Jean Harkin's Blog - Posts Tagged "mollie-hunt"
Ordinary Becomes Extraordinary
I return to blogging after a long break, to praise Oregon authors and publishers, many from Portland, such as the poet Carolyn Martin and the late Brian Doyle. Brian’s essays and Carolyn’s poems, full of lovely and lively words, elevate the ordinary to extraordinary through their piercing vision and acute observations of people and nature.
Carolyn’s book is “The Catalog of Small Contentments,” published this year by The Poetry Box publisher. Brian’s essay collection is “One Long River of Song,” compiled by his friend David James Duncan and others, approved by Brian shortly before his death in 2017. The essays are among Brian’s best.
I am adding a short list of books from Oregon authors and a publisher this year, but it’s only a sip off the top foam. There were many good reads published this year. Here is a taste:
Other 2021 books by Portland poets:
“Poems and Po-Yums” by Catherin Violante of Portland and Iain Yuill of Scotland. A collaboration by two writing friends that spans distances and themes from sublime to ridiculous, joy to grief.
“The Color of Goodbye” by Pattie Palmer-Baker. In poetic imagery this book tells the story of three characters in a family plus Jim Beam, finding memories and witnessing life.
2021 novels by Portland authors:
“The Point of Vanishing” by Maryka Biaggio is historical fiction based on the life of prodigious writer Barbara Follett and her mysterious, unexplained disappearance at age 25 in 1939.
“The Night Always Comes” by Willy Vlautin tells of the impact of corporatism and gentrification on ordinary Portland citizens, as a young woman struggles to save her family.
“Ghost Cat of Ocean Cove” by Mollie Hunt. First in the author’s newest cat mystery series, ‘A Tenth Life Cozy Mystery #1.’ A ghost cat and cold case murder complicate a peaceful beach venue.
From Independence, Oregon publisher Not a Pipe Publishing:
“See You at the End of the World” by cyber-punk author Simon Paul Wilson (from England) is a novella with romance, comedy, weird dreams, and a supernatural threat.
“Brief Black Candles” by Lydia K. Valentine, poet laureate of Tacoma, Washington, gives poetic shape to questions of family, loss, justice, and survival in not-yet-post-racist America.
“Incandescent” by Ayodele Nzinga, poet laureate of Oakland, California, brilliantly fires questions at the reader about justice, freedom, and existence.
“Denial Kills” is Not a Pipe’s anthology by 23 authors, revealing how forms of denial can be toxic to humans.
Happy reading! And stay tuned to next year’s news that will hopefully include the release of my novel, “Promise Full of Thorns” by Sunbury Press.
Meanwhile, I’ll blog again in a few months.
Carolyn’s book is “The Catalog of Small Contentments,” published this year by The Poetry Box publisher. Brian’s essay collection is “One Long River of Song,” compiled by his friend David James Duncan and others, approved by Brian shortly before his death in 2017. The essays are among Brian’s best.
I am adding a short list of books from Oregon authors and a publisher this year, but it’s only a sip off the top foam. There were many good reads published this year. Here is a taste:
Other 2021 books by Portland poets:
“Poems and Po-Yums” by Catherin Violante of Portland and Iain Yuill of Scotland. A collaboration by two writing friends that spans distances and themes from sublime to ridiculous, joy to grief.
“The Color of Goodbye” by Pattie Palmer-Baker. In poetic imagery this book tells the story of three characters in a family plus Jim Beam, finding memories and witnessing life.
2021 novels by Portland authors:
“The Point of Vanishing” by Maryka Biaggio is historical fiction based on the life of prodigious writer Barbara Follett and her mysterious, unexplained disappearance at age 25 in 1939.
“The Night Always Comes” by Willy Vlautin tells of the impact of corporatism and gentrification on ordinary Portland citizens, as a young woman struggles to save her family.
“Ghost Cat of Ocean Cove” by Mollie Hunt. First in the author’s newest cat mystery series, ‘A Tenth Life Cozy Mystery #1.’ A ghost cat and cold case murder complicate a peaceful beach venue.
From Independence, Oregon publisher Not a Pipe Publishing:
“See You at the End of the World” by cyber-punk author Simon Paul Wilson (from England) is a novella with romance, comedy, weird dreams, and a supernatural threat.
“Brief Black Candles” by Lydia K. Valentine, poet laureate of Tacoma, Washington, gives poetic shape to questions of family, loss, justice, and survival in not-yet-post-racist America.
“Incandescent” by Ayodele Nzinga, poet laureate of Oakland, California, brilliantly fires questions at the reader about justice, freedom, and existence.
“Denial Kills” is Not a Pipe’s anthology by 23 authors, revealing how forms of denial can be toxic to humans.
Happy reading! And stay tuned to next year’s news that will hopefully include the release of my novel, “Promise Full of Thorns” by Sunbury Press.
Meanwhile, I’ll blog again in a few months.
