Showing posts with label cold climates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cold climates. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Meg's Picks: August 2016, part 2

Sometimes the best way to survive these scorching summer days is to completely lose yourself in a great story. Here are two, both slated for publication in the next two weeks, that I'm hand-picking as stories I cannot wait to plunge into!



To the Bright Edge of the World, by Eowyn Ivey. Ivey's 2012 debut, The Snow Child, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and continues to be wildly popular among our readers. So I'm guessing that her follow-up effort, due out next week, will be in high demand. In the winter of 1885, decorated war hero Colonel Allen Forrester leads a small band of men on an expedition that has been deemed impossible: to venture up the Wolverine River and pierce the vast, untamed Alaska Territory. Leaving behind Sophie, his newly pregnant wife, Colonel Forrester records his extraordinary experiences in hopes that his journal will reach her if he doesn't return--once he passes beyond the edge of the known world, there's no telling what awaits him.
Bonus? Reading about Alaska in winter might just help you beat the heat!

Good Morning, Midnight, by Lily Brooks-Dalton. (Please note: this title is on order and will be available in our catalog shortly.) Billed as being a great read for fans of fiction like Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven (loved it) and Andy Weir's The Martian (also loved it) as well as Eowyn Ivey's The Snow Child (as mentioned above!), Brooks-Dalton's debut is the story of two lonely outsiders, a lone researcher in the Arctic and an astronaut trying to return to Earth, as they grapple with love, regret and survival in a changed world. I am very much looking forward to this!

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

What I've Been Reading: March 2015

Here we are at the end of March, and folks, it's fairly slim pickings. Two of my four titles for the month (yes, only four. Even super-readers have slumps.) were fairly high page-count, and two of them begged to be savored instead of devoured, but in the end, here are my four reads for the month of March.

Crash & Burn, by Lisa Gardner. In this rather creepy suspense novel from Gardner, Nicole Frank crawls free of the wreckage of her crashed SUV, only to find that she has gaping holes in her memory. When her husband tries to help her remember upon arriving at the hospital, Nicole begins to doubt everything he says in addition to the odds and ends she thinks she remembers. It falls to Boston PD Sergeant Wyatt Foster to help Nicole piece the story together, even as he helps her search for a missing girl who may not even exist. While this book was a bit of a slow start, once I got about a third of the way in, the plot took off like a shot and all I could do was hang on to the very twisted ending. I'm a fan.

Caribou Island, by David Vann. I recently came across a review of David Vann's new book (Aquarium, which was released earlier this month) which lauded the author as one of the greatest American novelists of our time. I was admittedly intrigued, because that's a lot to live up to. I picked up Vann's 2012 debut novel, Caribou Island, on audiobook and immediately fell down the rabbit hole. Set in the wilds of Alaska, this is the story of a family pulled apart by rage and regret. Gary feels consistently frustrated and thwarted, mourning thirty years of a life he thought would be different. His wife, Irene, does her best to go along with Gary's latest great project, a cabin built on Caribou Island; dissent only provokes arguments. She can feel Gary pulling away, and even as she tries to keep their family together, her own body begins to betray her with a headache that has no medical cause and that will not respond to medication. Their devoted adult daughter, Rhoda, attempts to maintain the peace, anxious at the increasing strain between her parents and equally worried about the state of her relationship with her fiance, Jim. The book builds to an almost unbearable tension, beautifully written and paced. I am looking forward to more great things from Vann.

The Prince of Tides, by Pat Conroy. Since discovering my love of Conroy's slow, deliberate prose when reading Beach Music a number of years ago, I have made an effort to pace myself with the reading of his work. Since he typically only publishes perhaps two or three times each decade, it has been a challenge for me to be moderate. So I have been reading The Prince of Tides, and savoring it, making it last. I admit I've never seen the movie, so I have come to the novel unspoiled by expectations. This is the story of Tom Wingo and his gifted, troubled twin sister Savannah, spanning decades as they each try in their own way to come to terms with their darkly secretive and extraordinary family legacy. I could talk about my love of Conroy for hours. Note: The audiobook version was read by the late, great Frank Muller. Conroy later said that he was grateful to Muller, because the reading of the novel gave him, Conroy, a version of the book he didn't know had existed.

The Nightingale, by Kristin Hannah. I have to thank my friend Wendy for encouraging me to read this, as she knew I was in a bit of a reading dry spell. I think the spell might be broken. At least, I hope so. And it would be in part because of this deeply emotional novel, set in France during the Nazi occupation during World War II. Two sisters, Vianne and Isabelle, have never been close. Vianne, 10 years Isabelle's senior, enjoys her small, simple life in the Loire Valley. She has a loving husband, a beautiful daughter, and a job teaching at the village school. Isabelle cannot accept what is expected of her--she has been expelled from a number of boarding schools, and now at nearly nineteen, she returns to their emotionally distant father in Paris, only to be shunted off to live with Vianne. As France falls to the German occupation and soldiers are billeted with the sisters, Isabelle finds herself drawn into the French resistance movement, driving another wedge between the sisters. This is a deeply moving story of family ties during a time of crisis, and I thought it was excellent.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Summer Reading Series 9: Beat the Heat


Lately, the heat has been tough to beat.  In fact, I’ve spent a lot of downtime in the AC, reading.  But if you’re looking for something to read with a great story and a cool climate, I’ve got some suggestions for you…


A Reliable Wife, by Robert Goolrick.  Set in a small town in 1907 Wisconsin, where the winters are harsh enough to drive people mad, Catherine Land arrives in answer to Ralph Truitt’s want-ad for “a reliable wife”.  From the start, there’s something that doesn’t ring true with Catherine’s story, but she’s not the only one with secrets to hide.  A dark psychological tale that builds to an ending you never saw coming. 


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson.  This novel, the first in Larsson’s Millennium Trilogy, was a complete sleeper hit two summers ago.  Yet its appeal hasn’t dropped off in the slightest, perhaps due to the striking originality of its multi-faceted thrilling plotline (which takes place in chilly Sweden), and also perhaps due to the odd pairing of main characters.  Mikael Blomkvist, disgraced financial journalist, accepts help from young, socially awkward and somewhat hostile computer hacker Lisbeth Salander as he tries to redeem himself and rescue his career by helping ailing industrialist Henrik Vanger discover what happened to his long-missing niece before he dies.  Hugely compelling, with characters that stick with you for years afterward.  If you’re a fan of audiobooks, I highly recommend this one and its sequels—they are fantastic.


Northern Lights, by Nora Roberts.  While it’s a few years old, this one is a favorite of mine.  Former Baltimore cop Nate Burke finds himself running from his past and winds up as police chief in Lunacy, Alaska…population 506.  A far cry from the busy city, Lunacy still has its challenges, and when a man who disappeared 16 years ago is found frozen in a remote mountain ice cave, an ice axe in his chest, it’s up to Nate to solve a years-old murder and keep order as locals begin to suspect one another.  Told in Roberts’s signature effortless prose, with a romantic subplot (of course), this is a great one to add to your beach tote.


Next up in our summer reading series, another list of non-fiction favorites.  Stay cool!