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Saturday, May 31, 2025
DNF - The Power of Parting (audiobook)
![]() The Power of Parting by Eamon Dolan (audiobook) |
REVIEW - Under the Stars (eARC/eBOOK)
OVERVIEW
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
This is the fifteenth or so book by Beatriz Williams that I have read. What a departure from her other books! Yes, this is a familiar location (Winthrop Island), with familiar characters (from Winthrop Island), but that is where it stops. This is a triple-storyline novel with much more "spice" than any previous Beatriz novel I have read.
For full disclosure, I am writing this review with only about six hours of sleep. I finished this historical fiction novel around 2:00 am because I couldn't put it down. That is my review in a nutshell.
One caveat, this book does stand alone, but it is part of the series based on Winthrop Island. It is up to you if you want to know some of the backstory by reading the other novels.
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
Beatriz always writes so amazingly beautifully. This novel is just a notch above her normal writing, as if she found her authentic and true voice. The descriptions are raw, powerful, and detailed without being overwhelming. It is filled with such incredible and strong writing.
I don't consider myself a prude, but "spicy" writing isn't my thing. Also, my favorite swear word is liberally used throughout the book.
Character development: 5.0 stars
The main characters are divided into three distinct timelines: Providence (1846 - a runaway servant); Audrey (2024 - Meredith's daughter); and Meredith (1993/1994, 2024 - Audrey's mother, famous movie star, and former local).
The secondary characters are: Mike (1993/1994, 2024 - Audrey's father, owner of a dive bar, and local); Sedge (2024 - connected visitor to the island); and Starkweather (1846 - police detective).
There are many tertiary characters, as this is a historical novel after all. But all were necessary and important to the progression of the three storylines.
Storyline: 5.0 stars
The three storylines could stand alone; however, the weaving of the three together is what makes this a fantastic novel.
In the 1846 timeline, Providence is escaping the murder warrant as a body is found in the home where she is a servant. In the 1993/1994 timeline, Meredith and Mike are living their lives until a visitor disrupts it all. The 2024 timeline is Meredith returning home with Audrey as chaos reigns.
The location was primarily the fictional Winthrop Island, New York, as well as Boston, Massachusetts.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
The description of travel in a steamship in 1846 was terrifying.
I cannot imagine how my ancestors traveled from Europe to the United States (most likely in the hold) for weeks on end in smaller vessels across the Atlantic Ocean. My heart aches for them.
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Beautiful.
Book title: 5.0 stars
Perfect and symbolic.
HIGHLY recommend
NetGalley eARC/ebook
Under the Stars by Beatriz Williams
368 pages
Ballantine Books
FUTURE release date: 7/29/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
GRAPHIC cursing and sexual situations, murder, gun violence, pregnancy, infidelity, alcohol, alcohol abuse, terminal illness, suicide, medical content, blood
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Thursday, May 29, 2025
REVIEW - Accidentally on Purpose (audiobook)
OVERVIEW
I used to watch Top Chef and was rooting for Kristen when she won season 10! She was my favorite from the season opener, but most especially when she won Last Chance Kitchen five times in a row! She was talented, gutsy, and amazing!
While browsing the Libby application on my cell phone, I stumbled upon her memoir! I immediately knew that I would want to listen to this as an audiobook. It did not disappoint!
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
The writing is strong, emotional, raw, and real. Kristen writes from the heart, and it shows!
It appears that she wrote this on her own without a ghost writer, BRAVA, Kristen!
Narration: 5.0 stars
Kristen narrated this book, even though she is not a professional narrator; she did a fantastic job. On a few occasions, she became emotional, but it added to the power of this memoir.
Character development: 5.0 stars
The main character is, of course, Kristen. She details her life from her first picture in the United States (as she is an adoptee from South Korea) to her recent hosting job on Top Chef. It is told chronologically, which is the format that I prefer.
Kristen shares her life journey as an adoptee, an Asian-American, and part of the LGBT+ community, and a chef. She takes great pride in all of the groups that she represents and understands the power of representation.
