Two excellent books this month, both recommended by Modern Mrs. Darcy as favorite audiobooks of 2024. I wholeheartedly concur!
The Briar Club by Kate Quinn is girl power at its best. Mix six women living in a Washington, D.C. boardinghouse in the early 1950's with politics (McCarthyism), cultural changes in gender roles, and murder and you get a fascinating story of secrets and loyalty. The house is also an important character. There are at least two chapters per boarder for in-depth character development and intriguing backstories. There are a few twists along the way (no spoilers), but one of my favorites is a recipe, complete with accompanying music and activity, from the group's weekly supper club - sun tea, Swedish meatballs, corned beef hash, Irish colcannon, candle salad (hysterical!), halusiki (cabbage and noodles), gumbo, strawberry fool, fried chicken, Italian ragu, fried bananas in rum, potato pancakes, eight-layer honey cloud cake and rassolnik (pickle soup).June 29, 2025
Monthly Book Review: June 2025
May 31, 2025
Monthly Book Review: May 2025
He became the most trusted confidante of my life. There was a clarity about [sic] .., a deep and unshakable integrity. It was soothing to be with a man who never boasted about himself ... and who did not impose himself on the world in anyway. If he ever had a fault or made a mistake, he would tell you before you could find out for yourself. And there was nothing I could ever tell him about myself that he would judge or criticize... Most of all though, he listened.
May 5, 2025
Monthly Book Review: April 2025
It's hard to summarize Challenger by Adam Higginbotham (Sharon Says So book club). It was intense, informative and thought provoking. Lots of engineering detail and history, but so necessary for context. I didn't find it dry or boring. Excellent narration. I know hindsight is 20/20, but over and over again, NASA had cautionary tales of what not to do, opportunities to maintain fail safes with too many acts of hubris and concern for optics. The only reason we know the full truth is because a couple of engineers at rocket contractor Morton Thiokol admitted that they advised NASA not to launch the fateful morning of January 28, 1986 because of poor performance of the O-ring seals in low temps. The temperature that morning was 36 degrees - 15 degrees cooler than any previous launch - and they told NASA they couldn't advise if below 50-something degrees. But NASA pushed them to prove it wasn't safe to launch for the first time - they had always focused on proving that it was safe to launch. Then the contractors reversed their advice - they caved to pressure and it cost lives. No one was ever the same - certainly not the families of the 7 lost astronauts. Unfortunately, in 2003 there was another disaster, owing much to the same flaws in management and politics. History always has a way of repeating itself.
March 29, 2025
Book Review: Q1 2025
Note post title 🤷♀️ IYKYK
I started the year with a memoir by one of my favorite celebrity chefs, Be Ready When the Luck Happens by Ina Garten. I watched Ina’s show for years and love her recipes for being reliable and delicious. It was interesting to hear how she became The Barefoot Contessa and that she seems to have been in the right place at the right time throughout her adult life. She did have many advantages so not completely rags to riches. I love her authenticity, work ethic (trying recipes over and over to ensure consistency) and general happiness. She doesn’t take herself too seriously and is grounded enough to determine the difference between what is and isn’t important. This was on everyone’s reading list as soon as it came out, but I finally decided to read it as part of Sharon McMahon’s book club (of Sharon Says So IG fame).
Next was Banyan Moon by Thao Thai. This is about three generations of women: Minh, her daughter Huong and her granddaughter Ann Tran. Minh immigrated to the U.S. after the Vietnam War, seeking a better life for her two young children. But she harbors a secret. Huong worked hard to give her daughter a good life, but her mother Minh and daughter Ann have a close relationship that she resents. Ann is at a crossroads in her life. Minh's sudden death brings them all together in a home that has its own secrets.
The Honey-Don't List by Christina Lauren was predictable but cute. What if popular "it" designers (think Chip & Joanna Gaines) were not happily married and one of their assistants was actually doing all the work?
Margo’s Got Money Troubles by Rufus Thorpe is my favorite so far this year. Margo is a very bright young woman with sketchy parents, three roommates and a new baby. She has to find a way to make ends meet since her baby daddy, her English professor, has ghosted her and she’s been fired from her waitress job for lack of childcare. Enter ingenuity, Only Fans, and wrestling. Funny, smart and thought proving, this really challenged me to stretch my ideas of how someone else's unconventional choices aren't bad even if they don't fit with what my idea of good choices looks like.
Here Be Dragons by Melanie Shankle. I read Melanie’s blog back in the day as well as one of her first books on friendship. In Dragons, she shares that her mother was her first bully. Oof. Very insightful regarding generational trauma and the journey to healing through boundaries. Loved all the references to growing up in the 70s and 80s and friends that fill our voids 💗
I just started Challenger by Adam Higginbotham (Sharon Says So book club) about the space shuttle disaster.