Monday, December 31, 2018

Movie Monday: Bohemian Rhapsody

I was finally feeling well enough to go out in the evening this weekend, and we enjoyed a nice dinner with friends Friday. I was lamenting that we missed seeing Bohemian Rhapsody on the big screen (because I was sick all fall) when they told me that it was still playing for two more nights in a small theater that usually only shows independent films. I was so excited! So, the next night, my husband and I went out (second night in a row!), grabbed some dinner, and finally got to see this movie about the band Queen that I have been dying to see for months. It lived up to all the hype and my very high expectations - a moving, powerful, joyful (and sometimes sad) story of the band, its unique songs, and its one-of-a-kind lead singer, Freddie Mercury.

Rami Malek (of Mr. Robot fame) takes on the role of flamboyant and larger-than-life Freddie, beginning with his humble beginnings, living with his parents who were Persian and had migrated from India to Zanzibar, where Freddie was born. Brought up in a very traditional household, Freddie - whose real name was Farrokh - wanted to be a musician, though his father wanted him to take a more traditional job, and his mother wanted him to bring home a "nice girl." Watching a local band perform in a pub one night, Freddie sees Mary (played by Lucy Boynton), who quickly becomes his girlfriend and the love of his life. After the show, he approaches the band members with a song he wrote. They laugh at first, but they've just lost their lead singer, and a short sample of Freddie's amazing singing voice convinces them to bring him in. The band soon reforms as Queen, and Freddie's stage presence, singing, and song-writing genius propel them to bigger and bigger venues and finally, an album. The rest is music history, of course. Meanwhile, in Freddie's private life, he marries Mary, but as most fans already know, he eventually realizes he's gay. They break up, and he begins to explore a very different life, though they remain devoted to each other throughout their lives. Freddie lives a hard partying life, like many a rock star, that eventually implodes. The movie ends with the band doing their part of the Live Aid concert, a stunning performance, especially since Freddie had AIDS by then.

I loved every moment of this movie. For much of it - especially the first half - I sat in the theater with a huge smile on my face, trying hard not to belt out each song and disturb my fellow theater-goers! It is pure, joyful fun watching this team of talented musicians come together and become what they were famous for, as they grow closer and also become a family. Some of my favorite parts were those showing behind-the-scenes how they came up with certain very creative songs, like Bohemian Rhapsody and We Will Rock You. Of course, it wasn't all fun and joy; Freddie went through some rough times, too. During those parts of the movie, I cried - and during some of the good parts, too! Any movie that can make you feel lboth joy and sorrow like that is incredible, in my book. Of course, it helps that I am a huge fan of Queen's music, so I thoroughly enjoyed all the music and concert scenes, too. It was an emotional rollercoaster ride that I never wanted to end.

Although it's the tail-end of its theatrical release, check your local listings to see if you can still catch Bohemian Rhapsody  on the big screen through Fandango:  



           






If you missed it in the theater, never fear! It is coming to both streaming and on DVD in January 2019 and can be pre-ordered now.

Just watching the trailer again sends shivers down my spine - check it out:

It's Monday 12/31! What Are You Reading?





Happy New Year's Eve!


I skipped my Monday post last week because Christmas Eve was super busy here - lots of wrapping, cooking, and other preparation for the big day, plus I wasn't feeling well. Both of our sons had to work Christmas Eve night (busiest we have EVER seen the restaurant), so my husband and I spent a very relaxing evening watching It's a Wonderful Life - and yes, I sobbed my eyes out at the end, even though I can recite every word! I'm happy to report that I felt better on Christmas Day than I had in months and have been doing pretty well since then. I think I finally found the right balance with my Lyme treatment and got my immune disorder back to my normal baseline. I have started walking again and even got my weights back out this morning!

