What We’re Reading in February

Joanna here, and it's What We're Reading time. 
What are the Wenches enthusiastic about this month?

Looks like mystery, suspense, and magic abound.

Www kings confressNow me, I'm reading CS Harris' Why Kings Confess, the latest in the Sebastian St. Cyr historical murder mysteries. (The first in the series is What Angels Fear. That's where I'd start.)

These mysteries are so perfect for me. They're gritty, exciting stories, full of intrigue, and set in my favorite historical period. This latest book — set in London — winds in and out of the downfall of the French Monarchy and the politics of Napoleonic France.

All these books are full of intricate, intricate plots and indirections. Complex characters. Sneaky stuff. Love stories.

I'm also enjoying Lilith's Cave: Jewish Tales of the Supernatural by Howard Schwartz.  What we got here is a collection of traditional folk stories of magic and mystery. Old stories, told with a little humor, of marriage with demons, wandering spirits, werewolves, and the occasional possession by dybbuks. Nice stuff to read at bedtime.

Cara/Andrea says,
 
I’m a big fan of historical mysteries, and there are several series I particularly enjoy, and Tasha Www counterfeit heiressAlexander’s Lady Emily series is one of them. So it was with great pleasure that I finally had the time to pick up her latest, The Counterfeit Heiress, and dive in.

Set in late Victorian England, the books beautifully capture the ambiance of upper crust society—and yet the protagonist, Lady Emily and her dashingly attractive husband Colin, are anything but conventional aristocrats.

Colin investigates sensitive situations for the government, many of which involve murder. Lady Emily, a classics scholar, is also very good at sleuthing, and together they form a formidable team.

In this book, someone posing as a famously eccentric female explorer and world traveler crashes the Duke of Devonshire’s costume ball, only to be recognized by one of Lady Emily’s friends as an imposter. She manages to flee the party but when she’s found murdered, it’s up to Lady Emily and Colin to delve into the mystery and untangle the twisted threads . . . well-written, with great characters and great descriptions of London and Paris, it’s a fun read.

 

Www napoleon I also love quirky historical non-fiction books, and Napoleon’s Buttons: How 17 Molecules Changed World History by Penny Le Couteur and Jay Burreson is a delightfully offbeat journey through chemistry (don’t shriek—it’s done in a very fun way) showing how 17 basic molecules have shaped civilization. (think glucose, as in sugar, and piperine as in pepper and the spice trade) It’s a fascinating perspective on how expected forces have shaped our world, and I thoroughly enjoyed it!

 
 
Nicola here. This month was all about thriller/suspense novels for me.
 
Ever since I read Gone, Girl a while ago I have had a taste for what’s being called domestic thrillers, books about relationships, with an element of psychological drama. I don’t find them comfortable reads. There are almost always aspects of the stories that disturb me but I do enjoy studying how the authors construct the suspense element and I like being kept on the edge of my seat.

This month I read The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins. As I don’t want to give away any spoilers, I’ll Www The Girl on the Trainjust quote the blurb from Amazon:

“Rachel catches the same commuter train every morning. She knows it will wait at the same signal each time, overlooking a row of back gardens. She’s even started to feel like she knows the people who live in one of the houses. ‘Jess and Jason’, she calls them. Their life – as she sees it – is perfect. If only Rachel could be that happy. And then she sees something shocking. It’s only a minute until the train moves on, but it’s enough. Now everything’s changed. Now Rachel has a chance to become a part of the lives she’s only watched from afar.”

 

This was a pretty tense book and I did enjoy it but I guessed fairly early on who the villain of theWww touch of passion piece was going to be. I also felt the book was a bit long-winded and repetitious but as it’s a number 1 bestseller and has loads of rave reviews I’m probably in a minority! I far preferred the other thriller I read, Sister by Rosamund Lupton. This was a fabulous read about the lengths a woman would go to find her missing sister and it was clever and beautifully written.

In my crimefest I didn’t totally forget historical romance, though. I was lucky enough to be given an advance copy of Bronwen Evans’ next book in her Disgraced Lords series, A Touch of Passion, and it is a fast-paced, sexy and romantic adventure I enjoyed a lot. 

Anne here.

After being in a bit of a reading slump for a while, where nothing seemed to catch my interest, I picked up the first book in a fantasy series (that I think someone here had recommended) and ended up eagerly glomming the whole series (5 books), finding myself so impatient for the next book and the next that I bought them on instant download. Www tieran soul lotfl_190X3001

It's the Tairen Soul series, by C.L. Wilson. It's fantasy and romance and adventure and a battle between good and evil — with the lines often deliciously blurred. The heroine is  wonderful — Ellie, the woodcarver's adopted daughter — who finds she is the "truemate" of the beautiful, tortured, magnificent faerie king, Rain Tairen Soul — a man who can change into a Tairen – sort of a cat/dragon.

He's used to commanding worlds, but Ellie makes up her own mind about things and has a lovely stubborn streak that often frustrates Rain. I won't describe the plot, but as well as a wonderful love story, there is a page-turning adventure plot and a truly evil villain — actually, several villains of different magnitude, as well as a wonderful cast of minor characters.

 

Pat Rice says:

Www MakingMagic72webWhile gearing up the courage to scan some of my earliest books into the computer, I’ve been taking time to just read. If I can find enough good material, maybe I’ll give up the foolish idea of editing thirty-year-old books!

One of my favorite new series by an author I’ve just discovered is Books of the Kindling by Donna June Cooper. I just finished Making Magic, and this third in the series is still as strong as the first book. Of course, she’s writing about people with otherworldly gifts and a magic mountain, while embracing environmental responsibility, so she’s pretty well nailed my interests! Www HIW-Web-non-ebook1-275x370

 

And ever since I picked up a few of their books at RT, I’ve sought out contemporary romances from UK publisher Choc Lit. So far, I haven’t read a bad one. My most recent encounter was Jane Lovering’s How I Wonder What You Are.  Again, I was enticed by the hint of UFOs and mysteries of the universe, but this really is a book about love and overcoming fears and insecurities, which also appeals to my need for great characters. If you like contemporary Brit romance, poke around on www.choc-lit.com and see if you don’t see a few things you’ll enjoy.

 

And Mary Jo, just back from vacation, joins us with:

Www Imperfect ChemistryI've mostly been reading research books and RITA entries, but Pat Rice said that she enjoyed the contemporary romance Imperfect Chemistry by Mary Frame, so I decided to give it a try.  I'm glad I did. 