Published on September 07, 2021 09:41
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Tags:
ayodele-nzinga, barbara-follett, brian-doyle, carolyn-martin, catherin-violante, david-james-duncan, denial-kills, iain-yuill, lydia-k-valentine, maryka-biaggio, mollie-hunt, not-a-pipe-publishing, pattie-palmer-baker, simon-paul-wilson, willy-vlautin
My Year of Books, and Goodreads to You!
I’m starting off the new book year and looking back to share some of my 2021 reading highlights with you. Maybe you’re looking for a short book or a long book, a popular one or one you’ve not yet read, a book by an Oregon author—or something else. Here we go:
I read 36 books in 2021, equaling 9,197 pages! My average rating was 4.3 stars; I gave 5 stars perfect ratings to about 12, so not such a grumpy critic, was I!
The shortest book I read was “The Catalog of Small Contentments,” 120 pages by Portland poet Carolyn Martin. The longest was best-selling “The Lincoln Highway” by Amor Towles. (576 pages.)
The most popular of books I read was “Never Let Me Go” by Kazuo Ishiguro. Over one million readers on Goodreads shelved this book. The highest rated on my booklist was “The Point of Vanishing” by Portland-area author Maryka Biaggio.
All of my 36 books are reviewed on Goodreads; my first review of 2021 was “The Girl and the Bombardier” by Susan Tate Ankeny of Newberg, Oregon. I gave this book 5 stars. My last review of the year, also rating 5 stars, was “The Snow Child” by Alaska author Eowyn Ivey.
Other books I read in 2021 by Portland-area authors were “Claws for Concern” by Sheila Deeth, “One Long River of Song” and “Chicago” by the late Brian Doyle, “The Night Always Comes” by Willy Vlautin, “Fuzzy Logic” by Maren Anderson, “The Sound of Murder” by Cindy Brown, “Cat Conundrum” by Mollie Hunt, and “Where Lilacs Still Bloom” by Jane Kirkpatrick.
Happy New Year and Good Reading to All in 2022! If you’re browsing, take a look at the Writers’ Mill’s latest anthology, “The Floor Above,” available on Amazon. Profits go to the Portland-area Cedar Mill Library.
I read 36 books in 2021, equaling 9,197 pages! My average rating was 4.3 stars; I gave 5 stars perfect ratings to about 12, so not such a grumpy critic, was I!
The shortest book I read was “The Catalog of Small Contentments,” 120 pages by Portland poet Carolyn Martin. The longest was best-selling “The Lincoln Highway” by Amor Towles. (576 pages.)
The most popular of books I read was “Never Let Me Go” by Kazuo Ishiguro. Over one million readers on Goodreads shelved this book. The highest rated on my booklist was “The Point of Vanishing” by Portland-area author Maryka Biaggio.
All of my 36 books are reviewed on Goodreads; my first review of 2021 was “The Girl and the Bombardier” by Susan Tate Ankeny of Newberg, Oregon. I gave this book 5 stars. My last review of the year, also rating 5 stars, was “The Snow Child” by Alaska author Eowyn Ivey.
Other books I read in 2021 by Portland-area authors were “Claws for Concern” by Sheila Deeth, “One Long River of Song” and “Chicago” by the late Brian Doyle, “The Night Always Comes” by Willy Vlautin, “Fuzzy Logic” by Maren Anderson, “The Sound of Murder” by Cindy Brown, “Cat Conundrum” by Mollie Hunt, and “Where Lilacs Still Bloom” by Jane Kirkpatrick.
Happy New Year and Good Reading to All in 2022! If you’re browsing, take a look at the Writers’ Mill’s latest anthology, “The Floor Above,” available on Amazon. Profits go to the Portland-area Cedar Mill Library.
Published on January 03, 2022 16:16
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Tags:
amor-towles, brian-doyle, carolyn-martin, cedar-mill-library, cindy-brown, eowyn-ivey, jane-kirkpatrick, kazuo-ishiguro, maren-anderson, maryka-biaggio, mollie-hunt, sheila-deeth, susan-tate-ankeny, the-floor-above, the-writers-mill, willy-vlautin
Fairy Tales for the New Year
Happy New Year to Friends of my Goodreads blog! Maybe you are, like me, delving into books you unwrapped over the holidays. Two holiday books revived an old coincidence for me. It has happened once again that two books I read in succession have common links. Both involve “coming of age” and both are inspired by themes from fairy tales.
“The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale” by Virginia Kantra is inspired by “The Wizard of Oz” but stands on its own as a relationship and coming of age story about grownups finding where they truly belong. Main character Dorothy (Dee) goes to the Emerald Isle, not the Emerald City, to escape an embarrassing situation at a university in Kansas.
“Fairy Tale” by Stephen King begins as 17-year-old Charlie Reade saves the life of an elderly neighbor and falls in love with his dog. The story continues into a Stephen King world of fantasy magic, horror, and heroism. Fantasy and horror fans would give this more stars than I did and will welcome the movie adaptation when it releases.
I reviewed both novels on Goodreads.com. I also reviewed and gave five stars to “There’s a Cat Hair in My Mask,” a memoir of a Covid year with cats by Portland author Mollie Hunt.