So, we had a lovely holiday. My mom and her husband drove down from CT for Christmas Day, and my father-in-law was here all day, too. And the week between Christmas and New Year's is my favorite time of year - nice and quiet, with time to begin catching up and getting reading for the new year. I also managed two evenings out this weekend - another big milestone for me - so we got to see friends and FINALLY see Bohemian Rhapsody before it left theaters for good (even more amazing than I expected!). All in all, a busy but good couple of weeks.

So, here's what we've all been reading during this hectic time of year:
  • I finished a review book, Here and Now and Then by Mike Chen. When I read the synopsis of this twisty time travel story wrapped up in family drama, I begged my editor to send it to me! It's like this novel was written for me, with all of my favorite fiction elements, about a man in the future who is part of a time-traveling law enforcement team. He is on a mission to 1996 when he gets left behind and stuck there. Eventually, he lets go of his old life in 2142, finds a job in IT, marries a woman, and they have a daughter together. Eighteen years pass, and the retrieval team finally comes back for him. He goes back to his own present (where he's only been gone two weeks), but he barely remembers his fiance and his old life. When he finds out that his daughter is in peril in the past, he has to figure out how to save her. I LOVED this one and can't wait to share my Shelf Awareness review with you - the book is due out in late January.
  • Next, I picked up one of last year's Christmas presents, in my typical end-of-year rush! I read American War by Omar El Akkad, which was on many Best of 2017 lists and nominated for a bunch of awards. All the accolades were right on - this novel about the US's second Civil War, from 2074 to 2095, was moving, powerful, and thought-provoking. The author looks at the effects of war through the eyes of one family and particularly, one girl/woman in that family. It was a bit bleak as a Christmas read, but so, so good that I've already reviewed it because I couldn't wait to tell you about it (review at the link).
  • Now, I am reading a book my husband gave me for my birthday this summer (trying to knock out those TBRs before the end of the year!). Less by Andrew Sean Greer won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2018, which I found surprising because it's humorous, and I typically think of Pulitzer Prize-winning novels as serious tomes. But it's excellent so far, about a middle-aged gay writer who sets off on a round-the world trip to avoid attending the wedding of his ex-lover. It's one of those "everything that could go wrong does" stories, though the things that go wrong are often bizarre, unexpected things. It's a lot of fun so far.
  • I finished listening to Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich on audio. I loved her novel LaRose (which I also listened to on audio), and this one also deals with the Ojibwe tribe, but with a completely different story. It's about a pregnant woman named Cedar who was born Ojibwe but adopted and raised by a kind white couple, but it's all set against an apocalyptic background where time seems to be moving in reverse, causing all kinds of problems in animals, plants, and humans. It is suddenly rare to have a normal pregnancy or birth, so when Cedar's doctor sees that her ultrasound looks normal, he advises her to hide. I was listening to this one at the same time that I was reading American War, so it was a bleak holiday season for me! ha ha It was very good, and I loved the characters - but definitely dark and without much hope at the end (American War ended on a note of hope after the war ended).
  • Now, I am listening to a middle-grade audio book, The Parker Inheritance by Varian Johnson. I was hoping to squeeze in a short audio by the end of the year, but this is actually a fairly long middle-grade novel...so it will be my first audio of 2019! It's the story of a young girl named Candice in South Carolina whose recently deceased Grandma left behind a puzzle for her to solve that could lead to a fortune. Candice befriends the boy across the street who loves to read as much as she does, and the two of them learn abut the town's history while following the clues. It's very good so far, and I'm enjoying it.
  • My husband, Ken, finished Dead Wake by Erik Larson, the king of entertaining narrative nonfiction. He says this story of the sinking of the Lusitania was interesting, and he enjoyed the book.
  • Now, Ken is read Here and Now and Then by Mike Chen, since I had just finished it. He is enjoying it but not loving it as much as I did (as I said, it is pretty much my ideal novel, and I love time travel plots, so that makes sense).
  • Our son, Jamie, 24, is reading Age of Myth, book one of The Legends of the First Empire by Michael J. Sullivan, the start of a new series, after enjoying Sullivan's first Riyria Chronicles book, The Crown Tower (we got him book 2 for Christmas!). He is almost finished now and loving it.
  • Next, Jamie plans to read the FINAL book 14 of The Wheel of Time series, A Memory of Light by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson. I was wrong when I said he finished the series with book 13 - there is one more, weighing in at a hefty 1168 pages! He loves this series and is looking forward to the conclusion.
Blog posts - two weeks' worth:
Teen/YA Review: How to Hang a Witch by Adriana Mather - witches and a ghost in Salem with modern teens

