Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Eddie Winston is Looking for Love by Marianne Cronin

 


What is the last heartwarming book that you have read?  Eddie Winston is Looking for Love by Marianne Cronin was a heartwarming novel and one of my favorite reads of January.

Eddie Winston is ninety and works in a charity shop in Birmingham.  He befriends a 24-year-old, Bella, as donates her boyfriend’s clothes to the shop when he passes away.  Bella is stunned to learn that Eddie has never been kissed and makes it a goal to help Eddie find love. Will Eddie finally find love and his first kiss?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       I read Eddie Winston is Looking for Love as part of the Brenda Novak’s Book Group.  She had a great interview with author Marianne Cronin as part of her January Book Group Meeting.  There is a great line up for books for 2025 for this book group and I look forward to reading them all.

·       This novel had short and quirky chapters which were easy to read.

·       The novel is narrated primarily be Eddie, Bella, and Bridie.  Bridie narrates her life and stories in the 1960s when Edie and Bridie fell in love.  Bridie was married to a serial cheater but wouldn’t leave him due to her strong catholic faith.

·       Bella is trying to come to terms with her grief and how to move on.

·       I like how Eddie decides it is not too late to make a change and decides to change his fashion and life.

·       I loved Eddie’s Guinea pig, Pushkin, and how he got a romance of his own.

·       This was a fun book about love, lose, finding oneself, the importance of friends and relationships, grief, and missed chances.

·       This would be a great read for those who enjoyed The Mostly True Story of Tanner and Louise by Colleen Oakley.

·       This novel was a sweet, heartwarming intergenerational story.  I would love to get to know Eddie and Bella in real life.  This novel had great characters and humor.

·       It was a quick read that I couldn’t put down.

Favorite Quotes:

“’The years fly, don’t they?’ she says with a sigh.  I wonder if they do.  Like birds, forever flapping away from us, off to sunnier climes.”

“Why do we spend so much money on flowers for the dead but barely ever buy them for the living.”

Overall, Eddie Winston is Looking for Love by Marianne Cronin was a fabulous heartwarming and funny book.  It will definitely be one of my favorite reads of 2025.

Book Source:  Purchased from Amazon.com.

Mountain Interval by Robert Frost

 


Do you enjoy reading poetry?  I haven’t read much poetry since college, but reading this collection made me think I need to pick up poetry again.

I read this collection of poetry in January for the What the Dickens Book Club on Facebook.  There was a great discussion about it last month. 

My thoughts on this collection:

·       I haven’t read any Robert Frost poem since my college days.  I either read his poems as individual poems or as part of a “complete collection.”  This was the first time I read them in a collection as they would have been published.  It was very interesting.

·       The collection includes one of my favorite poems, The Road Not Taken.

·       The poems give the reader a sense of place and time – that you are living on a farm in rural Vermont in the early twentieth century.

·       I especially liked the poem where a city guy tried to rip Frost off and buy one thousand pine trees for a total of $300.  This would only be three cents per tree!  It was interesting how Frost made this experience into a poem.

·       Poems are a nice length to read and think about before bed.  With all that is going on in the world, they were a good escapism read.

Overall, Mountain Interval by Robert Frost was an enjoyable poetry collection and I highly recommend it.

Book Source:  Purchased on my kindle from Amazon.com.

Monday, February 17, 2025

Midnight on the Scottish Shore by Sarah Sundin (Austenprose PR Book Tour)

 




What's a book that you wish you could experience for the first time again?  I have so many favorites, but one would be Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen.

Cilla van der Zee is a Dutch citizen living through the horrors of the Nazi occupation.  She infiltrates the Dutch Nazis for the resistance movement.  After witnessing them murdering one of her friends, she decides she needs to get out of the Netherlands.  She volunteers to become a spy in England where she went to school and has an aunt.  Once on the shores of Scotland, Lt. Lachlan Mackenzie immediately arrests her.  To save her own life, she has to become a double cross agent.  Will Lacklan and Cilla be able to work together to further the allied cause?  Will Lacklan ever be able to trust Cilla?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       Midnight on the Scottish Shore by Sarah Sundin was an engaging novel that captured my attention right from the first chapter.