I thoroughly enjoyed the story of Lucy London, a 20 year old prodigy who has a PhD in microbiology but is totally clueless at reading people or understanding emotions.   However, she jolly well has to learn those things if she is to write a proposal so she can secure a grant and her place at the university.  Working as a campus peer counselor isn't helping since her advice tends to send students fleeing from the room in order to register complaints about her. 

Ever logical, Lucy decides to ask her hottie next door neighbor, Jensen, if she can study him and his social life to help her develop her grant proposal.  The idea rather freaks him out, but eventually she wears him down, and her study develops in–unexpected ways.  I found the story smart, fun, and original.  There's a second book now available in her Imperfect series, and it's already downloaded into my e-reader.  <G>

 

And Jo Beverley says:

BookreadingcatThis month I've been reading for an award. It's always interesting to have my reading chosen for me, including books I might not have picked up otherwise.

It's been stimulating. I remember once deciding to read from my public library starting with the first book in general fiction beginning with A. I didn't stick with it for long, but it was interesting. I'm wondering if any Wench readers go out of their way to find a random read.

So, what are you reading this month that has you pleased and excited, or intrigued and enlightened?  What are your favorite books of the month?

 

 

 

 

195 thoughts on “What We’re Reading in February”

  1. For every book I actually finish, I add 5 more to my to be read shelf. You ladies aren’t helping. I’ve gone back to Eloisa James and will probably read everything she’s written by the end if it.

    Reply
  2. For every book I actually finish, I add 5 more to my to be read shelf. You ladies aren’t helping. I’ve gone back to Eloisa James and will probably read everything she’s written by the end if it.

    Reply
  3. For every book I actually finish, I add 5 more to my to be read shelf. You ladies aren’t helping. I’ve gone back to Eloisa James and will probably read everything she’s written by the end if it.

    Reply
  4. For every book I actually finish, I add 5 more to my to be read shelf. You ladies aren’t helping. I’ve gone back to Eloisa James and will probably read everything she’s written by the end if it.

    Reply
  5. For every book I actually finish, I add 5 more to my to be read shelf. You ladies aren’t helping. I’ve gone back to Eloisa James and will probably read everything she’s written by the end if it.

    Reply
  6. Thanks Wenches, for the recommendations.
    I picked ‘Imperfect Chemistry’ and ‘Lord of the Fading Lands’ to try. A rec from a favourite author is always worth a look 🙂
    I recently read ‘Catalysed Fusion’ by Francis Fairley. The author is a retired particle physicist and he gives a tongue in cheek insight into research at CERN where fascination with the universe apparently interlaces with seething passions. You don’t need more than a passing interest in physics to enjoy this one! LOL
    I used to read a lot of romantic fantasy (Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind was the last …. highly recommended) and Anne’s introduction to C L Wilson re-stimulated the old fascinations.

    Reply
  7. Thanks Wenches, for the recommendations.
    I picked ‘Imperfect Chemistry’ and ‘Lord of the Fading Lands’ to try. A rec from a favourite author is always worth a look 🙂
    I recently read ‘Catalysed Fusion’ by Francis Fairley. The author is a retired particle physicist and he gives a tongue in cheek insight into research at CERN where fascination with the universe apparently interlaces with seething passions. You don’t need more than a passing interest in physics to enjoy this one! LOL
    I used to read a lot of romantic fantasy (Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind was the last …. highly recommended) and Anne’s introduction to C L Wilson re-stimulated the old fascinations.

    Reply
  8. Thanks Wenches, for the recommendations.
    I picked ‘Imperfect Chemistry’ and ‘Lord of the Fading Lands’ to try. A rec from a favourite author is always worth a look 🙂
    I recently read ‘Catalysed Fusion’ by Francis Fairley. The author is a retired particle physicist and he gives a tongue in cheek insight into research at CERN where fascination with the universe apparently interlaces with seething passions. You don’t need more than a passing interest in physics to enjoy this one! LOL
    I used to read a lot of romantic fantasy (Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind was the last …. highly recommended) and Anne’s introduction to C L Wilson re-stimulated the old fascinations.

    Reply
  9. Thanks Wenches, for the recommendations.
    I picked ‘Imperfect Chemistry’ and ‘Lord of the Fading Lands’ to try. A rec from a favourite author is always worth a look 🙂
    I recently read ‘Catalysed Fusion’ by Francis Fairley. The author is a retired particle physicist and he gives a tongue in cheek insight into research at CERN where fascination with the universe apparently interlaces with seething passions. You don’t need more than a passing interest in physics to enjoy this one! LOL
    I used to read a lot of romantic fantasy (Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind was the last …. highly recommended) and Anne’s introduction to C L Wilson re-stimulated the old fascinations.

    Reply
  10. Thanks Wenches, for the recommendations.
    I picked ‘Imperfect Chemistry’ and ‘Lord of the Fading Lands’ to try. A rec from a favourite author is always worth a look 🙂
    I recently read ‘Catalysed Fusion’ by Francis Fairley. The author is a retired particle physicist and he gives a tongue in cheek insight into research at CERN where fascination with the universe apparently interlaces with seething passions. You don’t need more than a passing interest in physics to enjoy this one! LOL
    I used to read a lot of romantic fantasy (Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind was the last …. highly recommended) and Anne’s introduction to C L Wilson re-stimulated the old fascinations.

    Reply
  11. Imperfect Chemistry sounds like The Rosie Project, a book everyone but me seemed to love.
    I always add book to my list when I read what you gals are reading and this month is no exception. I already read C.S. Harris, but put Napoleon’s Buttons on my library list.
    Thanks again for your reviews.

    Reply
  12. Imperfect Chemistry sounds like The Rosie Project, a book everyone but me seemed to love.
    I always add book to my list when I read what you gals are reading and this month is no exception. I already read C.S. Harris, but put Napoleon’s Buttons on my library list.
    Thanks again for your reviews.

    Reply
  13. Imperfect Chemistry sounds like The Rosie Project, a book everyone but me seemed to love.
    I always add book to my list when I read what you gals are reading and this month is no exception. I already read C.S. Harris, but put Napoleon’s Buttons on my library list.
    Thanks again for your reviews.

    Reply
  14. Imperfect Chemistry sounds like The Rosie Project, a book everyone but me seemed to love.
    I always add book to my list when I read what you gals are reading and this month is no exception. I already read C.S. Harris, but put Napoleon’s Buttons on my library list.
    Thanks again for your reviews.

