Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Fiction Review: Honey

Back in 2017, I had the pleasure of reading a wonderful novel, Edgar and Lucy (my review at the link), and meeting its author, Victor Lodato, at Booktopia. He and his book were favorites of my mom and me at the event that year, so I was thrilled to hear he has a new novel out this spring, Honey. When he sent me a copy to review, he explained, "This novel is my whole heart," and it shows. I finished this beautiful novel with tears in my eyes and hugged it to my chest. It's that good.

Eighty-something Honey has returned to her hometown in New Jersey. As a young woman, Honey escaped this world--her father's world--first to college, then to New York, and finally to Los Angeles, where she lived a happy life. Her father was a powerful mob boss, strictly ruling both his business and his family, and Honey saw some horrific violence as a teenager. She escaped to the world of art and enjoyed a successful career in auction houses on both coasts. But after her two closest friends in LA both died, Honey decided to finally go back home, to reckon with her violent past and hopefully make peace with it. At first, it seems as though nothing in her family has changed, except the faces. Her parents are gone, but her nephew now heads up the family business. In a short span of time, a quirky, unrefined new neighbor named Jocelyn--wearing overalls, of all things!--drives into her young cherry tree, her grandnephew Michael bursts into her home asking for money and looking like he's on drugs, and her Lexus gets stolen. Old resentments bubble to the surface, and Honey is torn between forgiveness and revenge. As she battles her rage, Honey encounters a young painter who seems quite talented, attends too many funerals of old friends (and enemies), makes a new friend, and falls in love. Through it all, she tries to come to terms with her family and her own assumptions about the world around her.

This beautifully written novel explores the full range of human emotions and love in all its forms. My copy is filled with bookmarked funny or insightful or thoughtful quotes. Honey is a flawed but extraordinary character, who is still capable of change at her advanced age. She doesn't think change is even possible at the beginning of the story, but as she struggles with unexpected situations and previously hidden emotions, she even surprises herself. Honey is at the center of the novel, but the other characters are just as well-drawn and interesting. This isn't just a character-driven novel, though. As with Edgar and Lucy, there are plenty of surprises in store for the reader (and for Honey as well), as well as a wonderful sense of humor. This novel is about love, loss, aging, art, forgiveness, and second chances--it's about life, with all of its complexities, sorrows, and unexpected joys. And the ending is absolutely perfect.

400 pages, Harper

Harper Audio

This book fits in the following 2024 Reading Challenges:

 

Mount TBR Challenge

Diversity Reading Challenge

Literary Escapes Challenge - New Jersey
 

 Visit my YouTube Channel for more bookish fun!

 

Listen to a sample of the audiobook here and/or download it from Audible. Sample from the beginning--I love the narrator!

 

Or get this audiobook from Libro.fm and support local bookstores (a different audio sample here, with a glimpse into Honey's LA life).

 

Print and e-book from Amazon.

 

You can buy the book through Bookshop.org, where your purchase will support the indie bookstore of your choice (or all indie bookstores)--the convenience of shopping online while still buying local!

 

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Monday, May 27, 2024

It's Monday 5/27! What Are You Reading?

Hosted by The Book Date

Life

Whew, last week was just as hectic and crazy as I expected! I had something (sometimes two things) scheduled every single day, which is not usually the way I roll. I took my elderly book buddy out for lunch on Tuesday, then enjoyed a fun game night with my closest friends.

 

Wednesday, my husband and I attended a lovely memorial for a good friend's mom. She (our friend) is one of the original members of the local chronic illness support group I started 14 years ago, and a bunch of other members attended the memorial, too. Since most of us are immune-compromised and avoiding crowds, none of us had seen each other in person since 2019! It was wonderful to see everyone (masked, of course) and reconnect, though some payed dearly for the effort, which is heartbreaking.

Thursday was my neighborhood book group meeting, and we had a fabulous, in-depth conversation on a wide variety of topics inspired by A Woman Is No Man (see below), a very powerful novel. Friday, I had a long overdue massage therapy appointment, and I launched my annual Big Book Summer Challenge (with a few technical glitches, but I eventually got everything running smoothly). 