For New Year 2024, I proudly announce the November publication of “Carnival of Muses,” volume 11 of “The Writers’ Mill Journal.” A carnival of ideas and expressions have been collected from the inspirational Writers’ Mill writers of Oregon and around the world. The anthology is available on Amazon.com. Profits from sales go to the Cedar Mill Library of Washington County, Oregon.
Cheers, All the Best, and Good Reads to you in 2024! Thanks for reading my blog and keeping in touch!
“The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale” by Virginia Kantra is inspired by “The Wizard of Oz” but stands on its own as a relationship and coming of age story about grownups finding where they truly belong. Main character Dorothy (Dee) goes to the Emerald Isle, not the Emerald City, to escape an embarrassing situation at a university in Kansas.
“Fairy Tale” by Stephen King begins as 17-year-old Charlie Reade saves the life of an elderly neighbor and falls in love with his dog. The story continues into a Stephen King world of fantasy magic, horror, and heroism. Fantasy and horror fans would give this more stars than I did and will welcome the movie adaptation when it releases.
I reviewed both novels on Goodreads.com. I also reviewed and gave five stars to “There’s a Cat Hair in My Mask,” a memoir of a Covid year with cats by Portland author Mollie Hunt.
For New Year 2024, I proudly announce the November publication of “Carnival of Muses,” volume 11 of “The Writers’ Mill Journal.” A carnival of ideas and expressions have been collected from the inspirational Writers’ Mill writers of Oregon and around the world. The anthology is available on Amazon.com. Profits from sales go to the Cedar Mill Library of Washington County, Oregon.
Cheers, All the Best, and Good Reads to you in 2024! Thanks for reading my blog and keeping in touch!
Published on December 31, 2023 14:43
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Tags:
carnival-of-muses, fairy-tale, mollie-hunt, stephen-king, the-writers-mill-journal, there-s-a-cat-hair-in-my-mask, virginia-kantra
Fairy Tales for the New Year
Happy New Year to Friends of my Goodreads blog! Maybe you are, like me, delving into books you unwrapped over the holidays. Two holiday books revived an old coincidence for me. It has happened once again that two books I read in succession have common links. Both involve “coming of age” and both are inspired by themes from fairy tales.
“The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale” by Virginia Kantra is inspired by “The Wizard of Oz” but stands on its own as a relationship and coming of age story about grownups finding where they truly belong. Main character Dorothy (Dee) goes to the Emerald Isle, not the Emerald City, to escape an embarrassing situation at a university in Kansas.
“Fairy Tale” by Stephen King begins as 17-year-old Charlie Reade saves the life of an elderly neighbor and falls in love with his dog. The story continues into a Stephen King world of fantasy magic, horror, and heroism. Fantasy and horror fans would give this more stars than I did and will welcome the movie adaptation when it releases.
I reviewed both novels on Goodreads.com. I also reviewed and gave five stars to “There’s a Cat Hair in My Mask,” a memoir of a Covid year with cats by Portland author Mollie Hunt.
For New Year 2024, I proudly announce the November publication of “Carnival of Muses,” volume 11 of “The Writers’ Mill Journal.” A carnival of ideas and expressions have been collected from the inspirational Writers’ Mill writers of Oregon and around the world. The anthology is available on Amazon.com. Profits from sales go to the Cedar Mill Library of Washington County, Oregon.
Cheers, All the Best, and Good Reads to you in 2024! Thanks for reading my blog and keeping in touch!
“The Fairytale Life of Dorothy Gale” by Virginia Kantra is inspired by “The Wizard of Oz” but stands on its own as a relationship and coming of age story about grownups finding where they truly belong. Main character Dorothy (Dee) goes to the Emerald Isle, not the Emerald City, to escape an embarrassing situation at a university in Kansas.
“Fairy Tale” by Stephen King begins as 17-year-old Charlie Reade saves the life of an elderly neighbor and falls in love with his dog. The story continues into a Stephen King world of fantasy magic, horror, and heroism. Fantasy and horror fans would give this more stars than I did and will welcome the movie adaptation when it releases.
I reviewed both novels on Goodreads.com. I also reviewed and gave five stars to “There’s a Cat Hair in My Mask,” a memoir of a Covid year with cats by Portland author Mollie Hunt.
For New Year 2024, I proudly announce the November publication of “Carnival of Muses,” volume 11 of “The Writers’ Mill Journal.” A carnival of ideas and expressions have been collected from the inspirational Writers’ Mill writers of Oregon and around the world. The anthology is available on Amazon.com. Profits from sales go to the Cedar Mill Library of Washington County, Oregon.
Cheers, All the Best, and Good Reads to you in 2024! Thanks for reading my blog and keeping in touch!
Published on December 31, 2023 14:56
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Tags:
carnival-of-muses, fairy-tale, mollie-hunt, stephen-king, the-wizard-of-oz, the-writers-mill-journal, there-s-a-cat-hair-in-my-mask, virginia-kantra