Nonfiction Review: The Lyme Solution by Darin Ingels, ND - good overview on how to treat Lyme and other tick infections - helpful for us

Summary of Books Read in November - my biggest reading month ever!

Books for Christmas! - photos and lists of the books we gave and received this Christmas

Memoir Review: The Lost Girls: Three Friends. Four Continents. One Unconventional Detour Around the World by Jennifer Baggett, Holly C. Corbett, and Amanda Pressner - around-the-world travel memoir

Fiction Review: American War by Omar El Akkad - post-apocalyptic/dystopian look at US 2nd Civil War through the eyes of one girl

What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on Twitter at @SueBookByBook or on Facebook on my blog's page.   

What are you and your family reading this week? 
 
Happy New Year! (with my sons in 2005)

 

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Fiction Review: American War

I tend to save December reading for some of the books on my shelf that garnered the most praise and accolades, as well as gifts from last Christmas that I haven't gotten to yet! With a half dozen award nominations and on many Best of 2017 lists, American War by Omar El Akkad fit both criteria. I just finished this stunning fictional debut last night and couldn't wait to write about it.

American War is a historical account of the fictional (I hope) second American Civil War, fought from 2074 through 2095 over the issue of using fossil fuels. The U.S. federal government outlawed their use, while a group of southeastern states decided they'd rather secede than comply - but the U.S. government wouldn't let them. What followed was a war like no other, fought with both official military and a wide assortment of revolutionaries (aka terrorists), plus the use of biological weapons. Everything else about the U.S. changed dramatically as well. Both coasts are underwater (causing a massive inland influx of the population), Florida is now a sea, and a large portion of the Southwest is under Mexico's rule. All of these things are massive changes and events, affecting the whole world, but this novel focuses in on one family in particular, the Chestnuts. Sara T., known since childhood as Sarat, remembers when her family was whole and happy, living in a shipping container home next to the Mississippi Sea, not too far from where New Orleans used to be. She played with her twin sister, Dana, and her older brother, Simon, on the banks of the Mississippi. Then her father was killed in the beginning of the war (through no fault of his own), and as the war on the Texas front crept closer to their home, her mother was forced to leave their home with the children for a refugee camp in Mississippi called Camp Patience. Just six years old when they moved there, Sarat and her siblings grew up under terrible conditions in the camp, living in tents in the mud. As adolescence neared, a mysterious man took Sarat under his wing, and she soaked up the attention and education he provided. Eventually, though, Sarat became an instrument of the war and played a surprisingly large role in it.

This book is powerful and moving and thought-provoking on so many levels. I loved the way the author took a huge national event with international repercussions (one character says, "Everyone fights an American war") and narrowed it down to the perspective of a single family - and often a single girl/woman - to see its effects close up in a very personal way. The details of the war and the state of the United States are eerily reminiscent of issues that we already see on the news every day in the present, so it is a chilling tale that feels like it could really happen. On a personal level, although Sarat grows up to do some horrible things, it's impossible not to like her and feel empathy for her and all that she and her family have gone through. American War explores the effects of war on both individuals and communities in a way that is completely immersive and engrossing. Although this was a bleak read for the holiday season, it does end on a note of hope for the next generation, though it is still clear that the xenophobia that led to the war and all that followed it are still alive and well. This was a powerful, imaginative (yet all too realistic), and compelling debut novel, and I can't wait to see what Omar El Akkad comes up with next.