    Reply
  15. Imperfect Chemistry sounds like The Rosie Project, a book everyone but me seemed to love.
    I always add book to my list when I read what you gals are reading and this month is no exception. I already read C.S. Harris, but put Napoleon’s Buttons on my library list.
    Thanks again for your reviews.

    Reply
  16. Joanna, I am so jealous you are reading the new C.S. Lewis. We recently moved to South Carolina and the library system is pathetic. No money virtually for new books and those on the shelf are ancient. I adore Sebastien and the mystery of his parents, his love life and friends. Everyone else’s choices sound interesting, especially Napoleon’s buttons.

    Reply
  17. Joanna, I am so jealous you are reading the new C.S. Lewis. We recently moved to South Carolina and the library system is pathetic. No money virtually for new books and those on the shelf are ancient. I adore Sebastien and the mystery of his parents, his love life and friends. Everyone else’s choices sound interesting, especially Napoleon’s buttons.

    Reply
  18. Joanna, I am so jealous you are reading the new C.S. Lewis. We recently moved to South Carolina and the library system is pathetic. No money virtually for new books and those on the shelf are ancient. I adore Sebastien and the mystery of his parents, his love life and friends. Everyone else’s choices sound interesting, especially Napoleon’s buttons.

    Reply
  19. Joanna, I am so jealous you are reading the new C.S. Lewis. We recently moved to South Carolina and the library system is pathetic. No money virtually for new books and those on the shelf are ancient. I adore Sebastien and the mystery of his parents, his love life and friends. Everyone else’s choices sound interesting, especially Napoleon’s buttons.

    Reply
  20. Joanna, I am so jealous you are reading the new C.S. Lewis. We recently moved to South Carolina and the library system is pathetic. No money virtually for new books and those on the shelf are ancient. I adore Sebastien and the mystery of his parents, his love life and friends. Everyone else’s choices sound interesting, especially Napoleon’s buttons.

    Reply
  21. Oh, Catalysed Fusion sounds wonderful! A friend has gotten me very interested in physics, and I’ve seen the documentary Particle Fever about the hunt for the Higgs Boson at CERN. So can’t wait to read this! (And have already ordered Imperfect Chemistry!)I always fun fun things in thi post.

    Reply
  22. Oh, Catalysed Fusion sounds wonderful! A friend has gotten me very interested in physics, and I’ve seen the documentary Particle Fever about the hunt for the Higgs Boson at CERN. So can’t wait to read this! (And have already ordered Imperfect Chemistry!)I always fun fun things in thi post.

    Reply
  23. Oh, Catalysed Fusion sounds wonderful! A friend has gotten me very interested in physics, and I’ve seen the documentary Particle Fever about the hunt for the Higgs Boson at CERN. So can’t wait to read this! (And have already ordered Imperfect Chemistry!)I always fun fun things in thi post.

    Reply
  24. Oh, Catalysed Fusion sounds wonderful! A friend has gotten me very interested in physics, and I’ve seen the documentary Particle Fever about the hunt for the Higgs Boson at CERN. So can’t wait to read this! (And have already ordered Imperfect Chemistry!)I always fun fun things in thi post.

    Reply
  25. Oh, Catalysed Fusion sounds wonderful! A friend has gotten me very interested in physics, and I’ve seen the documentary Particle Fever about the hunt for the Higgs Boson at CERN. So can’t wait to read this! (And have already ordered Imperfect Chemistry!)I always fun fun things in thi post.

    Reply
  26. I have read and enjoyed many of the authors mentioned here, and written down the names of several more to check in the library catalogs. I sometimes wish readers didn’t mention new-to-me-authors and make them sound so appealing. So many books, so little time!

    Reply
  27. I have read and enjoyed many of the authors mentioned here, and written down the names of several more to check in the library catalogs. I sometimes wish readers didn’t mention new-to-me-authors and make them sound so appealing. So many books, so little time!

    Reply
  28. I have read and enjoyed many of the authors mentioned here, and written down the names of several more to check in the library catalogs. I sometimes wish readers didn’t mention new-to-me-authors and make them sound so appealing. So many books, so little time!

    Reply
  29. I have read and enjoyed many of the authors mentioned here, and written down the names of several more to check in the library catalogs. I sometimes wish readers didn’t mention new-to-me-authors and make them sound so appealing. So many books, so little time!

    Reply
  30. I have read and enjoyed many of the authors mentioned here, and written down the names of several more to check in the library catalogs. I sometimes wish readers didn’t mention new-to-me-authors and make them sound so appealing. So many books, so little time!

    Reply
  31. It’s a great time of year to curl up with a mystery. I’m in the middle of “A Broken Vessel”, the second Julian Kestrel mystery by Kate Ross, and it’s excellent. Lots of stuff about the seamier side of London.

    Reply
  32. It’s a great time of year to curl up with a mystery. I’m in the middle of “A Broken Vessel”, the second Julian Kestrel mystery by Kate Ross, and it’s excellent. Lots of stuff about the seamier side of London.

    Reply
  33. It’s a great time of year to curl up with a mystery. I’m in the middle of “A Broken Vessel”, the second Julian Kestrel mystery by Kate Ross, and it’s excellent. Lots of stuff about the seamier side of London.

    Reply
  34. It’s a great time of year to curl up with a mystery. I’m in the middle of “A Broken Vessel”, the second Julian Kestrel mystery by Kate Ross, and it’s excellent. Lots of stuff about the seamier side of London.

    Reply
  35. It’s a great time of year to curl up with a mystery. I’m in the middle of “A Broken Vessel”, the second Julian Kestrel mystery by Kate Ross, and it’s excellent. Lots of stuff about the seamier side of London.

    Reply
  36. I too just downloaded Imperfect Chemistry. I recently read Anne Tyler’s latest, A Spool of Blue Thread. A former student once described Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant as “the most important book I ever read because my life is in these pages.” I think Tyler creates that feeling often in her books about families that are both flawed and loving. In the new one, one of her characters looks at her husband of nearly five decades and realizes “And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Red’s sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all of life’s problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.” That’s the kind of illumination that keeps me reading Tyler’s books. I also reread Mary Balogh’s The Famous Heroine, an old favorite that never fails to leave me smiling. And I am in the midst of How to Be a Heroine, Or What I’ve Learned from Reading Too Much, a delightful combination of literary criticism and memoir in which journalist and playwright Samantha Ellis, daughter of an Iraqui-Jewish refugee, looks at the literary heroines who have influenced her from The Little Mermaid through Flora Poste of Cold Comfort Farm. She hooked me beginning with her introduction where she decides she has made a mistake in trying to be Cathy Earnshaw when she should have been following the pattern of Jane Eyre.