·       I loved the spy story and how everyone worked together to make the double cross work.  Espionage and suspense were rife in this novel.

·       It really put WWII into perspective on how it was a life and death situation for so many people without any clear options to get out of the terrible situation they were in.

·       I don’t know why, but I hadn’t really thought of submarines dropped off spies off the shores of Great Britain.

·       I loved the characters, but especially Cilla and Lachlan.  Cilla is in a tough situation and must figure out how to keep herself alive while wondering about her family and friends that are left back in the Netherlands.  She is a strong woman. Lachlan is trying to protect his own country, while also wondering about his brother who is involved in a separatist group.  He is a sensitive man who plays the bagpipes, wears a kilt, and loves poetry.

·       The Scottish setting was wonderful.  It was scenic as described on the page and I also loved the descriptions of the Scottish traditions.

·       Cilla and Lachlan had a great enemies to lovers’ romance.

·       Great questions at the end of the novel for a book club to use.  This would make a great book club selection.  It’s a riveting story with morally gray areas that could be explored.

·       I also enjoyed the author’s note at the end which went through the real history that is in this novel.  The Double Cross program is fascinating history.

Favorite quote: “Double cross is a game, Cilla.  It’s the grandest of games.”

Overall, Midnight on the Scottish Shore by Sarah Sundin is a very engaging espionage WWII historical fiction novel with great characters and a fascinating Scottish setting.  I highly recommend it!

Book Source:  Review copy from Revell Books as part of the Austenprose PR Book Tour. Thank-you!  Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

The only way Cilla van der Zee can survive the German occupation of the Netherlands is to do the unthinkable--become a spy for the Nazis in Britain. She soothes her conscience with a plan to abandon her mission and instead aid the Allies. Her scheme is thwarted when naval officer Lt. Lachlan Mackenzie finds her along the Scottish shore and turns her in to be executed.

But perhaps she is more useful alive than dead. British intelligence sends her to Scotland to radio misleading messages to Germany, messages about the naval base at Scapa Flow to be crafted by Lachlan. At the station in the lighthouse at Dunnet Head, Lachlan and Cilla must work together if the war is to be won. But how can he trust a woman who arrived on his shores as a tool of the enemy--a woman certain to betray both him and the Allied cause?

Master of World War II fiction Sarah Sundin takes you to the wild Scottish seaside, where danger lurks under the surface of the water--and in the depths of the human heart--for a WWII tale you won't soon forget.

AUTHOR BIO

Sarah Sundin is the bestselling author of When Twilight Breaks, Until Leaves Fall in Paris, The Sound of Light, Embers in the London Sky, and the popular WWII series Sunrise at Normandy, among others. She is a Christy Award winner and a Carol Award winner, and her novels have received starred reviews from Booklist, Library Journal, and Publishers Weekly. Sarah lives in Southern California. Visit SarahSundin.com for more information


Sunday, February 16, 2025

A Victim at Valentine’s by Ellie Alexander

 


Title: A Victim at Valentine’s

Author:  Ellie Alexander

Narrated by:  Ellen Quay

Publisher: Dreamscape Media

Length: Approximately 6 hours and 25 minutes

Source: Review Copy from NetGalley.  Thank you!

How did you celebrate Valentine’s Day?  Did you have a cozy night in or go out on the town?  Or not celebrate at all?  My husband and I went out for dinner.

Annie Murray is celebrating Valentine’s Day at the Secret Bookshop by putting together a matchmaking event.  Annie’s friend Scarlett was murdered in the past and she is still trying to put together the clues to solve her death.  When someone else is murdered at the bookstore, Annie helps investigate who the killer could be in their small town.  Will they find the killer before they strike again?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       This was a perfect cozy read for Valentine’s Day.  I loved how there was a slight romance with Annie and Liam and the event that was put together for the holiday. The murder was tied in with the holiday as well.