Saturday, we started shopping for a new washing machine (clothes)--ours is still working but not spinning well and on its last legs! And ... we went to look at a camper that we ended up putting down a deposit on! It's a 2017 but like new, barely used by its owners, and just what we wanted, for easier travel on longer trips (we'll keep our pop-up as well). More on that when we pick it up! Finally, we had good friends over for dinner last night and enjoyed catching up with them. A whirlwind week!

Oh, and we're guinea pig sitting and enjoying little Queso!

Tuckered out after a busy day!

Queso loves to sit outside!

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On the Blog

Movie Monday: The Holdovers - my husband and I enjoyed this warm, funny movie and can see why it won so many Oscars.

Big Book Summer Reading Challenge 2024 - It's here! Now in its 12th year, this is an easy-going challenge to read a book (or more) of 400+ pages between now and September 2. It began on Friday and is already in full swing. Wow, I've been stunned by the response this year! Several bloggers have already linked their Big Book Summer posts on this page (check them out), dozens of Booktubers have created (and plan to create) their Big Book Summer kick-off videos, 54 readers have already joined the Big Book Summer Goodreads group, and my kick-off video already has almost 2700 views (most of my book videos get 50-100 views)!

 Join the fun! Anyone is welcome to participate, and you can find the details at the link.

My Big Book Summer Plans 2024 - My own "pile of possibilities" for the challenge this year, with a colorful stack of books, all 400+ pages, from my TBR shelves - this challenge is great for helping you read from your own shelves!

NEW: I've created a bunch of fun Big Book Summer products to help participants enjoy the season (with lower prices than before). You can see them all at my new Printify shop. Here are a few things I've already ordered:

Women's T-shirt

Aluminum Bookmark

Notebook

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On Video

30 Great Book Recommendations for Spoonie Readathon or Anytime! - These are wonderful books that I enjoyed, in a wide variety of types and genres, that are all either written by a disabled author or feature disabled character(s). Add your own recommendations in the comments!

Big Book Summer Reading Challenge 2024 - my kick-off video for the challenge, with a quick overview of the guidelines, how it started, and my own Big Book pile of possibilities for this summer (recorded on our screened porch with birdsong in the background!).

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 What We're Reading

 

My last shorter book before diving into Big Book Summer is The East Indian by Brinda Charry, a Booktopia book/author from 2023. I chose it because it was the shortest novel on my shelf but also because it was my mom's favorite last year at Booktopia. Historical fiction about the first native of India to come to colonial America in the 1600's, it's based on a real historical figure. Twelve-year-old Tony (obviously not his original name!) sails from his home on the eastern Indian coast to London on a British East India Company ship, after his mother dies and he's left alone. He's settling in at London, with a job and a home with a fellow Indian immigrant when he is kidnapped along with a bunch of other kids and taken across the Atlantic to Virginia. Tony encounters a lot of challenges and sorrow, but eventually, he is on his way to living his dream of becoming a physician. My mom was right--this is a wonderful novel, filled with fascinating historical details about the colony and 1600's medicine, plus a poignant portrait of Tony and his fellow young servants. I should finish it today.

 

On audio, I listened to our book group selection, A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum. It was on every Top Books list of 2019 and a Read with Jenna (Today Show) pick. It's about three generations of Palestinian-American women, beginning with seventeen-year-old Isra in 1990 Palestine, who is married off to Adam, who brings her back to his home in Brooklyn, NY. In 2008 Brooklyn, Isra's eldest daughter, Deya, is also being forced to get married by her very traditional grandmother, though Deya's dream is to go to college. The audio was excellent, with multiple narrators for Isra, Deya, and Isra's mother-in-law. It's a powerful but brutal novel, with stark depictions of domestic abuse, but the author says that it's very autobiographical. There are signs of hope and change at the end. We thought it was especially important for us to understand some of the perspectives of Palestinian-Americans right now, and it was a great discussion, though we agreed that, though it reflected the author's experiences, it should not be taken as a depiction of all Arab-American families. A stunning novel I will not soon forget.