    Reply
  37. I too just downloaded Imperfect Chemistry. I recently read Anne Tyler’s latest, A Spool of Blue Thread. A former student once described Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant as “the most important book I ever read because my life is in these pages.” I think Tyler creates that feeling often in her books about families that are both flawed and loving. In the new one, one of her characters looks at her husband of nearly five decades and realizes “And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Red’s sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all of life’s problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.” That’s the kind of illumination that keeps me reading Tyler’s books. I also reread Mary Balogh’s The Famous Heroine, an old favorite that never fails to leave me smiling. And I am in the midst of How to Be a Heroine, Or What I’ve Learned from Reading Too Much, a delightful combination of literary criticism and memoir in which journalist and playwright Samantha Ellis, daughter of an Iraqui-Jewish refugee, looks at the literary heroines who have influenced her from The Little Mermaid through Flora Poste of Cold Comfort Farm. She hooked me beginning with her introduction where she decides she has made a mistake in trying to be Cathy Earnshaw when she should have been following the pattern of Jane Eyre.

    Reply
  38. I too just downloaded Imperfect Chemistry. I recently read Anne Tyler’s latest, A Spool of Blue Thread. A former student once described Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant as “the most important book I ever read because my life is in these pages.” I think Tyler creates that feeling often in her books about families that are both flawed and loving. In the new one, one of her characters looks at her husband of nearly five decades and realizes “And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Red’s sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all of life’s problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.” That’s the kind of illumination that keeps me reading Tyler’s books. I also reread Mary Balogh’s The Famous Heroine, an old favorite that never fails to leave me smiling. And I am in the midst of How to Be a Heroine, Or What I’ve Learned from Reading Too Much, a delightful combination of literary criticism and memoir in which journalist and playwright Samantha Ellis, daughter of an Iraqui-Jewish refugee, looks at the literary heroines who have influenced her from The Little Mermaid through Flora Poste of Cold Comfort Farm. She hooked me beginning with her introduction where she decides she has made a mistake in trying to be Cathy Earnshaw when she should have been following the pattern of Jane Eyre.

    Reply
  39. I too just downloaded Imperfect Chemistry. I recently read Anne Tyler’s latest, A Spool of Blue Thread. A former student once described Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant as “the most important book I ever read because my life is in these pages.” I think Tyler creates that feeling often in her books about families that are both flawed and loving. In the new one, one of her characters looks at her husband of nearly five decades and realizes “And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Red’s sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all of life’s problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.” That’s the kind of illumination that keeps me reading Tyler’s books. I also reread Mary Balogh’s The Famous Heroine, an old favorite that never fails to leave me smiling. And I am in the midst of How to Be a Heroine, Or What I’ve Learned from Reading Too Much, a delightful combination of literary criticism and memoir in which journalist and playwright Samantha Ellis, daughter of an Iraqui-Jewish refugee, looks at the literary heroines who have influenced her from The Little Mermaid through Flora Poste of Cold Comfort Farm. She hooked me beginning with her introduction where she decides she has made a mistake in trying to be Cathy Earnshaw when she should have been following the pattern of Jane Eyre.

    Reply
  40. I too just downloaded Imperfect Chemistry. I recently read Anne Tyler’s latest, A Spool of Blue Thread. A former student once described Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant as “the most important book I ever read because my life is in these pages.” I think Tyler creates that feeling often in her books about families that are both flawed and loving. In the new one, one of her characters looks at her husband of nearly five decades and realizes “And then that clear-eyed, calm-faced boy would shine forth from Red’s sags and wrinkles, from his crumpled eyelids and hollowed cheeks and the two deep crevices bracketing his mouth and just his general obtuseness, his stubbornness, his infuriating belief that simple cold logic could solve all of life’s problems, and she would feel unspeakably lucky to have ended up with him.” That’s the kind of illumination that keeps me reading Tyler’s books. I also reread Mary Balogh’s The Famous Heroine, an old favorite that never fails to leave me smiling. And I am in the midst of How to Be a Heroine, Or What I’ve Learned from Reading Too Much, a delightful combination of literary criticism and memoir in which journalist and playwright Samantha Ellis, daughter of an Iraqui-Jewish refugee, looks at the literary heroines who have influenced her from The Little Mermaid through Flora Poste of Cold Comfort Farm. She hooked me beginning with her introduction where she decides she has made a mistake in trying to be Cathy Earnshaw when she should have been following the pattern of Jane Eyre.

    Reply
  41. Jo Beverley said that she once decided to read the library from A to Z.
    I actually did that for a while. An employed mother with 3 children, one under 5, I took them to the library every Saturday morning. First we made the selections in the children’s room, then walked through to the Adult Fiction stack. The pre-schooler liked to curl up on an empty book shelf (pretending I don’t know what), which could have been a disaster, sime some shelves were two-sided, opening into a lower level reading room. So I grabbed some books from the A authors. This soon morphed to one A, one B, one C, and one D author. I discovered Albert Camus (The Stranger, and The Plague) that way. And I read ALL of Charles Dickens (except Edwin Drood). When the youngest learned to read, I could return to selecting my books.

    Reply
  42. Jo Beverley said that she once decided to read the library from A to Z.
    I actually did that for a while. An employed mother with 3 children, one under 5, I took them to the library every Saturday morning. First we made the selections in the children’s room, then walked through to the Adult Fiction stack. The pre-schooler liked to curl up on an empty book shelf (pretending I don’t know what), which could have been a disaster, sime some shelves were two-sided, opening into a lower level reading room. So I grabbed some books from the A authors. This soon morphed to one A, one B, one C, and one D author. I discovered Albert Camus (The Stranger, and The Plague) that way. And I read ALL of Charles Dickens (except Edwin Drood). When the youngest learned to read, I could return to selecting my books.

    Reply
  43. Jo Beverley said that she once decided to read the library from A to Z.
    I actually did that for a while. An employed mother with 3 children, one under 5, I took them to the library every Saturday morning. First we made the selections in the children’s room, then walked through to the Adult Fiction stack. The pre-schooler liked to curl up on an empty book shelf (pretending I don’t know what), which could have been a disaster, sime some shelves were two-sided, opening into a lower level reading room. So I grabbed some books from the A authors. This soon morphed to one A, one B, one C, and one D author. I discovered Albert Camus (The Stranger, and The Plague) that way. And I read ALL of Charles Dickens (except Edwin Drood). When the youngest learned to read, I could return to selecting my books.

