its self-indulgence is the real strength of this collection. It is a very cozy collection of low-stakes art that is very relaxing to read. However, it is also an interesting peak behind the curtain at the process of making a manga, and of a professional artist's process. A fun little expansion that is great fun for fans of the series. 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan

 

Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan, 112 pages  


 




Is there anything so delightful as revisiting a book you loved as a child?! The surprising details that have stayed in the back of your memory somewhere, the charming little things you didn’t notice at a different point in your life, the surprise when you find yourself identifying with the adults in the story...what’s not to love? I had read this one several times, and certainly long after it was an academic challenge, just because it was so darn good.  

 

 



This is the story of a father and two children in a setting that I took to be 1880’s Kansas, but was surprised on this read to find it is actually a little more vague. A widower places a personal ad in the newspaper, and his two children eagerly await an answer. A response comes from the titular Sarah from the exotic land of Maine. Sarah arrives to spend a month the family before deciding if she’ll marry the widower and stay forever. Behaving as no actual children ever have, the kiddos strive to impress Sarah both because they want so much to have a stepmother and because they come to love her as an individual. They enjoy a sampling of prairie-life experiences, and hear how different things are in Maine. It’s difficult to call this a spoiler because the book is 45 years old, and because it’s a predictable book: Sarah decides to join the family!  

Of course this is one of many White People on the Great Plains type of books, that don’t offer a variety of experiences, but did lack the more overt insensitivity of the Little House books (which you’d expect from 1980s and 1930s books, respectively). It did get a little monotonous that Sarah responds to everything with “in Maine, we do xyz instead!” Girl, we get it, you’re from Maine! Otherwise, a fun little one-sitting read. 

We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year by Charles Wheelan

 

We Came, We Saw, We Left: A Family Gap Year by Charles Wheelan, 269 pages

 

 


This is a memoir of two parents and their three teenagers that take a gap year and travel together around South America, New Zealand and Australia, Asia and Africa. This was among the best lighthearted travel writing that I’ve encountered 

I have my own theories on why most travel writing is mediocre at best, and why there is so much of it, which I will spare you here.  WCWSWL is the exception! This book is a fun escape not only in that you get to go along on the travel adventure but also feel a part of a fun- but not too perfect- family. I laughed out loud many times (especially at the antics of the teens) and actively looked forward to my bedtime reading throughout the day.  

While I got the impressions that the Wheelan’s are thoughtful people that sought to understand the social issues that the inhabitants of their destinations were facing, it wasn’t a particularly informative book that sought to be life-changing at its heart. There’s plenty of profound travel writing out there, but this one was delightful just telling a fun story that took me on the cheapest kind of vacation. 


Thursday, June 25, 2026

Americus

 Americus by M.K. Reed with art by Jonathan Hill (2011) 216 pages

Americus is small town America. Published by First Second back in 2011. That year the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom recorded 326 book ban challenges. In 2025 there were over 4,000 titles challenged. I found this book on BookRiot's recent list "Fighting Oppression: 5 Graphic Novels About Book Banning." The main character, Neil, is starting high school in Americus. Following a somewhat sheltered youth with his divorced mom, he is a budding punk music fan who thinks a lot of his small town and high school is stupid. He is a big fan of a popular fantasy book series and becomes a page at the local public library. His best friend's mom launches a Christian crusade against these fantasy books. The book ban is the main crisis of the plot, but I really enjoyed this book because of the people surrounding Neil. His mom as compared to the other moms, their neighbor, his friendship with the teen librarian, his best friend (sent to a military school), and other outcast kids at school, build a recognizable world.

Margo's Got Money Problems

Margo's Got Money Troubles by Rufi Thorpe (2024), 294 pgs. 

Margo was a student, living in an apartment with three roommates and working as a server to make ends meet. She was nowhere near rich, but she was comfortable. Then, Margo got pregnant, and her whole life flipped upside down. Now, Margo's got money troubles. Diapers, doctors appointments, baby food, rent--all these costs certainly add up quickly, and after losing her job and her roommates, they are getting harder and harder to keep up with. Perhaps Margo didn't fully comprehend what she was getting herself into, starting this whole motherhood thing. After trying a few different plans and realizing that the system is not set up to support young single parents, Margo starts an experimental account on OnlyFans. Seeing how her father has made money by building a fanbase as his wrestling persona, she wonders if she can create an online character for herself to make enough money to support her son. 

This is a complicated, interesting book. It leaves you with a lot to think about in terms of the broken system of childcare in this country; sex work vs. other jobs in entertainment and the sticky morality of it all; and what it means to be a "good" mother. Margo is as real of a character as one can write. She is deeply flawed, naive at times, and lonely as well. She fights with her mom and seeks approval from her dad and wonders if she is doing enough for her son. Rufi Thorpe did a wonderful job writing this story and keeping me hooked, then leaving me with so much to consider. Highly recommend with a slight warning for motifs of sex work and addiction



A Chance to Harmonize

A Chance to Harmonize: How FDR's Hidden Music Unit South to Save America from the Great Depression--One Song at a Time, by Sheryl Kaskowitz, 272 pgs. © 2024


This was an fascinating read. As part of FDR's New Deal, a special agency is created to help bring the arts to resettlement towns, which are towns and encampments meant to transition destitute farmers and migrants during the great depression into planned communities. This was a huge agency that's main goal was to boost morale of Americans through the arts, specifically music--the music unit within the Resettlement Agency was even led by Charles Seeger, father of banjo folk-hero Pete Seeger. The book focuses on two women who were a boon to the success of the program, doing the most work and receiving the least amount of credit. The women learn to use the latest in recording technology and travel to the different resettlement towns, recording the folk songs and music of the community, bringing joy and optimism during a very bleak period in American history--the 1930s music program  is credited with the renewed interest in folk music that took place in the 1950s.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Bodyguard

 


The Bodyguard by Katherine Center (2022) 302 pages

When you think of a bodyguard, you may not visualize a five foot five inch woman, but that's what Hannah is. Her company has been hired to protect an especially popular and good-looking actor, Jack Stapleton, who has a stalker. When Jack needs to temporarily relocate to Texas to be near his mother, who has been diagnosed with cancer, Hannah is the primary bodyguard for Jack. Because Jack doesn't want his family to worry about his stalker, he insists that Hannah pose as his girlfriend, rather than as a more traditional type of bodyguard.

A few complications are that Hannah had been dating another bodyguard in her company, who has broken up with her (and right after her mother has died), but she still needs to work with him. Jack's complication is that one of his brothers - Drew - died in a car accident two years ago, and Jack's older brother Hank still blames Jack, because Jack was in the car with Drew. Jack survived, but Drew did not.

Hanging out with Jack and his family - not the standard operation for a bodyguard - is making Hannah appreciate the relationships within Jack's family (with the exception of Hank) even as she works to convince herself that Jack is acting, not really interested in her. I really enjoyed this page turner.