She shares how she was raised in Michigan with an older non-biological brother. Kristen has incredibly loving parents who supported her choices to leave college and pursue a culinary degree. She shares her confusion about being LGBT+ and her coming out. Add that she is a female, Asian American chef when there were not many women or Asian-American chefs when she was starting out, period. She shares working in restaurants, opening her first restaurant, being on food/travel television shows, and finally becoming the host of Top Chef. Finally, she shares meeting the love of her life, Bianca, and getting married.
Memorable: 5.0 stars
For me, one of the biggest takeaways was finding joy. We cannot qualify or quantify it, but we know it when we see it. Kristen focuses on finding joy in her life both individually and as part of a married couple.
Entertaining/Educational: 5.0 stars
As a mom of a hapa (Asian-American/Northern European) daughter, Kristen is a strong role model. But, I also found her endearing, real, and so accessible that the mom in me adored her and her memoir.
I would so love to cook or dine with Kristen! I know that she would make it a fun time!
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Great photograph.
Book title: 5.0 stars
Very appropriate.
HIGHLY recommend
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) borrow: audiobook
Accidentally on Purpose by Kristen Kish
10 hours, 28 minutes
Little, Brown & Company
Release date: 4/22/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL)
TRIGGER WARNINGS: Cursing, drug use, alcohol use, racism, sexism, pandemic
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
REVIEW - The One That Got Away (ebook/short story)
OVERVIEW
This was the additional short story provided with Amazon First Reads for April 2025. I had never read anything by Mike Gayle, who is a British author.
I somewhat liked this story, but it wasn't one of my favorites offered by the Amazon First Reads program. It was something to read while I waited for my daughter to shop at Costco.
OVERALL REVIEW: 3.0 stars
Writing: 3.0 stars
Mike writes beautifully. I have no issues with the quality of the writing at all.
Character development: 3.0 stars
There was fairly good character development, but I didn't like either of the primary characters. They were both selfish jerks.
The primary characters are Reuben and Beth, who were a couple.
The secondary characters are Leo (Beth's fiancé) and the assorted friends of Reuben, Beth, and Leo. As an aside, Reuben has incredible friends that he doesn't deserve!
The tertiary characters are Alan (Reuben's dad), Anne (Reuben's stepmother), and some minor characters.
Storyline: 3.0 stars
This short story is told in a dual timeline with "Then" and "Now" chapters.
Basically, Reuben and Beth have been broken up for about six months, and she is getting married. Beth calls Reuben on the morning of the wedding, and nothing but chaos ensues.
The main location is southern England.
Memorable/Informative: 3.0 stars
The premise of Reuben and Beth's relationship, their issues, and why they break up is just ridiculous.
Book cover: 3.5 stars
Meh.
Book title: 3.0 stars
True, but trite.
LUKEWARM recommend
BOOK INFORMATION
Amazon First Reads - ebook/short story
The One That Got Away by Mike Gayle
100 pages
Amazon Original Stories
Release date of 5/1/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Infidelity, alcohol
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Monday, May 26, 2025
REVIEW - The Bookstore Family (ebook/ short story)
OVERVIEW
This was a special treat! I had no idea Alice Hoffman had written a fourth short story in the Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories. I am hoping for a fifth short story in this series. Yes, I am being so greedy!
This was another great short story by the amazing Alice Hoffman. This is the fourth and final (say it isn't so!) short story in The Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories about a family bookstore on the fictional island of Brinkley's Island, Maine. I so love this sweet and lovely series.
Caveat: Please read the first three short stories before reading this one.
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
Alice Hoffman is my favorite author, period. Her writing is beautifully spectacular, poetic, and brilliant. This fourth short story was another great addition to this lovely series.
Character development: 5.0 stars
As always, there is good character development! This short story is primarily about Violet (Sophie's daughter), who is living an unhappy life as a pastry chef in Paris.
The secondary characters are Sophie (Violet's mother), Isabel (Violet's aunt), and Remy (Violet's friend in Paris).
The tertiary characters are Johnny (Isabel's husband), David (Sophie's husband), and Suzy (Johnny and Isabel's young daughter).