    Reply
  44. Jo Beverley said that she once decided to read the library from A to Z.
    I actually did that for a while. An employed mother with 3 children, one under 5, I took them to the library every Saturday morning. First we made the selections in the children’s room, then walked through to the Adult Fiction stack. The pre-schooler liked to curl up on an empty book shelf (pretending I don’t know what), which could have been a disaster, sime some shelves were two-sided, opening into a lower level reading room. So I grabbed some books from the A authors. This soon morphed to one A, one B, one C, and one D author. I discovered Albert Camus (The Stranger, and The Plague) that way. And I read ALL of Charles Dickens (except Edwin Drood). When the youngest learned to read, I could return to selecting my books.

    Reply
  45. Jo Beverley said that she once decided to read the library from A to Z.
    I actually did that for a while. An employed mother with 3 children, one under 5, I took them to the library every Saturday morning. First we made the selections in the children’s room, then walked through to the Adult Fiction stack. The pre-schooler liked to curl up on an empty book shelf (pretending I don’t know what), which could have been a disaster, sime some shelves were two-sided, opening into a lower level reading room. So I grabbed some books from the A authors. This soon morphed to one A, one B, one C, and one D author. I discovered Albert Camus (The Stranger, and The Plague) that way. And I read ALL of Charles Dickens (except Edwin Drood). When the youngest learned to read, I could return to selecting my books.

    Reply
  46. Oooh. Yes. Kate Ross.
    There are so many great writers who just drop off the edge of my consciousness for some reason. I think it’s because I don’t have a lot of time to read.
    I think of the library as my overflow stacks for the TBR pile.

    Reply
  47. Oooh. Yes. Kate Ross.
    There are so many great writers who just drop off the edge of my consciousness for some reason. I think it’s because I don’t have a lot of time to read.
    I think of the library as my overflow stacks for the TBR pile.

    Reply
  48. Oooh. Yes. Kate Ross.
    There are so many great writers who just drop off the edge of my consciousness for some reason. I think it’s because I don’t have a lot of time to read.
    I think of the library as my overflow stacks for the TBR pile.

    Reply
  49. Oooh. Yes. Kate Ross.
    There are so many great writers who just drop off the edge of my consciousness for some reason. I think it’s because I don’t have a lot of time to read.
    I think of the library as my overflow stacks for the TBR pile.

    Reply
  50. Oooh. Yes. Kate Ross.
    There are so many great writers who just drop off the edge of my consciousness for some reason. I think it’s because I don’t have a lot of time to read.
    I think of the library as my overflow stacks for the TBR pile.

    Reply
  51. Now I want to go reread Tyler — another writer I liked and then haven’t picked up for a while.
    Soon …. (jo pokes the muddy, quiescent WIP) Soon.
    Those are all beautiful suggestions, beautifully described. I have to go to twitter and tell folks to come look at the comments.

    Reply
  52. Now I want to go reread Tyler — another writer I liked and then haven’t picked up for a while.
    Soon …. (jo pokes the muddy, quiescent WIP) Soon.
    Those are all beautiful suggestions, beautifully described. I have to go to twitter and tell folks to come look at the comments.

    Reply
  53. Now I want to go reread Tyler — another writer I liked and then haven’t picked up for a while.
    Soon …. (jo pokes the muddy, quiescent WIP) Soon.
    Those are all beautiful suggestions, beautifully described. I have to go to twitter and tell folks to come look at the comments.

    Reply
  54. Now I want to go reread Tyler — another writer I liked and then haven’t picked up for a while.
    Soon …. (jo pokes the muddy, quiescent WIP) Soon.
    Those are all beautiful suggestions, beautifully described. I have to go to twitter and tell folks to come look at the comments.

    Reply
  55. Now I want to go reread Tyler — another writer I liked and then haven’t picked up for a while.
    Soon …. (jo pokes the muddy, quiescent WIP) Soon.
    Those are all beautiful suggestions, beautifully described. I have to go to twitter and tell folks to come look at the comments.

    Reply
  56. There’s something beautiful and determined and wholly human about reading through the library A to Z. It’s like some kinda high crusade. Mythic stuff.
    One’s life is so shaped by the kids. There are books of mine I will never think of without remembering the hard gym floor, the cold concrete wall at my back, and a class of kiddie karate jumping and yelling in front of me.

    Reply
  57. There’s something beautiful and determined and wholly human about reading through the library A to Z. It’s like some kinda high crusade. Mythic stuff.
    One’s life is so shaped by the kids. There are books of mine I will never think of without remembering the hard gym floor, the cold concrete wall at my back, and a class of kiddie karate jumping and yelling in front of me.

    Reply
  58. There’s something beautiful and determined and wholly human about reading through the library A to Z. It’s like some kinda high crusade. Mythic stuff.
    One’s life is so shaped by the kids. There are books of mine I will never think of without remembering the hard gym floor, the cold concrete wall at my back, and a class of kiddie karate jumping and yelling in front of me.

    Reply
  59. There’s something beautiful and determined and wholly human about reading through the library A to Z. It’s like some kinda high crusade. Mythic stuff.
    One’s life is so shaped by the kids. There are books of mine I will never think of without remembering the hard gym floor, the cold concrete wall at my back, and a class of kiddie karate jumping and yelling in front of me.

    Reply
  60. There’s something beautiful and determined and wholly human about reading through the library A to Z. It’s like some kinda high crusade. Mythic stuff.
    One’s life is so shaped by the kids. There are books of mine I will never think of without remembering the hard gym floor, the cold concrete wall at my back, and a class of kiddie karate jumping and yelling in front of me.

    Reply
  61. Quantum, three more wenches have joined you in buying Imperfect Chemistry, and one other has bought Lord of the Fading Lands, so you’re in good company. We can compare notes. 🙂
    I haven’t read Terry Goodkind — thank you for the recommendation. I, too used to read a lot of fantasy. Among others, I liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Darkover series.

    Reply
  62. Quantum, three more wenches have joined you in buying Imperfect Chemistry, and one other has bought Lord of the Fading Lands, so you’re in good company. We can compare notes. 🙂
    I haven’t read Terry Goodkind — thank you for the recommendation. I, too used to read a lot of fantasy. Among others, I liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Darkover series.

    Reply
  63. Quantum, three more wenches have joined you in buying Imperfect Chemistry, and one other has bought Lord of the Fading Lands, so you’re in good company. We can compare notes. 🙂
    I haven’t read Terry Goodkind — thank you for the recommendation. I, too used to read a lot of fantasy. Among others, I liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Darkover series.

