Modern Girls by Jennifer S. Brown is about some Jewish immigrant families in New York during the great depression. The story is told from alternating views of Rosa, the mother, Dottie, her daughter who finds herself in a predicament. Both mother and daughter get pregnant. Rosa is 42 years old and Dottie isn't married, but has been seeing Abe for three years, waiting for him to save up enough money to rent their own place when they get married. Abe is a virtuous Jew and Dottie knows the baby is not his, but a handsome, wealthy, playboy journalist named Willie Klein is the father. Gossip is spreading throughout her neighborhood, her mother had saved up money for her to go to college, and Dottie is desperate to get Abe to think the baby is his. She really wants to keep the baby, but her mother has made an appointment to have it "taken care of." Will she be able to have her happily ever after ending with Abe? Will she get the abortion? Will she end up marrying Willie? How will Rosa be able to help her daughter?
This book kept my interest, and I did like Dottie in spite of her big mistake. I also liked her mother although she had some secrets of her own! I also enjoyed Dottie's brothers and thought Willie and Abe were interesting characters. I liked how they were pretty much opposites and yet Dottie liked them both. I would have liked more of the story as it has an open-ended ending. I think this would make a good book club read since there's much that could be discussed.
(Karen's review, 4 stars)
Teaser from page 21: Abe would work at the store during the day. Ma would watch the kids for a few hours, and I'd continue at the insurance company. The picture was dreamy and I smiled before remembering I had botched it all up.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
"Modern Girls" by Jennifer S. Brown (Mother/Daughter Book)
Labels:
abortion,
book club,
depression,
family secrets,
historical fiction,
Jewish,
mothers and daughters,
New York,
pregnancy,
relationships
Tuesday, May 7, 2019
"The Wonder of Lost Causes" by Nick Trout
In The Wonder of Lost Causes by Nick Trout, Kate is the mom of Jasper who has Cystic Fibrosis. Kate will do whatever needs to be done for her son. Jasper really wants a dog; however, Kate is not sure that is a good idea for a number of reasons. When a beaten dog comes around, Jasper claims the dog and he have a connection and are meant to be together.
I thought this book was pretty good. Jasper and the dog, Whistler, were both great characters. If you are looking for a heartwarming story, this is it!
(Gerard's review, 4 stars)
Teaser from page 22: Over my shoulder, I check in, and I'm still in the crosshairs of his focus. Is it possible that, even without a blink or a bark, the dog is making me choose for him?
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
I thought this book was pretty good. Jasper and the dog, Whistler, were both great characters. If you are looking for a heartwarming story, this is it!
(Gerard's review, 4 stars)
Teaser from page 22: Over my shoulder, I check in, and I'm still in the crosshairs of his focus. Is it possible that, even without a blink or a bark, the dog is making me choose for him?
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
Labels:
dog,
heartwarming,
illness,
mothers and sons
Friday, May 3, 2019
"Heroine" by Mindy McGinnis
In Heroine by Mindy McGinnis, Mickey is a young teen girl. She has had a rough life to this point in her young life. She is a bit of a loner. There is one place where she feels good: being the catcher on her high school girls' softball team. Her best friend is the pitcher. But when they both get into a car accident, all of a sudden Mickey's spot on the team is in danger. To make matters worse, it is her senior season! She will do and take anything to make sure she is ready to play!
This book is fiction but it rings true to life for me. It goes fast and the story moves along at a good pace. Give it a try, you will be glad you did!
(Gerard's review, 5 stars)
Teaser from page 9: Carolina wipes a tear from her face as she looks down at me. She takes a deep breath and it hitches, stuck in her lungs, refusing to release.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
This book is fiction but it rings true to life for me. It goes fast and the story moves along at a good pace. Give it a try, you will be glad you did!