Storyline: 5.0 stars
This short story concerns family, loss, grief, and unconditional love, as in the first three short stories.
Violet leaves Paris to return home to the island. Sadly, her mother, Sophie, has had a recurrence of her cancer. The family rallies to help Sophie meet all of the tasks on her bucket list.
We receive a lovely, bittersweet ending (maybe not) to this wonderful short story series!
The main location is the fictional Brinkley's Island, Maine.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
This is another beautiful short story in a short story series. Alice Hoffman could write her grocery list, and I would read it!
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Gorgeous.
Book title: 5.0 stars
Perfect!
HIGHLY recommend
BOOK INFORMATION
Purchased Kindle digital copy
The Bookstore Family (Once Upon a Time Bookshop Stories #4) by Alice Hoffman
43 pages
Amazon Original Stories
Release date of 5/13/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Death of a parent, terminal illness
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
REVIEW - The List (eARC/ebook)
OVERVIEW
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
This is the twentieth or so book by Steve Berry I have read. I have read nearly all of the published books in the Cotton Malone series (thrillers with a historical bent) I immensely enjoy. But this is one of the few stand-alone books by Steve I have read that is unrelated to the Cotton Malone franchise.
This was a perfect book for the long weekend! It was a fresh new book from Steve, and I really enjoyed the difference in the storytelling.
OVERALL REVIEW: 4.5 stars
Writing: 4.0 stars
Steve writes so very well. This book was quite different without the historical aspect with most of his books, but I enjoyed it.
My only issue is that I found the descriptions of the mill, the paper process, and the operations uninteresting.
Character development: 4.5 stars
The main characters were Brent (a lawyer returning to his hometown), Hank (the electricians' union head), the fictional Southern Republic Pulp and Paper mill, and the three greedy shareholders/owners, Bozin, Lee, and Hughes.
The secondary characters are Brent and Hank's friends and family, the various mill workers, and the townspeople.
The tertiary character is greed, and the incredible lengths that some will go to protect and increase their wealth.
Storyline: 4.5 stars
This is a contemporary thriller and was quite mind-boggling. But nothing that corporations do anymore shocks or surprises me.
Brent and Hank unwittingly stumble into some horrible and criminal activities by the three owners/shareholders of the mill. By finding out this information, they put themselves and their families in danger. It then gets off and running, and the suspense doesn't stop until the end.
As Steve indicated in his Writer's Note, this book was inspired by his law practice in a town similar to the fictional Concord.
The location was primarily the fictional Concord, Georgia.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
I had no idea that these paper mills existed in the South. With access to water, trees, and a relatively inexpensive labor force, they thrived in the 19th and 20th centuries. Now, with the advent of the digital age, paper isn't used nearly as frequently, which has helped cause the demise of these mills.
Book cover: 4.0 stars
Okay, but meh.
Book title: 4.5 stars
Short and sweet!
STRONG recommend
NetGalley eARC/ebook
The List by Steve Berry
384 pages
Grand Central Publishing
FUTURE release date: 7/22/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Murder, gun violence, pregnancy, physical abuse, sexual situations, mild cursing, infidelity, terminal illnesses, gore, and blood
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Review - Where You Are Is Not Who You Are (audiobook)
OVERVIEW
Malcolm Gladwell mentioned Ursula in his book, "Revenge of the Tipping Point". I wanted to know more about her (and do my own research), so I found her memoir.
I thoroughly enjoyed, but didn't love, this memoir. Ursula mentions she is best one-on-one, and I know I would enjoy a cup of coffee or a glass of wine with her! She reminds me of my late friend, Robin, who also came from New York.
OVERALL REVIEW: 4.5 stars
Writing: 4.0 stars
The writing is strong, emotional, and personal.
But, there was so much "Xerox speak". Ursula is also a mechanical engineer, so she is very technical (like my electrical engineer husband).
Narration: 4.0 stars
Ursula seemed uncomfortable and tentative reading the book. Narration is not her forte.
I recommend reading this book as either a digital or physical copy instead of an audiobook.