·       This is the fifth book in the A Secret Bookcase Mystery series.  I read it as a standalone, but I feel like it would have been even better if I had read the first books in the series.

·       I enjoyed that the bookstore was an Agatha Christie themed bookstore.

·       There were many red herrings in the mystery which made it fun as Annie put together the pieces to find the killer.

·       Ellen Quay was a great narrator, and this was an enjoyable audiobook.

Overall, A Victim at Valentine’s Day by Ellie Alexander was a perfect cozy mystery for the holiday.

Slow Dance by Rainbow Powell


Title: Slow Dance

Author: Rainbow Powell

Narrated by: Rebecca Lowman

Publisher: HarperAudio

Length: Approximately 11 hours and 31 minutes

Source: Audiobook Purchased from Audible

Do you like to dance?  My husband and I enjoy dancing, although we don’t get to do it too often with our busy kids’ schedules.

Shiloh and Cary were best friends in high school and everyone around them expected them to get together.  Life did not work out that way and Shiloh went off to college while Cary shipped off to the Navy.  Over the years, the two keep passing back into each other’s life.  Is there a good time for a second chance at romance?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       This was the February pick for the Page-turners Book Club at the Kewaunee Public Library.  Unfortunately, I was unable to attend the meeting due to work commitments.

·       I had a really hard time with this book.  The plot move very slowly, and I had a hard time connecting with the characters or even liking them as people. 

·       I read about 100 pages of the novel and then I switched to the audiobook version which worked better for me.

·       This novel had lots and lots and lots of flashbacks.  I am usually a fan of flashbacks, but there were just too many through too many time periods in this one to keep me enjoying the story.

·       This was a second chance romance which is one of my favorite tropes.  I did like that it showed a different type of couple with a divorced mother of two living with her mother and a single military man trying to take care of his mother and family as well.

·       This was a steamy romance, although most of the steam was the end of the novel.

Overall, Slow Dance by Rainbow Powell was too slow of a dance of a novel for me.  I read it through to the end, but really didn’t enjoy the characters or story.

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Whispers of Fortune by Mary Connealy (Austenprose PR Book Tour)




 Share a book that has a beautiful dedication.  I loved the dedication in this book, “To my cowboy husband: You’re retired now, but you’ll always be a cowboy at heart.”

Brody MacKenzie has just become a doctor in 1874 and he has headed west to find his two brothers who have runaway from the orphan train after their parents’ deaths.  He finds that they are in a great situation living in an orphanage and school, but that they are obsessed with using their grandfather’s old journal to find a hidden treasure.  Will they find it before others that are also hot on the trail?

My thoughts on this novel:

This was a good clean, western adventure romance.  It was a great start to a new series.

I enjoyed the character of Brodie MacKenzie.  I liked that he was a good man who wanted to help his brothers out while also keeping the promise to the doctor that had helped him out.

Ellie and her brother Josh have been taking care of the two brothers on the ranch.  Ellie and Brodie have a romance in the novel that is sweet.  The romance is not the focus of the novel and didn’t have much build-up.

I always love a treasure hunt and I think it made the story more exciting that there was a villain also looking for the treasure.

There is a sneak peak at the end for Book 2 of this series and it looks great!

Favorite Quote:

“Revenge was the juice that kept his blood flowing.” – What a great description of the villain.

Overall, Whispers of Fortune by Mary Connealy is an entertaining western adventure romance and good start to what looks to be a fascinating new series.

Book Source:  Review copy from Bethany House Publishing as part of the Austenprose PR Book Tour. Thank-you!  Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

In a land of gold and grit, can two hearts uncover the true treasure?

In 1875 California, Brody MacKenzie arrives at the Two Harts Ranch on a mission to find his runaway brothers, worried they may have fallen into harm. Instead, he discovers them thriving at the ranch's school and orphanage under the care of Ellie Hart, a woman with a heart as resilient as the land she calls home. His options limited, Brody reluctantly takes on the role of ranch doctor, and he forms an unexpected bond with Ellie, who's kept a steady eye on Brody's two rapscallion brothers. When the boys show him a mysterious journal that has been guiding their travels and may hold the key to a lost treasure, Brody and Ellie are captivated by the possibility of a thrilling adventure.

