Kristine Brancolini > Recent Status Updates

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Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 95 of 370 of The Fair Botanists
I’m going to Edinburgh soon and reading fiction set there to get in the mood and learn about life there, past and present.This book centers on real and fictional characters associated with the Botanic Garden.We will be visiting there and it’s a fascinating place. There’s intrigue around the blooming of a famous plant native to California. I’m thoroughly enjoying reading about plants and class/gender in 1822.
Dec 16, 2025 10:07PM Add a comment
The Fair Botanists

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 65 of 352 of Hear No Evil
I’m pausing in my reading because this book is so good that I want it to last. I’m going to Scotland for Christmas so I’ve been reading recommended books set there. This historical novel based on a true story caught my attention. It’s brilliant and multi-faceted. Set in 1817 in Glasgow and Scotland, the story of Jean Campbell, deaf and an accused murderess, is fascinating. More, please, from Sarah Smith!
Nov 30, 2025 02:13PM Add a comment
Hear No Evil

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 156 of 436 of Still Life (Inspector Karen Pirie, #6)
I’ve been loving the Karen Pirie series on streaming, so I was thrilled when my book club chose this book. . “Still Life” is even more complex and engrossing than I expected. In addition to Pirie, the book Introduces a promising new detective, Sergeant Daisy Mortimer. The book starts with two mysteries that now seem to be converging. Plus, I’m going to Edinburgh for Christmas, so the setting is perfect.
Nov 22, 2025 09:18AM Add a comment
Still Life (Inspector Karen Pirie, #6)

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 116 of 259 of Unto Us a Son Is Given (Commissario Brunetti, #28)
I first read a Guido Brunetti mystery in the summer of 2004. I read “Death at La Fenice,” Brunetti #1. The next summer, I spent a week in Venice with my family, exploring Leon’s and Brunetti’s city. I’ve been reading her books and others set in Venice ever since. Her mysteries always explore cultural and social issues; this book continues that commitment. It’s a novel but also a chance to visit Venice.
Nov 15, 2025 07:05PM Add a comment
Unto Us a Son Is Given (Commissario Brunetti, #28)

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 164 of 367 of Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice
I’m reading this shocking and horrific book slowly, in intermittent bursts, because its content makes for difficult reading. Yet it is well-written and compelling in many ways. I feel sad that Virginia did not live to see the positive response from readers. She was failed by her parents and so many others. Maxwell’s preferential treatment in prison is a travesty. She’s a monster. Virginia Giuffre is a hero.
Nov 01, 2025 09:36AM Add a comment
Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 103 of 304 of Shanghai
I’m fascinated by Shanghai and there are many outstanding mysteries set there. I have read other books by Kanon and this book popped up in a NYT list of recommended historical spy novels. So far, it’s more 1939 gangsters than spies but the two worlds may coalesce or collide. I’m interested in the Jewish refugees who came to Shanghai; the book’s protagonist Daniel is one of them.
Sep 01, 2025 09:57AM Add a comment
Shanghai

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 152 of 336 of Banyan Moon
My book club recently read “The Women,” by Kristin Hannah, which tells the story of an Army nurse in Vietnam, and how her experiences there influenced her life for years after she returned to the U.S. “Banyan Moon” tells another side of the story: three generations of Vietnamese women, who end up in Florida, living in a dilapidated house set in a banyan grove. Grandmother Minh tells her story in flashback.
Aug 27, 2025 09:53PM Add a comment
Banyan Moon

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 122 of 256 of The Double Life of Liliane
One of the most powerful books I have read in years is Lily Tuck’s “The Rest is Memory.” Like that book this one is fiction blended with fact. In this case, the fact is Lily Tuck’s life. I actually live this technique— autobiographical fiction. Tuck writes beautifully and I love I keep hopping online to try to figure who her father “Rudy” was.
Aug 10, 2025 10:18PM Add a comment
The Double Life of Liliane

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 285 of 471 of The Women
With the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, it’s good to see the horrors of that war revisited. The Women tells the fictional story of a naive young nurse who enlists in the Army to serve in Vietnam after her brother has been killed there. It!’s as brutal and horrifying as I expected but the title draws attention to the power of female friendship. Frances grows up fast.
May 17, 2025 11:03PM Add a comment
The Women