333 pages, Alfred A. Knopf


Note: This post contains affiliate links. Purchases from these links provide a small commission to me (pennies per purchase), to help offset the time I spend writing for this blog, at no extra cost to you.

Listen to a sample of the book on audio. I read this one in print, but from the sample, it sounds like it is also excellent on audio.


You can purchase American War from an independent bookstore, either locally or online, here:
 Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org

Or you can order American War from Book Depository, with free shipping worldwide.

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Memoir Review: The Lost Girls

The last book I read for Nonfiction November (though I finished it in December) was another one that had been on my bookcase for a very long time. It was published in 2010, so I figured it had "aged" enough to finally tackle it! As always, I don't know why I waited so long - I thoroughly enjoyed reading all 500+ pages of The Lost Girls: Three Friends. Four Continents. One Unconventional Detour Around the World, a three-way memoir by Jennifer Baggett, Holly C. Corbett, and Amanda Pressner. The three women in their late twenties chronicle the almost-year they spent traveling around the world together.

Chapters alternate between the perspectives of the three authors, and Chapter One actually begins about two years before the actual round-the-world trip when the three of them were on vacation in South America together and made the decision to take the "big trip." At the time, two of them worked for the same women's magazine as writers/editors, and the other worked in television. They had a hard enough time just taking a short vacation (many co-workers told them it wasn't worth the backlog of work they'd return to); taking a full-year sabbatical from their careers seemed crazy. But they dove in and committed to the concept, and found themselves, two years later, heading back to South America to begin a trip around the world, giant backpacks slung on their backs. Yes, as young women early in their careers, this was not to be a luxury tour, but a bare bones classic global backpacking experience, staying mostly in hostels and sticking to a budget. Each chapter of the book explores in detail the place they were visiting, from Peru to Kenya to Laos to Australia, with many other stops along the way, but this isn't just a travelogue. Each woman's chapter, both at home and later, on the road, gives some insight into her own personality, relationships, goals, and life. In this way, they highlight not only what they saw and did but also how the trip changed them, and the impact it had on each of them and their relationships with each other, too (spoiler: the trip made them dedicated lifelong friends).

I really loved this book, both for its armchair-traveler appeal and for the same reason I like all memoirs: the personal made universal. It was of particular interest to me since I am also a freelance writer, working with magazines some of the time and doing some travel writing (one of the women was a freelancer by the time they took the trip), so the inside view of the publishing world was fascinating to me. When it comes to travel, each of them really digs into the details of the trip - what they did, who they met, what they ate (an essential aspect of travel for me!), and wonderful descriptions of the exotic locales. They include everything - the good, the bad, and the ugly - and are honest about each of their low moments, as well as the life-altering highlights. I love to travel but rarely have a chance to leave the U.S., so I loved reading about their adventures. My favorite part of the trip was the month that they volunteered at a girls' school in Kenya, with the relationships they made there, and the impact they had on the young girls they interacted with. All three of them are excellent writers, with engaging narratives in a personal essay-type style. Although the book is fairly long at more than 500 pages, it easily kept my attention, and I got to know each of the women and appreciate the way the three different perspectives were woven together. I know I couldn't even begin to handle a trip like they took with my health problems, but they certainly gave me the travel bug, and I am ready to explore!

525 pages, Harper


Note: This post contains affiliate links. Purchases from these links provide a small commission to me (pennies per purchase), to help offset the time I spend writing for this blog, at no extra cost to you.

You can purchase The Lost Girls through an independent bookstore, either locally or online, here:
Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org

Or you can order The Lost Girls from Book Depository, with free shipping worldwide.

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Books for Christmas!

I hope everyone has been enjoying the holiday season and that those who celebrate it enjoyed a Merry Christmas! Here is my annual round-up of the books that my book-loving family exchanged for Christmas yesterday - quite a haul!