    Reply
  64. Quantum, three more wenches have joined you in buying Imperfect Chemistry, and one other has bought Lord of the Fading Lands, so you’re in good company. We can compare notes. 🙂
    I haven’t read Terry Goodkind — thank you for the recommendation. I, too used to read a lot of fantasy. Among others, I liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Darkover series.

    Reply
  65. Quantum, three more wenches have joined you in buying Imperfect Chemistry, and one other has bought Lord of the Fading Lands, so you’re in good company. We can compare notes. 🙂
    I haven’t read Terry Goodkind — thank you for the recommendation. I, too used to read a lot of fantasy. Among others, I liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Darkover series.

    Reply
  66. Janga, what wonderful recommendations. I love Anne Tyler’s writing, and will immediately order A Spool of Blue Thread (love that title).
    And I might have to try How to be a Heroine as well. It sounds delightful. Yes to not following Catherine Earnshaw. Might have to read Cold Comfort farm for the umpteenth time, too. And you can never go wrong with Mary Balogh.
    I’m so glad you pop in here sometimes with your recommendations — I miss your blog.

    Reply
  67. Janga, what wonderful recommendations. I love Anne Tyler’s writing, and will immediately order A Spool of Blue Thread (love that title).
    And I might have to try How to be a Heroine as well. It sounds delightful. Yes to not following Catherine Earnshaw. Might have to read Cold Comfort farm for the umpteenth time, too. And you can never go wrong with Mary Balogh.
    I’m so glad you pop in here sometimes with your recommendations — I miss your blog.

    Reply
  68. Janga, what wonderful recommendations. I love Anne Tyler’s writing, and will immediately order A Spool of Blue Thread (love that title).
    And I might have to try How to be a Heroine as well. It sounds delightful. Yes to not following Catherine Earnshaw. Might have to read Cold Comfort farm for the umpteenth time, too. And you can never go wrong with Mary Balogh.
    I’m so glad you pop in here sometimes with your recommendations — I miss your blog.

    Reply
  69. Janga, what wonderful recommendations. I love Anne Tyler’s writing, and will immediately order A Spool of Blue Thread (love that title).
    And I might have to try How to be a Heroine as well. It sounds delightful. Yes to not following Catherine Earnshaw. Might have to read Cold Comfort farm for the umpteenth time, too. And you can never go wrong with Mary Balogh.
    I’m so glad you pop in here sometimes with your recommendations — I miss your blog.

    Reply
  70. Janga, what wonderful recommendations. I love Anne Tyler’s writing, and will immediately order A Spool of Blue Thread (love that title).
    And I might have to try How to be a Heroine as well. It sounds delightful. Yes to not following Catherine Earnshaw. Might have to read Cold Comfort farm for the umpteenth time, too. And you can never go wrong with Mary Balogh.
    I’m so glad you pop in here sometimes with your recommendations — I miss your blog.

    Reply
  71. A pleasure, Bronwen! I love some adventure with my romance and it is a lovely book!
    I also picked up Imperfect Chemistry on the recommendation of fellow wenches and really enjoyed it. I’ve ordered the second book in the series. Now I’m going to look out for Napoleon’s Buttons and The Counterfeit Heiress. Love the WWR for all these reading ideas!

    Reply
  72. A pleasure, Bronwen! I love some adventure with my romance and it is a lovely book!
    I also picked up Imperfect Chemistry on the recommendation of fellow wenches and really enjoyed it. I’ve ordered the second book in the series. Now I’m going to look out for Napoleon’s Buttons and The Counterfeit Heiress. Love the WWR for all these reading ideas!

    Reply
  73. A pleasure, Bronwen! I love some adventure with my romance and it is a lovely book!
    I also picked up Imperfect Chemistry on the recommendation of fellow wenches and really enjoyed it. I’ve ordered the second book in the series. Now I’m going to look out for Napoleon’s Buttons and The Counterfeit Heiress. Love the WWR for all these reading ideas!

    Reply
  74. A pleasure, Bronwen! I love some adventure with my romance and it is a lovely book!
    I also picked up Imperfect Chemistry on the recommendation of fellow wenches and really enjoyed it. I’ve ordered the second book in the series. Now I’m going to look out for Napoleon’s Buttons and The Counterfeit Heiress. Love the WWR for all these reading ideas!

    Reply
  75. A pleasure, Bronwen! I love some adventure with my romance and it is a lovely book!
    I also picked up Imperfect Chemistry on the recommendation of fellow wenches and really enjoyed it. I’ve ordered the second book in the series. Now I’m going to look out for Napoleon’s Buttons and The Counterfeit Heiress. Love the WWR for all these reading ideas!

    Reply
  76. I just finished rereading the second Mary Finch book, The Counterfeit Guest, by Rose Melikan, and am hunting for the third, which I know I have. Somewhere. Other than that, I’ve been working my way through Alan Furst’s novels and a stack of used vintage Signets (tonight’s read was A Heart in Peril by Emma Lange – a bit on the melodramatic cheek biting side with a revenge AND an attempted murder plot, but they don’t get in the way of the story 😉 After that I dunno yet.

    Reply
  77. I just finished rereading the second Mary Finch book, The Counterfeit Guest, by Rose Melikan, and am hunting for the third, which I know I have. Somewhere. Other than that, I’ve been working my way through Alan Furst’s novels and a stack of used vintage Signets (tonight’s read was A Heart in Peril by Emma Lange – a bit on the melodramatic cheek biting side with a revenge AND an attempted murder plot, but they don’t get in the way of the story 😉 After that I dunno yet.

    Reply
  78. I just finished rereading the second Mary Finch book, The Counterfeit Guest, by Rose Melikan, and am hunting for the third, which I know I have. Somewhere. Other than that, I’ve been working my way through Alan Furst’s novels and a stack of used vintage Signets (tonight’s read was A Heart in Peril by Emma Lange – a bit on the melodramatic cheek biting side with a revenge AND an attempted murder plot, but they don’t get in the way of the story 😉 After that I dunno yet.

    Reply
  79. I just finished rereading the second Mary Finch book, The Counterfeit Guest, by Rose Melikan, and am hunting for the third, which I know I have. Somewhere. Other than that, I’ve been working my way through Alan Furst’s novels and a stack of used vintage Signets (tonight’s read was A Heart in Peril by Emma Lange – a bit on the melodramatic cheek biting side with a revenge AND an attempted murder plot, but they don’t get in the way of the story 😉 After that I dunno yet.