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 233 of 389 of The First Ladies
I’m reading this book for my book club. We also read “The Personal Librarian” by the same authors. Benedict and Murray make a strong pair of writers to tackle a story about race, gender tokes and equality, and personal loss. Eleanor Roosevelt and Mary McLeod Bethune met and formed a powerful friendship in the 1930’s, a time when black and white people rarely did. Theirs is a fascinating story.
Apr 24, 2025 05:59PM Add a comment
The First Ladies

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 281 of 352 of The Librarianist
I’ve slowed down the pace of my reading because I don’t want this book to end — and I’m worried I will be disappointed by the ending. I’m reading section 3, a flashback to 1945, when 11-year-old Bob ran away from home and ended up in a reading Victorian seaside hotel. I think that Wes Anderson should make the movie. This book is very quirky with an eclectic cast. The movie should be, too.
Feb 10, 2025 10:10PM Add a comment
The Librarianist

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 201 of 352 of The Librarianist
I’ve been waiting for a can’t-put-down book and “The Librarianist” is it. The protagonist Bob Comet is a librarian, but that is really not a central element of the novel. I admit that I was intrigued by the title — but this book is not about literature or libraries. Bob is a truly fascinating character, as are Connie and Ethan, the other two main characters. I need a distraction from the news. Success!
Feb 09, 2025 01:12PM Add a comment
The Librarianist

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 211 of 464 of Intermezzo
I love this story of two brothers who are ten years apart, very troubled in indifferent ways, and borderline estranged. Not quite.The hook for me is the younger brother Ivan, age 22, in a torrid relationship with a divorced woman, Margaret, age 36.Older brother is critical of this relationship, but he’s got major problems of his own. Rooney changes her writing style based on the character narrating.Very effective.
Jan 10, 2025 08:24PM Add a comment
Intermezzo

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 217 of 341 of Please See Us
I’m back on track with this book. The murders have receded into the background a little, and the women’s stories have taken center stage. Lily and Clara have created a bond and it’s an interesting relationship. I still wouldn’t call it a page turner but I want to know what happens to Lily and Clara. And what’s up with Luis?
Dec 21, 2024 01:04PM Add a comment
Please See Us

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 135 of 341 of Please See Us
This book is brutal. Some call it a page-turner, but it is about the women victimized by a serial killer and I’m just not in the mood. It is well written.The central character, a 16-year-old fortune teller in Atlantic City (real name Ava, professional name, Clare Voyant), is smart, sympathetic, and in a world of trouble. Not sure I can finish it.
Dec 17, 2024 11:12PM Add a comment
Please See Us

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 87 of 192 of Animal Life
I’m borderline obsessed with Iceland. I’ve read lots ofIcelandic mysteries but have had trouble finding other fiction authors. I read “Miss Iceland” by this author and loved it. “Animal Life” is about a family of midwives and it’s delightful.
Dec 14, 2024 01:54PM Add a comment
Animal Life

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 298 of 595 of All the Colors of the Dark
This book is the definition of a page turner. It is also beautifully written, featuring fascinating and compelling characters. It’s almost 600 pages long, but I easily read the first half in two days. As reviewers noted the author writes short, densely packed chapters. The author is British and I would love to know how he knows so much about life in a small town in rural Missouri, in the 1970s no less.
Oct 13, 2024 08:52PM Add a comment
All the Colors of the Dark

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 101 of 356 of The Secret Life of Sunflowers
I started and stopped reading this book, but now I’m hooked. I started reading about the real Johanna Van Gogh and thought I would be disappointed in this fictional telling of her story. However, I really love the modern story, which helps propel the astonishing true story in the past.
Sep 23, 2024 08:23PM Add a comment
The Secret Life of Sunflowers