First, I received, from my son, my mom, and my husband:

  • Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf (a classic I've been meaning to read for years)
  • Not the End of the World by Kate Atkinson (a favorite author)
  • Unsheltered by Barbara Kingsolver (another favorite!)
  • The Official Scrabble Dictionary (my mom and I love to play Scrabble together)
  • And, not a book, but a set of classic Hitchcock movies from my husband because I just watched my first Hitchcock (Rear Window) last year!
We gave our son:
  • The Rose and the Thorn by Michael Sullivan (book 2 in The Riyria Chronicles - he just finished book 1 and loved it...almost bought book 2 three days ago for himself!)
  • Defender by Robert J. Crane (book 1 of The Sanctuary series)
  • Pithy Seedy Pulpy Juicy by Hilary B. Price (a book of cartoons - she draws Rhymes with Orange in the newspaper, with is very Far Side-like)
And, from my son and I, my husband got a big stack of his favorite thrillers:
  • Edge by Jeffrey Deaver, a stand-alone novel (not part of the Lincoln Rhyme series)
  • Live to Air by Jeffrey L. Diamond
  • The Child Finder by Rene Denfeld
  • Past Tense by Lee Child
  • Dark Sacred Night by Michael Connelly
That should keep him busy for awhile!!

And I gave my mom two of my all-time favorite novels ever: Bean Trees and Pigs in Heaven by Barbara Kingsolver.

So, it was a happy and bookish Christmas here! Hope it was for your family, too!









Friday, December 21, 2018

Books Read in November

Last of fall color & crisp blue sky in November
Whew, it's taken me awhile to catch up reviews from November because of the holiday season, my illness flaring up, and especially...because I read so many books last month! Here's what I finished in November (links are to my reviews, where available):
  • How To Hang a Witch by Adriana Mather (MA) - teen/YA novel on audio
  • Flawed by Andrea Dorfman (Canada) - graphic memoir
  • Escaping Wars and Waves: Encounters with Syrian Refugees by Olivier Kugler (Iraq, Greece, France, UK, Germany) - graphic nonfiction - reviewed for Shelf Awareness







  
Yes, that's right - I read 12 books in November! That is an all-time record for me. Now, granted, three were graphic novels and very quick reads, and I crammed in four audio books, but that is still a big accomplishment for me. Not only that but I crushed Nonfiction November, with 11 of those 12 books nonfiction (the novel was a leftover from October that I finished in early November). I read almost all fiction normally, so this was a nice change for me. I enjoyed every one of them. The four audio books were especially good and have all stayed with me, long after I finished them. Both Hey, Kiddo and Escaping Wars and Waves were very powerful and unique graphic-novel style books. I guess Born a Crime would be my top book of November, but it's a close race!

Progress in 2018 Reading Challenges:
This is my favorite part of my monthly summary - updating my Reading Challenges:

Mount TBR Reading Challenge - I added 5, bringing my total-to-date to 31 (and I think I should get extra credit for finally reading Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil after 20+ years on my shelf!). 

Monthly Motif Reading Challenge - November was Family month, and Seven: In the Lane of Hope was a family memoir.  

Back to the Classics Challenge - Gift From the Sea counted as a 20th century classic, published in 1955.

2018 Badass Books Challenge - nothing new added
  
Travel the World in Books Reading Challenge - I added Iraq, Greece, France, UK, Germany (all in one book!), plus South Africa and Turkey.

2018 Literary Escapes Challenge, I added Georgia and Delaware (it's rare to find books set in our tiny state)
Finally, Bookish Bingo hosted by Chapter Break - not really a challenge per se, but a fun game that I play each month. I filled in 22 squares in November - an excellent Bingo month for me (though impossible to get "set in the future" or "magical abilities" when you are reading all nonfiction!)