With winter approaching and his brothers threatening to bolt again, Brody and Ellie race against time to decipher cryptic clues and unearth the hidden fortune. But along the way, old adversaries resurface, threatening their newfound affection and the safety of those at the ranch.

AUTHOR BIO

Mary Connealy writes "romantic comedies with cowboys" and is celebrated for her fun, zany, action-packed style. She has sold more than 1.5 million books and is the author of the popular series A Western Light, Wyoming Sunrise, and many other books. Mary lives on a ranch in eastern Nebraska with her very own romantic cowboy hero. Learn more at MaryConnealy.com.

Friday, February 7, 2025

I’ll Tell You Everything by Rebecca Kelley (TLC Book Tours)

 


Do you prefer to read one book at a time or multiple books at once?  I’m usually reading multiple books at once.

Ramona Crawford was adopted as an infant, and she wants to find out her biological parents.  She is able to find her mother, Amy Linden, through DNA testing and she meets with her to find out more details about her biological father.  Amy tells Ramona the sad story of her birth, but the details don’t quite add up. What is true and what isn’t?  Is Amy capable to be able to tell the truth?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       I always enjoy a good suspense novel.  This novel kept me wondering what the real story was right up until the end.  I read this book quickly.

·       I loved the setting of this novel.  Amy runs a mountain lodge, which was also the setting for where she met Ramona’s father.  The lodge seemed like a cozy place to stay with hiking, and cabaret performances.

·       The book alternates between Ramona and Amy’s point of view.

·       I thought both Amy and Ramona were interesting characters.  Amy especially seemed like she could turn into a villain, but she wasn’t.  She was a complicated character that kept me interested in the story.  I felt bad for Ramona and just wanted her to be able to find out the truth about her biological father and origin.

·       I am always intrigued by unreliable narrators.

·       This was a good domestic drama.

Overall, I’ll Tell You Everything by Rebecca Kelley was an enjoyable domestic drama and suspense novel.

Book Source:  Review copy from author Rebecca Kelley as part of the TLC Book Tour. Thank-you!  Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Waiting for Christmas by Lynn Austin

 


What's a book that you've recommended to everyone?

In 1901 New York City, Howard and Adelaide are excited to spend their first Christmas together as husband and wife.  Adelaide is trying to learn how to be a middle-class wife after being raised in great wealth.  Adelaide discovers a young boy, Jack, who says he’s not really an orphan, but that his mother died and, his father is away at sea, and his sister is missing.  He is sure his father will return for Christmas.  Howard and Adelaide help Jack out.  Will his father return for Christmas?

My thoughts on this novella:

·       I love an Edwardian Christmas. 

·       The sections were split to correlate with the advent calendar.  I liked this unique storytelling and the deep faith elements.

·       I have not read the first book in this series, but it was fine reading this as a standalone.  I do want to go back and read the first novel.

·       I enjoyed reading about Adelaide’s work for the suffrage movement.

·       The cover of this novella was striking. 

·       This was a sweet and clean read.

·       I loved how the story included the true meaning of Christmas.  I especially loved when Adelaide brought home the family nativity and explains it to the kids.

·       Adelaide must ponder what to do with her inherited fortune and how best to help others and the suffrage movement.

·       The ending was heartwarming.

Overall, Waiting for Christmas by Lynn Austin is a wonderful historical fiction Christmas novel that encompasses the true meaning of Christmas.  I loved it.

Book Source:  Review copy from NetGalley. Thank-you!  Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

Thursday, February 6, 2025

The Indigo Heiress by Laura Frantz (Austenprose PR Book Tour)

 


What's a book that you think should be turned into a movie?  I think about this every time I read a book.  When I read The Indigo Heiress by Laura Frantz, I realized I would love to see this book as a movie or a series.