Now, I have started my first book for Big Book Summer, on audio: The Women by Kristin Hannah. I've been saving this one for summer! Twenty-year-old Frankie, recently graduated from nursing school, has taken her family's dedication to service to heart and enlisted in the Army, to join her beloved brother, Finlay, in Vietnam. But her parents are horrified, especially after they are notified that Finlay was killed. After basic training, Frankie is shipped to Vietnam and immediately taken to a remote field hospital. It was all men on her flight, but in the field, she meets her roommates, Barb and Ethel, two other nurses. Her first day there, multiple helicopters carry in soldiers, wounded in horrible ways, and Frankie is immediately out of her depth. Apparently, the novel also deals with the aftermath of the war and what the soldiers experienced upon returning to the U.S. I just started it yesterday, but I am already fully engrossed.

 

My husband's first Big Book for the summer (yes, he joins the challenge, too!) is The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck, one of my favorites from last summer (my review at the link). I hope he enjoys this suspenseful, funny, heartbreaking classic as much as I did.

 

Our son, 29, is still reading book 2 of the Licanius Trilogy by James Islington, An Echo of Things to Come since he was pretty busy this past week driving all over the US! When he was a kid, he'd bring an entire duffle bag stuffed full of books on our 3-week summer road trip, but he's trying to keep his girlfriend company when it's her turn to drive. They've had an amazing road trip so far, with stops in Shenandoah National Park, Nashville, New Orleans (which his girlfriend fell in love with, as we knew she would!), Oklahoma (where my husband grew up), Boulder, Rocky Mountain National Park, and Utah. They're headed to Idaho, where she has family, today. That was all in just over a week!!

Hiking Blackrock Summit at Shenandoah NP

At City Park in New Orleans

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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?


Friday, May 24, 2024

My Big Book Summer Plans 2024

I have just announced the 12th year of my annual reading challenge, Big Book Summer Challenge, so I guess I should be the first to sign up!

I always enjoy tackling some big books in the summer, since I first came up with the idea in 2011, and I'm looking forward to finally reading some of these bricks that have been collecting dust on my shelf (for this challenge, a Big Book is any book with 400 pages or more).

NOTE: Don't let my stack below intimidate you! You only need to read ONE Big Book over the next three months to join in the fun and participate in the challenge. I like to make a "pile of possibilities," but you do you 😀

I definitely won't get through all of these, but I like to have some options to choose from. These are all currently on my shelves, waiting patiently to be read (along with many others!):

 


From the top of the stack:

  •  Cloud Cuckoo Land by Anthony Doerr (574 pages)
  • White Teeth by Zadie Smith (448 pages)
  • Empire Falls by Richard Russo (483 pages)
  • Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry (858 pages)
  • Trust by Hernan Diaz (402 pages)
  • The Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley (488 pages)
  • Drums of Autumn by Diana Gabaldon (880 pages)
  • The Ferryman by Justin Cronin (538 pages)

I know that looks like a huge stack--and it is!--but as you can see, many of my choices are in the 400-500 page range and several are fast-paced reads. 

All of these also qualify for my Mount TBR Reading Challenge 2024. My shelves are overflowing, so this is good!

I also devote my summer to listening to Big Audio Books (audios and e-books count). I will choose those as I go, throughout the summer, though I know one of them already: I've been saving The Women by Kristin Hannah for Big Book Summer!

And here's my husband's stack for Big Book Summer 2024--he began participating several years ago:


Check out my 2024 Big Book Summer Challenge Video for more on what I plan to read this summer, plus some great suggestions that I enjoyed in past summers. You can also find more great Big Book recommendations on my Big Books! list on Bookshop. I have read and enjoyed every single book on that list, and it includes a wide variety of book types and genres--something for everyone! And visit the Big Book Summer Goodreads group to see what everyone else is reading this summer!