Spaces filled in:
How to Hang a Witch - in a series, baking/cooking, mysterious character, bad boy actually good
Flawed - free book, graphic novel
Escaping Wars and Waves - read a physical book, travel/distance, start over/new beginning
Seven - family gathering, feast, sports
Hey, Kiddo - not in a series, married couple, sassy/sarcastic character
Born a Crime - library book, pet, brown on the cover
Midnight in the Garden of Good & Evil - shelf love, made into a TV show or movie
What was your favorite book read in November?   

Nonfiction Review: The Lyme Solution

If you are a regular reader of my blog, you know that Lyme disease is an important subject for my family and that I've had a rough few months lately, with my own Lyme recurring and triggering my immune disorder to go crazy. My oldest son has the same immune disorder, plus Lyme disease and two other common tick infections as well. So, I took advantage of my recent infirmity to read a book I bought back in September: The Lyme Solution: A 5-Part Plan to Fight the Inflammatory Auto-Immune Response and Beat Lyme Disease by Darin Ingels, ND, FAAEM. Although I thought I knew a lot about treating tick infections, after 10 years of battling them in our family, I learned even more reading this book, and it led us to try a new treatment approach.

While Lyme disease itself is a bacterial infection (not all tick infections are bacterial) that is often treated solely with antibiotics, the situation is far more complex than that. If you only have Lyme and no other tick infections (there are at least a dozen common ones, some more common than Lyme in certain regions) and you were lucky enough to catch it and get diagnosed very early, then a month or two of antibiotics might be enough to eradicate the infection. However, that is rarely the case. So-called co-infections are often present, and many people have difficulty getting an accurate diagnosis. Cases like ours are not uncommon, where people battle tick infections for years, decades, or even a lifetime, and these infections can be devastating and very debilitating, even leading to permanent neurological damage if left untreated. Ingels explains all of this in his introductory chapters, including the challenges of diagnosis, the limits of antibiotic therapy, and the complex effects that these infections have on our bodies, including our immune systems.

The bulk of the book details Ingel's 5-part plan:
  1. The Gut Protocol That Restores Your Immune System
  2. The Lyme Solution Immune-Boosting Diet
  3. Prevent and Target Active Infection
  4. Hidden Toxins in Your Surroundings
  5. More Sleep, More Exercise, Less Stress
 As you can see, much of it deals with supportive therapies that help to improve the immune system and reduce inflammation, so your own body can better fight off these complicated infections. In the treatment chapter, Ingels recommends various herbal protocols (which is what we now use after too many years on antibiotics). Finally, he addresses chronic Lyme (a category we certainly fit into!) and advanced protocols and also includes plenty of recipes and other guidance for his immune-boosting diet.

I was impressed that Ingels' introductory information on tick infections was mostly accurate; believe it or not, this is a rarity with these complex diseases. He does a good job of explaining why Lyme disease is so hard to get rid of, the ways that it affects all parts of the body, the role of both antibiotic and herbal remedies, and why it is so difficult to get an accurate diagnosis. I would have liked more attention paid to co-infections since these are almost always a factor and quite often the reason why someone being treated just for Lyme disease isn't getting well. He does mention the other common tick infections briefly in a few sections but does not address their specific symptoms and treatments in detail.

We were already addressing gastrointestinal issues, diet, and inflammation, though his information added to my body of knowledge. What was most valuable to me in this book, though, was his review of various herbal protocols. I learned that the one my son has been on for almost five years is considered too potent for many people and often causes a severe negative reaction (known as a Herx reaction) - this was a lightbulb moment for me since that has been exactly my son's experience! In addition, my own treatment with this same protocol has clearly not been 100% effective, since my Lyme goes into remission but then keeps recurring every few years, as it did this fall. So, based on what I read in this book, we checked with our Lyme specialist (LLMD) and then switched both of us to a different protocol that is supposed to be gentler and cause less of a reaction. After 3-4 weeks, we are both still reacting moderately to it and so are taking it much, much slower than what Ingels recommends in this book, but I am hopeful that this new approach will help my son to improve further to a new level of functioning and help me to finally get rid of my own Lyme for good. My copy of the book is filled with Post-It notes and tabs, and I learned a lot from it. The Lyme Solution is an excellent starting point if you or someone you love has tick infections (or if there is an undiagnosed condition that might possibly be related to tick infections, as so many are misdiagnosed at first), whether you are new to this topic or, like us, have plenty of hard-won experience.