    Reply
  80. I just finished rereading the second Mary Finch book, The Counterfeit Guest, by Rose Melikan, and am hunting for the third, which I know I have. Somewhere. Other than that, I’ve been working my way through Alan Furst’s novels and a stack of used vintage Signets (tonight’s read was A Heart in Peril by Emma Lange – a bit on the melodramatic cheek biting side with a revenge AND an attempted murder plot, but they don’t get in the way of the story 😉 After that I dunno yet.

    Reply
  81. I think it was the late Avram Davidson who wrote a story about the after-midnight antics of physical objects. Nighttime is when they mate and increase. You have plenty of paper clips one day but you wake up and there are none to be found, but there are a lot more coathangers than you think you had. In the story, the process proceeds to the bicycle stage, at which point the lead character finds out and the bicycles get him. So you see, Jo, you’re not crazy, yet.

    Reply
  82. I think it was the late Avram Davidson who wrote a story about the after-midnight antics of physical objects. Nighttime is when they mate and increase. You have plenty of paper clips one day but you wake up and there are none to be found, but there are a lot more coathangers than you think you had. In the story, the process proceeds to the bicycle stage, at which point the lead character finds out and the bicycles get him. So you see, Jo, you’re not crazy, yet.

    Reply
  83. I think it was the late Avram Davidson who wrote a story about the after-midnight antics of physical objects. Nighttime is when they mate and increase. You have plenty of paper clips one day but you wake up and there are none to be found, but there are a lot more coathangers than you think you had. In the story, the process proceeds to the bicycle stage, at which point the lead character finds out and the bicycles get him. So you see, Jo, you’re not crazy, yet.

    Reply
  84. I think it was the late Avram Davidson who wrote a story about the after-midnight antics of physical objects. Nighttime is when they mate and increase. You have plenty of paper clips one day but you wake up and there are none to be found, but there are a lot more coathangers than you think you had. In the story, the process proceeds to the bicycle stage, at which point the lead character finds out and the bicycles get him. So you see, Jo, you’re not crazy, yet.

    Reply
  85. I think it was the late Avram Davidson who wrote a story about the after-midnight antics of physical objects. Nighttime is when they mate and increase. You have plenty of paper clips one day but you wake up and there are none to be found, but there are a lot more coathangers than you think you had. In the story, the process proceeds to the bicycle stage, at which point the lead character finds out and the bicycles get him. So you see, Jo, you’re not crazy, yet.

    Reply
  86. I loved Rosamund Lupton’s Sister. It was one of those books that keeps you turning the pages late into the night. I also loved Gone Girl and Before You Go Sleep by SJ Watson.

    Reply
  87. I loved Rosamund Lupton’s Sister. It was one of those books that keeps you turning the pages late into the night. I also loved Gone Girl and Before You Go Sleep by SJ Watson.

    Reply
  88. I loved Rosamund Lupton’s Sister. It was one of those books that keeps you turning the pages late into the night. I also loved Gone Girl and Before You Go Sleep by SJ Watson.

    Reply
  89. I loved Rosamund Lupton’s Sister. It was one of those books that keeps you turning the pages late into the night. I also loved Gone Girl and Before You Go Sleep by SJ Watson.

    Reply
  90. I loved Rosamund Lupton’s Sister. It was one of those books that keeps you turning the pages late into the night. I also loved Gone Girl and Before You Go Sleep by SJ Watson.

    Reply
  91. I’m glad to know I wasn’t the only person who ever set out to read all the books A-Z. But I was a young teenager (early 70’s) so I started in Young Adult. I did start with A and I think I made it to Z. I’m not sure I read every single book but I did read the vast majority.
    In fact I remember going back to A, B, C, etc and checking to make sure I hadn’t missed any books because someone had checked them out.
    Now that I think about it, I did something like that when I was in Junior High…read all the books A-Z in fiction and biography.

    Reply
  92. I’m glad to know I wasn’t the only person who ever set out to read all the books A-Z. But I was a young teenager (early 70’s) so I started in Young Adult. I did start with A and I think I made it to Z. I’m not sure I read every single book but I did read the vast majority.
    In fact I remember going back to A, B, C, etc and checking to make sure I hadn’t missed any books because someone had checked them out.
    Now that I think about it, I did something like that when I was in Junior High…read all the books A-Z in fiction and biography.

    Reply
  93. I’m glad to know I wasn’t the only person who ever set out to read all the books A-Z. But I was a young teenager (early 70’s) so I started in Young Adult. I did start with A and I think I made it to Z. I’m not sure I read every single book but I did read the vast majority.
    In fact I remember going back to A, B, C, etc and checking to make sure I hadn’t missed any books because someone had checked them out.
    Now that I think about it, I did something like that when I was in Junior High…read all the books A-Z in fiction and biography.

    Reply
  94. I’m glad to know I wasn’t the only person who ever set out to read all the books A-Z. But I was a young teenager (early 70’s) so I started in Young Adult. I did start with A and I think I made it to Z. I’m not sure I read every single book but I did read the vast majority.
    In fact I remember going back to A, B, C, etc and checking to make sure I hadn’t missed any books because someone had checked them out.
    Now that I think about it, I did something like that when I was in Junior High…read all the books A-Z in fiction and biography.

    Reply
  95. I’m glad to know I wasn’t the only person who ever set out to read all the books A-Z. But I was a young teenager (early 70’s) so I started in Young Adult. I did start with A and I think I made it to Z. I’m not sure I read every single book but I did read the vast majority.
    In fact I remember going back to A, B, C, etc and checking to make sure I hadn’t missed any books because someone had checked them out.
    Now that I think about it, I did something like that when I was in Junior High…read all the books A-Z in fiction and biography.

    Reply
  96. As others have said, I have so many in the TBR piles that it’s hard to choose, so that’s when I pull out an old favorite for a reread. Happily engrossed in Secrets of the Heart again.

    Reply
  97. As others have said, I have so many in the TBR piles that it’s hard to choose, so that’s when I pull out an old favorite for a reread. Happily engrossed in Secrets of the Heart again.

    Reply
  98. As others have said, I have so many in the TBR piles that it’s hard to choose, so that’s when I pull out an old favorite for a reread. Happily engrossed in Secrets of the Heart again.

    Reply
  99. As others have said, I have so many in the TBR piles that it’s hard to choose, so that’s when I pull out an old favorite for a reread. Happily engrossed in Secrets of the Heart again.