(Gerard's review, 5 stars)
Teaser from page 9: Carolina wipes a tear from her face as she looks down at me. She takes a deep breath and it hitches, stuck in her lungs, refusing to release.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
Labels:
addiction,
contemporary fiction,
drugs,
family,
friends,
high school,
hope,
softball
Thursday, May 2, 2019
"Beautiful Bad" by Annie Ward
Beautiful Bad by Annie Ward is a slow developing dark, twisted thriller about Maddie, mother of a little boy named Charlie and wife of Ian, a military guy who has PTSD. Maddie met Ian at a fund-raiser for the Red Cross that her friend, Joanna invited her to. Joanna worked with women and children in refugee camps around Macedonia. The book begins 12 weeks before the day of the killing and goes back and forth between the present and the past to give the reader background information. Also, when Maddie sees psychologist who uses writing therapy, Maddie’s past events are also revealed.
This is a book of lies, deception and manipulation! Charlie is a sweet little boy and the only reason I kept reading this book. The flashbacks to the past I found very boring. So boring, in fact, that halfway through the book I skipped over them and just focused on the present chapters! I would get into a present chapters and then find myself being disappointed when the next chapter jumped back to the past. I found it very annoying. Of Maddie, Joanna and Ian, I disliked Ian the least from the start. The only characters I really liked were Charlie and a cop named Diane. I did not care for this one at all, but at least did not give up on it; although, I did put it aside three times to read something better. To be fair; however, this one has been compared to Girl on the Train and Woman in the Window, neither of which read because they didn’t appeal to me. (Karen’s review, 2 stars)
Teaser from page 17: It was messy, almost as if mopped, and Diane imagined someone crawling on hands and knees before managing to haul up on his or her feet for one more staggering go at life. She had an irrational urge to start running through the house calling out for the child, but she’d already broken one rule just be entering.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
This is a book of lies, deception and manipulation! Charlie is a sweet little boy and the only reason I kept reading this book. The flashbacks to the past I found very boring. So boring, in fact, that halfway through the book I skipped over them and just focused on the present chapters! I would get into a present chapters and then find myself being disappointed when the next chapter jumped back to the past. I found it very annoying. Of Maddie, Joanna and Ian, I disliked Ian the least from the start. The only characters I really liked were Charlie and a cop named Diane. I did not care for this one at all, but at least did not give up on it; although, I did put it aside three times to read something better. To be fair; however, this one has been compared to Girl on the Train and Woman in the Window, neither of which read because they didn’t appeal to me. (Karen’s review, 2 stars)
Teaser from page 17: It was messy, almost as if mopped, and Diane imagined someone crawling on hands and knees before managing to haul up on his or her feet for one more staggering go at life. She had an irrational urge to start running through the house calling out for the child, but she’d already broken one rule just be entering.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
Labels:
deceit,
deception,
journaling,
mothers and sons,
murder mystery,
PTSD
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
"Wunderland" by Jennifer Cody Epstein
WOW! What a fantastic book Wunderland by Jennifer Cody Epstein is to finish the month of April! There are two main stories in this book: (1) Ilse and Renate are the two young girls and best of friends! However, the infiltration with the Hitler youth movement will put that friendship to the test like nothing else would! (2) Things have never been easy between Ava and her estranged mother Ilse. Ava has so many questions; however, when her mom's ashes arrive in a box from Germany and a bunch of letters addressed to Renate, Ava will learn the shocking story of her mom she never knew!
This is very good! Ilse and Renate were both great characters! I thought both of the stories were really well written and enjoyed this book a lot! Believe the hype! (Gerard's review, 5++ stars)
Teaser from page 39: But Ava could only shake her head, overwhelmed not just by the gift but by the stark realization that for all her self-declared independence and self-sufficiency, for all her written protestations to her friends that she'd been "managing just fine" alone, she hadn't been. Not at all.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
This is very good! Ilse and Renate were both great characters! I thought both of the stories were really well written and enjoyed this book a lot! Believe the hype! (Gerard's review, 5++ stars)
Teaser from page 39: But Ava could only shake her head, overwhelmed not just by the gift but by the stark realization that for all her self-declared independence and self-sufficiency, for all her written protestations to her friends that she'd been "managing just fine" alone, she hadn't been. Not at all.
Have you read this one? What did you think of it? If you reviewed this too, feel free to share your link to your review in the comments. To find books on a specific topic, scroll to the bottom and click on the topic you want. Happy Reading!
Labels:
betrayal,
family secrets,
friendship,
Germany,
historical fiction,
Nazis,
women
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)