Juliet Catesby lives in the State of Virginia in 1774 on the Royal Vale plantation with her father and sister, Loveday.  The plantation is a mix of slaves and indentured servants, and Juliet and Loveday work secretly to help slaves escape to their aunt in Philadelphia.  Juliet also is a great help to her father keeping their plantation running, but they find themselves weighed down by debt that is mostly from the tobacco lords from Scotland.  One of those lords, Leigh Buchanon is coming to Virginia for a visit, and Juliet is not pleased.  Even more so when she discovers that her father has promised Leigh one of his daughters to cancel his debts.  Will Leigh chose Juliet or Loveday?  Can true love bloom from an arranged marriage?

My thoughts on this novel:

·       I greatly enjoyed this novel.  I literally couldn’t put it down and kept reading too long into the night.

·       I loved the unique story.  The book was partially set in colonial Virginia right before the start of the Revolutionary War and partially set in 18th century Glasgow Scotland.  I found both settings to be fascinating.

·       I loved the characters.  Juliet was a strong woman making her way in a man’s world with grace.  She was willing to make changes in her life and trust that God would lead her through.  I also loved Leigh Buchanon.  He has not had the easiest of lives although he is from a wealthy family.  I love how considerate he is to Juliet in their arranged marriage.

·       Love bloomed between Juliet and Leigh over time, and I enjoyed the romance.

·       There was a great mystery about the death of Leigh’s first wife and a lot of suspense in the last part of the novel.

·       Loveday had an orange cat named Hobbes that traveled with them to Scotland.  I loved the cat.

·       The story is told in alternating chapters between Juliet and Leigh.

·       This was a clean romance.

·       I knew nothing about the tobacco lords and found that piece of history to be fascinating.  There is a great author’s note at the end on the topic as well.

Overall, The Indigo Heiress by Laura Frantz is a well written captivating historical fiction novel with great characters in a fascinating setting. It’s a story you won’t soon forget.  I highly recommend it!

Book Source:  Review copy from Revell Books as part of the Austenprose PR Book Tour. Thank-you!  Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

In 1774, Juliet Catesby lives with her father and sister at Royal Vale, the James River plantation founded by her Virginia family over a century before. Indigo cultivation is her foremost concern, though its export tethers her family to the powerful Buchanan clan of Glasgow, Scotland. When the heir of the Buchanan firm arrives on their shores, Juliet discovers that her father has secretly arranged for one of his daughters to marry the Scot as a means of canceling the family's debt. Confident it will be her younger, lovelier sister, Juliet is appalled when Leith Buchanan selects her instead.

Despite her initial refusal of him, an ensuing altercation forces Juliet to flee Virginia. Agreeing to marry, she sails with Leith to Scotland, hopeful of a better match for her sister, who accompanies her. But once in Glasgow and faced with the contentious, powerful Buchanan clan, she realizes that the man who saved her from financial ruin and scandal is the very one she must now save in return.

AUTHOR BIO

Laura Frantz is a two-time Christy Award winner and the ECPA bestselling author of 15 novels, including The Seamstress of Acadie, The Rose and the Thistle, The Frontiersman's Daughter, Courting Morrow Little, The Lacemaker,and A Heart Adrift. She is the proud mom of an American soldier and a career firefighter. Though she will always call Kentucky home, Laura lives with her husband in Washington State. Learn more at LauraFrantz.net.

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

The Radio Hour by Victoria Purman (Austenprose PR Book Tour)

 

Title: The Radio Hour

Author:  Victoria Purman

Narrated by:  Jennifer Vuletic

Publisher: Harper Muse

Length: Approximately 9 hours and 59 minutes

Source: Audiobook Review Copy from NetGalley.  Physical book review copy from Harper Muse as part of the Austenprose Book Tour.  Thank-you!

What is your favorite TV show?  I have a lot of favorites, but one of them is Only Murders in the Building.  I love a good mystery that also has humor.