359 pages, Avery (an imprint of Penguin Random House)


Note: This post contains affiliate links. Purchases from these links provide a small commission to me (pennies per purchase), to help offset the time I spend writing for this blog, at no extra cost to you.

Listen to a sample of the audio book.

Purchase in print, e-book, or audio from Amazon:


Or you can order The Lyme Solution from Book Depository, with free shipping worldwide.

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Teen/YA Review: How To Hang a Witch

I think the title of today's review book makes it clear just how far behind I am in writing reviews! I began listening to How to Hang a Witch by Adriana Mather back in October, as the perfect end to my two months of spooky reading for the RIP Challenge this fall. I finished this intriguing teen/YA novel that mixes history and fantasy in early November. I'm glad I finally found time to review it because I really enjoyed it.

When Samantha's father is moved to a special hospital near Boston because of his lengthy coma, Samantha and her stepmother move into an old family house in Salem, to be closer to her dad. Their last name is Mather (yes, descended from the infamous Mathers who were involved in the Salem Witch Trials), and her father grew up in this house but hadn't been back there in decades, so Samantha has never seen it. When Samantha starts going to her new high school in Salem, she runs into trouble right away. There is a group of teens at school who call themselves the Descendants because their ancestors were among the women who were victims of the witch trials. They dress all in black and are immediately hostile to Samantha whose ancestors were on the wrong side of history. Things aren't much better back at home in her father's childhood house, where a handsome but angry ghost is not happy that Samantha has moved into his sister's old room and is touching her things. Before long, what starts as minor pranks and meanness aimed at Samantha and the Descendants turns deadly, and the enemies must band together before their town succumbs to another period of trauma and death. Samantha begins to figure things out with the help of her ghost friend, some historical research, and old diaries she finds in a hidden room of the house, as well as the kindness and help of the next-door neighbors, a cute guy who goes to her school, and his mom, who was her dad's childhood friend.

Notice that the author of this novel is also a Mather, and yes, descended from those same Mathers. Her own family history led her to research details of the Salem Witch Trials and incorporate them into her modern YA novel. She is also an actress, and that shows in her story, filled with dramatic twists and turns. This book was perfect for October, with witches and a ghost, too, and I thoroughly enjoyed listening to it on audio. The tension builds as the mysteries surrounding Salem and its famous history grow. It's a complex, suspenseful, dark mystery steeped in real-life history that is packed with surprises.

368 pages, Ember
Listening Library


Note: This post contains affiliate links. Purchases from these links provide a small commission to me (pennies per purchase), to help offset the time I spend writing for this blog, at no extra cost to you.

Listen to a sample of the audiobook.

You can purchase How to Hang a Witch from an indie bookstore, either online or locally, here:
Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org

Or order How to Hang a Witch from Book Depository, with free shipping worldwide.

Monday, December 17, 2018

It's Monday 12/17! What Are You Reading?

Whoa, December 17 already, and Christmas is just over a week away! How did that happen? My past week was mostly filled with holiday prep. I set aside my writing work almost entirely last week to finished ordering gifts, and I spent most of my time putting together my annual year-end DVD of photos and music for my family. It's a lot of work, but it means a lot to me to have that keepsake of the year and to DO something with all my photos! I am almost finished now - just previewing it and then hopefully tonight I can burn the DVDs. My goal is to get all of them (plus photo calendars) in the mail to far-flung family members by Wednesday. Then, I just need to wrap gifts, send cards, finish a few last end-of-year writing tasks...whew! Busy, busy!