 How about you? Are you up for tackling a Big Book (or two or three) this summer? 
Join me and sign up for the 2024 Big Book Summer Challenge! The rules, details, and link-ups are on that page.

NOTE: You don't need a blog or YouTube channel to participate--you can either leave a comment on the Challenge page or sign up in the 2024 Big Book Summer Goodreads group. Either way, first read the details on the Challenge page.


Join me in some bookish summer fun!

Big Book Summer 2024


Welcome to Big Book Summer 2024!

The idea is simple: Use the ease of summer to tackle a Big Book (400+ pages) or two or ... however many you want! You set your own goals. You can hear more about how it started and what I'll be reading in my video, Big Book Summer Challenge 2024.

And if it is the start of winter where you live, then it's your Big Book Winter Challenge! Everyone is welcome to participate.

The Details:
Hey, it's summer, so we'll keep this low-key and easy!

  • Anything 400 pages or more qualifies as a big book.
  • The challenge runs from Memorial Day weekend (starting May 24 this year) through Labor Day (September 2 this year).
  • Choose one or two or however many big books you want as your goal. Wait, did you get that?  You only need to read 1 book with 400+ pages this summer to participate! (though you are welcome to read more, if you want).
  • Sign up on the first links list below if you have a blog or YouTube channel, to leave your link so others can find you. 
  • No blog? No problem! Just sign up in the comments below or in the Goodreads group in the Sign-Up discussion thread if you don't have a blog or YouTube channel.
  • If you have a blog or YouTube channel, write a post or record a video to kick things off: you can list the exact big books you plan to read or just announce your intent to participate, but be sure to include the Big Book Summer Challenge pic above, with a link back to this blog page. It's fine to kick-off your Big Book Summer as part of another post or video.
  • You can write/record progress or wrap-up posts/videos if you want to and/or reviews of the big books you've read ... but you don't have to. There is a separate links list (the second one) below for big book reviews, progress updates, and wrap-up posts/videos.

That's it!  Go check out your shelves and your TBR list for chunksters and sign up below!

What kind of books "count"? All kinds! Middle-grade, YA, graphic novels, classics, all genres, all types--as long as they are at least 400 pages. Yes, e-books and audio books count, too--just check online for the number of pages in the print edition. See my list of Big Books on BookShop for some great ideas from my own past reading.

And if you DO have a blog or YouTube channel, you are still welcome to join the group on Goodreads for the 2024 Big Book Summer Challenge, where we can talk about Big Books and our progress on the challenge. It's a fun book conversation all summer long!

Check out my own list of books to read for the challenge this summer and my Big Book Summer Kick-Off Video for more on what I plan to read this summer. 

And you can pick up some fun Big Book Summer products! Check out my shop on Printify (new this year with better prices) for Big Book Summer mugs, t-shirts, tote bags, notebooks, magnets, stickers, and more!

At the end of the summer, there will be a Big Book Giveaway! After Labor Day, I'll select a name from among the participants--bloggers and booktubers who leave a link below as well as those without a blog/video who sign-up through the Goodreads group or in the Comments below--and will send the winner a BookShop or Amazon gift certificate.

And help spread the word on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and other social media with #BigBookSummer. You can follow me at:

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/suzanljackson/

Twitter: @suebookbybook 

Facebook: the Facebook page for this blog 

YouTube: SueJacksonDE

Challenge updates will be posted in all of those places.

Hope you'll join the Big Book Summer fun!


You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Monday, May 20, 2024

Movie Monday: The Holdovers

There are a few Best Picture Oscar nominees that I've had my eye on, waiting for them to be available on the streaming services we have, and this weekend, I noticed that The Holdovers was available on Amazon Prime. It was just as good as I'd heard, funny and warm.