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 101 of 211 of The Samurai's Garden
This is a beautiful and thought-provoking book, set in the Japanese countryside from late 1937-late 1938. It is narrated by a young man, Stephen, recovering from tuberculosis, staying in his family’s beach house with the family’s long time caretaker and gardener Matsu. The two become friends But world war is coming. Stephen’s mother is Chinese, living in Hong Kong, and his father is Japanese living in Kobe.
Sep 07, 2024 08:07PM Add a comment
The Samurai's Garden

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 245 of 416 of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
At some point this book hooked me, despite my apathy for video games and their development. Zevin’s genius is character development snd she nails the aging process along the way. Sam, Sadie, and Marx are endlessly fascinating. Three characters enrich the possibilities.
Aug 30, 2024 09:59PM Add a comment
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 95 of 416 of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
It is a testament to the quality of this book that I’m still reading it. I have picked it up in the past and never started it because I am not a gamer and have zero interest in gaming. Nevertheless, I’m in love with Sadie, Sam, and Marx. I’ve read reviews so I know a little about what to expect. And despite my apathy about gaming, I’m enjoying the creative collaboration of game development.
Aug 24, 2024 09:46PM Add a comment
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 218 of 379 of The Last Mona Lisa
This is an excellent mystery from an author new to me. I bought the book on the strength of its description and Goodreads reviews. It brings together my favorite elements: a mystery based on actual people and events, revolving around art, set in Italy, during the past and the present. I have already ordered Santlofer’s latest book, in anticipation of hurtling to the conclusion of this one today.
Jul 14, 2024 07:51AM Add a comment
The Last Mona Lisa

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 104 of 240 of The Girl at the Door
This short novel is spare. Two narrators - Him and Her — both unlikeable, very short chapters, set in a fictional country called Miden. At first I found Him so loathsome, I almost stopped reading. Then about a third of the way in, I reversed. It all started to click for me. The setting in the weird county becomes central to the novel, another character, along with Him, Her, and, of course, the girl, the victim.
Jun 22, 2024 10:29AM Add a comment
The Girl at the Door

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 131 of 312 of The Stationery Shop
Although I have known from the beginning that Roya and Bahman will be forced apart by the coup in Iran that brought Reza Shah to power in 1953, I found myself reading quickly to learn what happened. I’m a sucker for teenagers who meet and fall in love in a Tehran bookstore. Now I want to know what happened after the events of August 19, until they meet again as senior citizens in 2013.
Jun 16, 2024 06:40PM Add a comment
The Stationery Shop

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 170 of 304 of What You Are Looking For Is in the Library
I’ve been reading dark books lately, mostly mysteries and crime novels. This book is the polar opposite. It was selected as my book club’s April book. And I’m glad that it was. I need a change of pace and a little more hope. I look forward to discussing it with my friends this week.
Apr 21, 2024 10:07AM Add a comment
What You Are Looking For Is in the Library

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 119 of 256 of Miss Iceland
As others have noted, don’t be tricked by the title or the cover art. This is not a book about a beauty queen. Set in 1963, it is about Hekla, a young woman writer who despairs of being published in a country with few women authors. Her friend Isey, a young mother, is also a writer. Only one other person knows that Hekla is a writer, her best friend Jon, who is gay and persecuted. He dreams of fleeing with Hekla.
Apr 14, 2024 01:24PM Add a comment
Miss Iceland

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 243 of 276 of The Cold Summer (Pietro Fenoglio, 1)
This book has taken an interesting turn. It’s feeling more like a Carofiglio character study. The interrogation of Lopez, a suspected kidnapper/murderer was reported verbatim, documentary style. But suddenly, at the end, he blows up the plot and we’re going down a different path. Riveting!
Mar 15, 2024 09:53PM Add a comment
The Cold Summer (Pietro Fenoglio, 1)

Kristine Brancolini
Kristine Brancolini is on page 104 of 276 of The Cold Summer (Pietro Fenoglio, 1)
This is a true story, fictionalized. So far it’s very descriptive and reads like non-fiction. This is unusual for Carofiglio, but i think it’s because he is retelling actual events related to the Pugliese mafia in 1992. I’m missing the human element. Maybe it’s coming…
Mar 12, 2024 10:19PM Add a comment
The Cold Summer (Pietro Fenoglio, 1)

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