    Reply
  100. As others have said, I have so many in the TBR piles that it’s hard to choose, so that’s when I pull out an old favorite for a reread. Happily engrossed in Secrets of the Heart again.

    Reply
  101. Hello, Wenches: Thank you for the tip on C. L. Wilson. I purchased and read the first 2 in the last 2 days and have gone ahead with buying #3,4,5. Really interesting fantasy. I haven’t seen anyone mention Diana Gabaldon. If you haven’t read her there’s a BIG treat waiting. BIG because her books run to about 1800 pages and there are 8 of them so far. Another series I absolutely adore is the Liaden Series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They describe it as a Regency Romance mixed in with Space Opera and that’s accurate. I hope that fellow readers will enjoy these recommendations.

    Reply
  102. Hello, Wenches: Thank you for the tip on C. L. Wilson. I purchased and read the first 2 in the last 2 days and have gone ahead with buying #3,4,5. Really interesting fantasy. I haven’t seen anyone mention Diana Gabaldon. If you haven’t read her there’s a BIG treat waiting. BIG because her books run to about 1800 pages and there are 8 of them so far. Another series I absolutely adore is the Liaden Series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They describe it as a Regency Romance mixed in with Space Opera and that’s accurate. I hope that fellow readers will enjoy these recommendations.

    Reply
  103. Hello, Wenches: Thank you for the tip on C. L. Wilson. I purchased and read the first 2 in the last 2 days and have gone ahead with buying #3,4,5. Really interesting fantasy. I haven’t seen anyone mention Diana Gabaldon. If you haven’t read her there’s a BIG treat waiting. BIG because her books run to about 1800 pages and there are 8 of them so far. Another series I absolutely adore is the Liaden Series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They describe it as a Regency Romance mixed in with Space Opera and that’s accurate. I hope that fellow readers will enjoy these recommendations.

    Reply
  104. Hello, Wenches: Thank you for the tip on C. L. Wilson. I purchased and read the first 2 in the last 2 days and have gone ahead with buying #3,4,5. Really interesting fantasy. I haven’t seen anyone mention Diana Gabaldon. If you haven’t read her there’s a BIG treat waiting. BIG because her books run to about 1800 pages and there are 8 of them so far. Another series I absolutely adore is the Liaden Series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They describe it as a Regency Romance mixed in with Space Opera and that’s accurate. I hope that fellow readers will enjoy these recommendations.

    Reply
  105. Hello, Wenches: Thank you for the tip on C. L. Wilson. I purchased and read the first 2 in the last 2 days and have gone ahead with buying #3,4,5. Really interesting fantasy. I haven’t seen anyone mention Diana Gabaldon. If you haven’t read her there’s a BIG treat waiting. BIG because her books run to about 1800 pages and there are 8 of them so far. Another series I absolutely adore is the Liaden Series by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller. They describe it as a Regency Romance mixed in with Space Opera and that’s accurate. I hope that fellow readers will enjoy these recommendations.

    Reply
  106. Thank you for these suggestions! I can see that I’ll be spending some time with my library’s online catalog this afternoon. And regarding the catalog and Jo Beverley’s mention of how she picks random reads, when I search a name or a subject in the online catalog, I try to scan through all of the “hits.” As you all know, library catalogs tend to offer the most specific matches first and then the more general suggestions. I reserve first what I’m looking for, so I don’t forget, but the search results help me to discover books, movies, music and subjects that I’d never even considered.

    Reply
  107. Thank you for these suggestions! I can see that I’ll be spending some time with my library’s online catalog this afternoon. And regarding the catalog and Jo Beverley’s mention of how she picks random reads, when I search a name or a subject in the online catalog, I try to scan through all of the “hits.” As you all know, library catalogs tend to offer the most specific matches first and then the more general suggestions. I reserve first what I’m looking for, so I don’t forget, but the search results help me to discover books, movies, music and subjects that I’d never even considered.

    Reply
  108. Thank you for these suggestions! I can see that I’ll be spending some time with my library’s online catalog this afternoon. And regarding the catalog and Jo Beverley’s mention of how she picks random reads, when I search a name or a subject in the online catalog, I try to scan through all of the “hits.” As you all know, library catalogs tend to offer the most specific matches first and then the more general suggestions. I reserve first what I’m looking for, so I don’t forget, but the search results help me to discover books, movies, music and subjects that I’d never even considered.

    Reply
  109. Thank you for these suggestions! I can see that I’ll be spending some time with my library’s online catalog this afternoon. And regarding the catalog and Jo Beverley’s mention of how she picks random reads, when I search a name or a subject in the online catalog, I try to scan through all of the “hits.” As you all know, library catalogs tend to offer the most specific matches first and then the more general suggestions. I reserve first what I’m looking for, so I don’t forget, but the search results help me to discover books, movies, music and subjects that I’d never even considered.

    Reply
  110. Thank you for these suggestions! I can see that I’ll be spending some time with my library’s online catalog this afternoon. And regarding the catalog and Jo Beverley’s mention of how she picks random reads, when I search a name or a subject in the online catalog, I try to scan through all of the “hits.” As you all know, library catalogs tend to offer the most specific matches first and then the more general suggestions. I reserve first what I’m looking for, so I don’t forget, but the search results help me to discover books, movies, music and subjects that I’d never even considered.

    Reply
  111. Hi Michele —
    You’re right about searches. So often the top one or two picks answers my question.
    But then I scan onward and find the most interesting things. What comes to mind in particular are Google image searches. That is a wonderland I can just fall into and come out an hour later …

    Reply
  112. Hi Michele —
    You’re right about searches. So often the top one or two picks answers my question.
    But then I scan onward and find the most interesting things. What comes to mind in particular are Google image searches. That is a wonderland I can just fall into and come out an hour later …

    Reply
  113. Hi Michele —
    You’re right about searches. So often the top one or two picks answers my question.
    But then I scan onward and find the most interesting things. What comes to mind in particular are Google image searches. That is a wonderland I can just fall into and come out an hour later …

    Reply
  114. Hi Michele —
    You’re right about searches. So often the top one or two picks answers my question.
    But then I scan onward and find the most interesting things. What comes to mind in particular are Google image searches. That is a wonderland I can just fall into and come out an hour later …

    Reply
  115. Hi Michele —
    You’re right about searches. So often the top one or two picks answers my question.
    But then I scan onward and find the most interesting things. What comes to mind in particular are Google image searches. That is a wonderland I can just fall into and come out an hour later …

    Reply

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