Paul Hunham, played by Paul Giamatti, is a grumpy, strict ancient civilizations teacher at a private boys' boarding school in 1970 Massachusetts. This Christmas, he's drawn the short straw and is assigned to remain at the school with the "holdovers," those students who must stay on campus for the holiday break. He had no plans to go anywhere anyway; he rarely leaves campus. Initially, five boys are left in his care, three teens and two younger boys, but eventually, there's just one boy left with nowhere to go for the holidays. Angus Tully, played by Dominic Sessa, is an older teen boy who'd been bragging to his classmates that he was traveling to St. Kitt's for the holiday. At the last minute, his mother calls and says it would be best if it were just her and her new husband on this trip, and Angus is left in the empty school with Mr. Hunham. The two actually have some things in common, as Angus is also prickly and unpopular with his peers, though Mr. Hunham thinks Angus is just another spoiled rich kid. Rounding out the sparse holiday crew at school is Mary, played by Da'Vine Joy Randolph, who cooks at the school and is deeply grieving the loss of her son, a past student who died in the Vietnam War. They're a glum, depressing trio, feeding off each other's misery, until they begin to get to know each other better. Secrets are revealed, their broken, frozen hearts begin to thaw, and their holiday turns around. 

We really enjoyed this movie. It's wonderfully written, and the central actors are all outstanding in their roles. It's very funny in spite of some serious topics, like loss and grief, underlying the plot. Surprising twists that we didn't expect keep the narrative moving. And this movie has so much heart! The emotions feel very real and authentic. It's really a beautiful story of people opening up and finding connections they sorely needed. We both enjoyed it very much. 

The Holdovers is currently available on Amazon Prime or for a fee on several other services.


It's Monday 5/20! What Are You Reading?

Hosted by The Book Date

Life

First things first: Big Book Summer 2024 starts on Friday, May 24!

I'm not sure how it's the end of May already or how I will get everything done and set up by Friday, but I'm excited to host the reading challenge again, in its 11th year!  

Here at home, our week was very busy, helping our older son and his girlfriend get ready for their big month-long road trip. They've been planning it for years and left our house early Saturday morning. We're so excited for them!! Their first stop was a (rainy) hike in Shenandoah National Park, which used to be our first stop each summer on our annual road trip. I love seeing my son share his favorite spots with his girlfriend and the two of them exploring and discovering new places together, too. They spent the past two nights in Nashville and are on their way to New Orleans now! We used to live in New Orleans and have taken our sons there several times, so that's another favorite place.

Ready for the big trip!!

Hiking Blackrock Summit at Shenandoah NP

While they're away, we are guinea pig sitting for the next month! Queso is a very sweet little guy who loves to be cuddled. He's an old man (yes, that's a cataract in one eye), so we're taking good care of him and sending plenty of updates.

My husband holding Queso

Queso enjoying his artwork while he munches on a snack

This week is another very busy one. I have stuff scheduled every single day (sometimes twice a day), which is way more than I usually do. And somehow, I need to get Big Book Summer up and running by Friday morning!

__________

On the Blog

Fiction Review: My Beloved Life by Amitava Kumar - this beautiful story of one man's life set against a fascinating historical backdrop begins in 1935 India. This was another Booktopia favorite this year, and as I put my review together, I realized that the author (who has a wonderful voice) narrated the audio himself. Definitely worth checking out (my review & audio samples at the link).

 

Be sure to stop by the blog on Friday to sign up for Big Book Summer! It's a very easy-going reading challenge. A Big Book is any book--any genre, any format--of 400 or more pages (for audios and e-books, check the page count of the print edition online). You only have to read one Big Book to participate (though of course you can read more), and you have all summer, until Monday, September 2! Plus, you get to enjoy chatting books with other readers all summer in the Big Book Summer Goodreads group, and there's a giveaway at the end.

Join the fun!

__________

On Video

Friday Reads 5/17/24 - my brief weekly video update of what we are currently reading, including an outstanding novel I loved and a fabulous middle-grade novel on audio, plus my Mother's Day book haul!