Martha Berry has worked in broadcasting as a secretary for twenty-four years.  It’s now 1956 in Australia and television is being talked about on the horizon. While she has vast experience, she has never been promoted or seen a pay raise.  She has been reassigned to a new show that will be produced by new employee, Quentin Quinn.  Quentin is fresh out of school and is more interested in very long lunches that involve alcohol rather than actually working on scripts and starting the new show.  Martha takes it upon herself to save the show and starts to write the scripts herself.  Will Martha’s secret remain hidden?

My thoughts on this book:

·       I loved this story.  Martha was a great character.  I loved how she is an independent woman of a certain age who has decided to take her future into her own hands.

·       I also enjoyed the radio show itself.  It was fun reading the different scenes of the show.

·       There are also many Jane Austen references throughout the novel that I enjoyed.  Martha is a fan of Austen and her works and references them often.  She also references other favorite authors such as George Eliot and Charlotte Bronte.

·       I loved how Martha brought daring real life scenarios into the radio screen plays such as menopause and having an Italian immigrant family as one of the main families.

·       The radio broadcast has an archaic rule that if you are married, you can no longer work there.  This had changed in England, but not in 1950s Australia.

·       It was interesting as the book discussed how television was taking over at the time in England and the United States, but it has not yet gotten to Australia.  I had not thought about how this would have changed an entire radio industry and potentially put people out of work.

·       I related so much to Martha.  Early in my career I had my own Quentin Quinn at work.  While he enjoyed pay raises and promotions, I was doing the majority of his work while had long lunches, late starts, and would leave early.  I was told, well he’s a married man.  Then after I was married, well, he has a baby.  It didn’t seem quite right.

·       The ending was great and a real pick me up when all news seems so negative these days.

·       I enjoyed the author’s note about real history in which this fictional story was set.

·       There are a lot of great book club questions.  This would be a great book club read!

·       I loved listening to the audiobook version of this book.  The narrator was wonderful, and she especially did a great job with the voices in the radio broadcasts.

Favorite Quote:

“But Martha was done with being polite.  She was done with being overlooked and underestimated by men like Quentin Quinn, those young enough to be her son yet who acted as if she was the child.”

Overall, The Radio Hour by Victoria Purman is an excellent, inspirational, and intriguing historical fiction novel.  Martha Berry is one of the best new characters in fiction.  This was my first read of author Victoria Purman, but it won’t be my last.  If you enjoyed, Lessons in Chemistry, I think you will enjoy The Radio Hour.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

A charming and funny look at the golden years of radio broadcasting in post-war Australia that celebrates the extraordinary but unseen women who captivated a nation with their authentic stories of ordinary lives.

Martha Berry is fifty years old, a spinster, and one of an army of polite and invisible women in 1956 Sydney who go to work each day and get things done without fuss, fanfare, or reward.

Working at the country's national broadcaster, she's seen highly praised talent come and go over the years. But when she is sent to work as the secretary on a brand-new radio serial, created to follow in the footsteps of Australia's longest running show, Blue Hills, she finds herself at the mercy of an egotistical and erratic young producer without a clue, a conservative broadcaster frightened by the word pregnant, and a motley cast of actors with ideas of their own about their roles in the show.

When Martha is forced to step in to rescue the serial from impending cancellation, she ends up secretly ghost-writing scripts for As the Sun Sets, creating mayhem with management, and coming up with storylines that resonate with the serial's growing and loyal audience of women listeners.

But she can't keep her secret forever and when she's threatened with exposure, Martha has to decide if she wants to remain in the shadows or finally step into the spotlight.

AUTHOR BIO

Victoria Purman is an Australian top ten and USA TODAY bestselling fiction author. Her most recent book, A Woman's Work, was an Australian bestseller, as were her novels The Nurses' War, The Women's Pages, The Land Girls, and The Last of the Bonegilla Girls. Her earlier novel The Three Miss Allens was a USA TODAY bestseller. She is a regular guest at writers festivals, a mentor and workshop presenter, and was a judge in the fiction category for the 2018 Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature and the 2022 ASA/HQ Commercial Fiction Prize for an unpublished manuscript. Connect with her online at victoriapurman.com.