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Showing posts from October, 2022

Mad Honey by Jodi Picoult and Jennifer Finney Boylan

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This isn't my typical type of read but I just can't seem to pass up books that revolve around bees and honey.  It is so well written that I finished reading it in one day.  I was surprised that this was written by two authors as it has such a smooth flow and consistent voice.  Each of the characters was well-developed, and the story drew you in.  I had to keep reading to figure out what happened to Olivia, Asher and Lily.  I loved how the apiculture scenes were woven throughout the book and I admit to having a few sniffles about the tradition to inform the bees about a death in the family. I thought I had guessed what was going to happen and I was completely wrong!  Definitely recommended. Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC and to the authors -- well done! 

Welcome to Feral. A Graphic Novel

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Welcome to Feral.  Little Town.  Big Scares!  I absolutely loved the drawings and each of the mini-stories in this book.  Reminded me a lot of watching shows like Tales from the Darkside, Unexplained Mysteries, and the Twilight Zone.  Each of these stories, all set in the fictional town of Feral, has strange twists. From spooky midnight playgrounds, eerie forests where kids disappear on their way to the local swimming hole, and scout leaders who aren't really what they are supposed to be.   It is the perfect graphic novel to kick off Hallowe'en!  Definitely recommended.  Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC of this graphic novel.

The Swift and the Harrier by Minette Walters

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The Swift and the Harrier by Minette Walters Jayne Swift has focused her life on being a physician, so she avoids offers of marriage.  The Swift and the Harrier by Minette Walters starts out with Jayne trying to get through a rough crowd of execution gawkers so that she can get to her cousin's house to treat her sick nephew.  She gets pushed into a doorway and ends up taking refuge there so that she doesn't get crushed by the crowd.  This event brings her together with William Harrier, who appears to be a footman at the residence, although mysteriously may not be. Unfortunately, I had difficulty with the PDF that I received through NetGalley so this slowed my reading progress of this novel.  Overall, it is a really good story centred around the English civil war, the black death and the treatment of the ill at Lyme Regis.  That said, I did find that it was overly descriptive in places which did impact my attention span (I admit to flipping pages to speed the sto...