__________

 What We're Reading

I finished Honey by Victor Lodato, with tears in my eyes, and hugged it to my chest. That's all you need to know! I met Victor at Booktopia 2017, and my mom and I both loved his novel Edgar and Lucy (my review at the link). He sent me an advanced reader copy of Honey, which was just released on April 16. It's the story of 80-something Honey Fasinga who escaped from her family and her father, a notorious mobster, as a young adult, and enjoyed a wonderful life in NY and LA. But after her closest friends died, Honey moved back to her hometown in New Jersey, and she's now trying to reckon with the violent past she left behind. I've always loved Victor's writing, and he's created another wonderful character in Honey (with an Easter egg for those who read Edgar and Lucy). It's about life, loss, and love, as well as aging, forgiveness, and second chances. And the ending is perfect.

 

I am now trying to squeeze in one more short novel before Big Book Summer begins this weekend. I'm reading The East Indian by Brinda Charry, coincidentally a Booktopia book/author from 2023! I chose it because it was the shortest novel on my shelf but also because it was my mom's favorite last year at Booktopia. It's historical fiction about the first native of India to come to colonial America, in the 1600's, and it's based on a real historical figure. Twelve-year-old Tony (obviously not his original name!) sails from his home on the eastern Indian coast to London on a British East India Company ship, after his mother dies and he's left alone. He's settling in at London, with a job and a home with a fellow Indian immigrant when he is kidnapped along with a bunch of other kids and taken across the Atlantic to Virginia. His dream is to become a medicine man or physician's assistant. It's excellent so far--he's just been kidnapped and is on his way to the New World.

 

On audio, I finished The Sky at Our Feet by Nadia Hashidi, a middle-grade novel that I chose for the Spoonie Readathon on Booktube (FYI - a spoonie is someone living with chronic illness or disability, so right up my alley!). Twelve-year-old Jason was born in the US, and he's just found out that his mother is in the country illegally. His dad worked as a translator for the US military in Afghanistan and, amid death threats, was promised he and his family could move to the US. Jason's mom got a student visa when she was pregnant with him and moved to the US early to start college. Before he could join them, her husband was killed in the war. When her temporary visa ran out, Jason's mom became illegal, but the US was the only home Jason had ever known, and Afghanistan was still a dangerous war zone. One day, Jason sees his mom picked up by INS while working, and he's left all alone. He gets on a train to NYC to go find his aunt. Still in Penn Station, Jason passes out, hits his head, and wakes up in the hospital. While there, he meets a girl his age named Max, who has electrodes all over her head. Since the police are trying to find out who Jason is, the two kids hatch an escape plan! It was a wonderful story--heartfelt, funny, and full of suspense and adventure.

 

Now, I am trying to cram in another audio by Thursday when my book group meets! Our selection for this month is A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum. It was on every Top Books list of 2019 and a Read with Jenna (Today Show) pick. It's about three generations of Palestinian-American women, beginning with seventeen-year-old Isra in 1990 Palestine, who is married off to Adam, who brings her back to his home in Brooklyn, NY. In 2008 Brooklyn, Isra's eldest daughter, Deya, is also being forced to get married by her very traditional grandmother, though Deya's dream is to go to college. It's wonderful so far, and I'm glad I'm listening to the audio. We thought it was especially important for us to understand some of the perspectives of Palestinian-Americans right now, and it should be a great discussion.

 

My husband, Ken, finished one of his dad's old books he found while we were reorganizing, The Trail to Seven Pines by Louis L'Amour. He says it's about what you'd expect: classic cowboy tale with good guys and bad guys. It's about Hopalong Cassidy, a fictional cowboy created in 1904 by author Clarence E. Mulford, so it's interesting that L'Amour was commissioned by Doubleday in 1950 to write four novels about the character. It was my husband's first Louis L'Amour novel, and he enjoyed it. I'm not sure what he will pick next because, like me, he already has a huge stack of huge books set aside for Big Book Summer!


Our son, 29, is probably still reading book 2 of the Licanius Trilogy by James Islington, An Echo of Things to Come since he was pretty busy this past week! I'm not going to interrupt his vacation for an update, but I'm sure he plans to read during some of those long hours in the car (when he was a kid, he'd bring an entire duffle bag stuffed full of books on our 3-week summer road trip!).

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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?