Donna’s
Comments
(group member since Nov 16, 2024)
Donna’s
comments
from the Mount TBR Challenge 2025 group.
Showing 1-20 of 25
#23 Pirenzi by Susanna ClarkeI loved Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrel, but I just didn't get this one.
#22 Summer People by Aaron StanderFirst book in the Ray Elkins series. Are the four deaths coincidental or are they related in some way going back 20-25 years?
#21 The Great Mistake by Mary Roberts RinehartPublished in 1940, it contains all the pluses and minuses of that time period.
#20 Rebecca by Daphne duMaurierThe book is better than the Hitchcock movie, even though it won the Best Picture Oscar.
#19 The Great Mistake by Mary Roberts RinehartComplicated plot, large cast of characters. All in the family, so to speak.
#18 Seeing with the Heart by Kevin O'BrienA good companion to "An Ignatian Adventure" by this author.
#16 Educated by Tara WestoverAn inspiring story about breaking away from one's family in order to save yoursekf,
#15 The Mystery Guest by Nina ProseSecond in the series about a quirky maid whose notice of details helps solve crimes.
#14 The Singing Sands by Josephine TeyI read this book ten years ago and again now for a book club discussion. I'd forgotten how the mystery is solved.
#13 A Tale of Two Cities by Charles DickensMy fourth time reading this book, each time with a different discussion group and consequently I learned/understood things differently.
#12 One Long River of Song by Brian DoyleWhat beautiful writing!! This book is a series of essays each one more perfect than the next.
I listened to this book on audible.Since the essays are not connected, each one deserves to be experienced with some time and thought in between. That's not how it happens with an audiobook which just keeps plowing on.
#11 The Bookshop: A History of the American Bookstore by Evan FrissI loved this book, but then I love bookshops as much as I love books. On our second date my now husband took me to the library after dinner. I knew he was a keeper. Our town just lost an independent bookshop (very sad) but another opened...a little smaller, but bright and shiny new. I can't wait to go there,
#10 Smallbone Deceased by Michael Gilbert1950s British classic, but I just didn't connect with any of the characters. I was supprised by the revelation of the murderer.
#8 Across that Bridge: A Vision for Change and the Future of America by John LewisThis book is not just about the Civil Rights movement, but is a spiritual reflection that supported that movement throughout.
#7 Beastly Things by Donna LeonI love Brunetti and his Venice. I'm so glad there are still more books in the series to read.
#6 Until I am Free by Keishan N BlainThis is the story of Fannie Lou Hamer who became a major supporter of civil rights protests in Mississippi.
#5 Joy in the Morning by P.G. WodehouseJeeves and Wooster are quite a pair. This is the first one I've read and I just might have to get some others.
#4 The First Ladies by Marie Benedict and Victoria Christopher MurrayThe fictional account of how Eleanor Roosevelt and Mary McLeod Bethune became friends and worked together to model non-racist behaviour and bring about the hiring of African Americans in the US federal government.