I also hit some milestones last week health-wise, with my first time in the grocery store and my first walk around the block in more than two months...though I overdid a bit and had a couple of down days, too - baby steps! I'm not quite back to my normal baseline after that big flare-up of my chronic illness, but I am getting there, bit by bit. I even made it to my husband's office holiday party on Saturday evening for a couple of hours.

We always have time for books, even when we're busy! Here's what we've all been reading this past week:
  • I finished reading The Light Years, a memoir by Chris Rush that is due out in April. It's a moving, powerful, funny story of a seriously warped childhood among the drug culture of the 1960's and early 1970's. I am hoping to review it and interview the author.
  • Now, I have turned my attention back to fiction, with another review book, Here and Now and Then by Mike Chen. When I read the synopsis of this twisty time travel story wrapped up in family drama, I begged my editor to send it to me! It's like this novel was written for me, with all of my favorite fiction elements, about a man in the future who is part of a time-traveling law enforcement team. He is on a mission to 1996 when he gets left behind and stuck there. Eventually, he lets go of his old life in 2142, finds a job in IT, marries a woman, and they have a daughter together. Eighteen years pass, and the Retrieval team finally comes back for him. He goes back to his own present (where he's only been gone two weeks), but he barely remembers his fiance and his old life. When he finds out that his daughter is in peril in the past, he has to figure out how to save her. IT'S SO GOOD!!!
  • I finished listening to Release by Patrick Ness, a teen/YA novel narrated by a gay teen whose father is a hardcore evangelical pastor. The novel all takes place in a single day - possibly the worst day of Adam's life, when everything that could go wrong does. It's completely engrossing, and I enjoyed it very much, though I'm not sure I totally "got" the parallel fantasy/afterlife story woven into it.
  • Now, I am listening to Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich. I loved her novel LaRose (which I also listened to on audio), and this one also deals with the Ojibwe tribe, but with a completely different story. It's about a pregnant woman named Cedar who was born Ojibwe but adopted and raised by a kind white couple, but it's all set against an apocalyptic background where time seems to be moving in reverse, causing all kinds of problems in animals, plants, and humans. It is suddenly rare to have a normal pregnancy or birth, so when Cedar's doctor sees that her ultrasound looks normal, he advises her to hide. It's a strange story but very compelling, and I love listening to Erdrich read her own novels on audio. 
  • My husband, Ken, is still reading Dead Wake by Erik Larson, the king of entertaining narrative nonfiction. He says this story of the sinking of the Lusitania is interesting, and the torpedo was just launched (no worries about spoilers in historical nonfiction)!
  • Jamie, our 24-year old son, finished his favorite Wheel of Time series, with the final book #13, Towers of Midnight by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson.
  • He is now reading a book I gave him for Easter that sounded right up his alley: The Crown Tower by Michael J. Sullivan, book 1 in The Riyria Chronicles. He says it's great so far. Thanks for the recommendation, Beth Fish Reads!
Blog posts from last week:
Movie Monday: Trainwreck - light, funny, raunchy romcom starring Amy Schumer

TV Tuesday: Killing Eve - compelling & completely unique thriller that we loved!

Nonfiction Review: Look Alive Out There: Essays by Sloane Crosley - warm, witty, relatable essays about life

Nonfiction review: Gift from the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh - a modern classic that is lyrical, insightful, and still relevant - my 3rd time reading it!

What Are You Reading Monday is hosted by Kathryn at Book Date, so head over and check out her blog and join the Monday fun! You can also participate in a kid/teen/YA version hosted by Unleashing Readers.

You can follow me on Twitter at @SueBookByBook or on Facebook on my blog's page.   

What are you and your family reading this week? 
So excited this weekend to get dressed like a grown-up & go out in the evening!