Character development: 5.0 stars
The main character is Ursula, as it is her memoir. But there are other important people in her life, especially her mother, Olga, with the book title and many chapters named after her mother's sayings.
Ursula grew up on Manhattan's Lower East Side, living in public housing. She used education to improve her life and is a true American success story. But that doesn't mean she didn't encounter racism, sexism, and classism.
Ursula presents the good, the bad, and the ugly in this memoir. She discusses her strengths and weaknesses candidly.
Finally, the memoir is in fairly chronological order, which makes it easy to follow her life trajectory.
Memorable: 5.0 stars
As the first Black woman CEO to run a Fortune 500 company, she was a trailblazer. But the biggest takeaway was that she was technically proficient, mentored by the top leaders in the country, and exceedingly qualified for the position.
It caused a lot of drama when she was announced as the Xerox CEO, but would the same have happened if she had been a white man? I think not, so that is definitely something to remember and consider.
Entertaining/Educational: 5.0 stars
Ursula mentions impactful capitalism and believes the United States would be better off following this model. This business theory sounds fascinating and a real opportunity for positive change.
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Great photograph.
Book title: 5.0 stars
Perfectly stated.
STRONG recommend
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) borrow: audiobook
Where You Are Is Not Who You Are by Ursula Burns
7 hours, 39 minutes
HarperAudio
Release date: 6/15/2021
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL)
TRIGGER WARNINGS: Mild swearing, drug addiction, medical content, classism, racism, sexism, pandemic
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Friday, May 23, 2025
REVIEW - Wayward Girls (eARC/ebook)
OVERVIEW
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own
This is the first book by Susan Wiggs that I have read. The premise aligns perfectly with many of my recent reads. The fictional storyline was about incarcerated young women at a Roman Catholic Magdalene laundry in Buffalo, New York, from 1968-1969.
The scary part is that this book is inspired by true-life accounts of what happened in these so-called laundries from the 1880s to the 1970s. Horrific!
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
Susan writes so beautifully with compassion but descriptively without being prurient. The storyline is difficult to read, but the writing makes it fascinating, although anger-provoking.
Character development: 5.0 stars
The main characters (in the 1968-1969 timeline) include the "wayward girls", the Our Lady of Charity Roman Catholic order, and the Good Shepherd Institute. The ridiculous reasons for these young women being incarcerated are unbelievable, and the horrible treatment that they receive is unconscionable.
The secondary characters (in the 1968-1969 timeline) are the parents who send their daughters to the Institute, the girls' friends and partners, and the inept local Buffalo community that was supposed to protect them.
The tertiary timeline (present time) is the new lives for the "wayward girls", their friends, family, and their friendships.
Storyline: 5.0 stars
This is a historical fiction novel, but it is primarily about seven "wayward girls" and one nun. Their story ends in 1970ish at the Institute when six of the girls escape. Then everything explodes again when two of the girls rekindle their friendship many years later. Powerfully done!
The location was primarily Buffalo, New York, and the surrounding area.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
I had no idea that these laundries occurred in the United States. I had heard of them in Ireland, But A Note from the Author indicates that there were at least thirty-eight of these institutions in our country.
We need to remember this history and protect our daughters and granddaughters from this type of abuse from ever occurring again!
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Perfect!
Book title: 5.0 stars
Excellent!
HIGHLY recommend
NetGalley eARC/ebook
Wayward Girls by Susan Wiggs
400 pages
William Morrow
FUTURE release date: 7/15/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Rape, incarceration, pregnancy, physical abuse, adult-minor relationships, drug use, sexual situations, mild cursing, infidelity
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Thursday, May 22, 2025
REVIEW - Revenge of the Tipping Point
OVERVIEW
This is only the second Malcolm Gladwell book that I have read. The other is "The Tipping Point," which I read fairly soon after it came out. But this book, unfortunately, is not "The Tipping Point, Part II.
It was a disorganized audiobook, but there were good topics to research and verify.
OVERALL REVIEW: 4.0 stars
Writing: 4.0 stars
The writing is good - Malcolm can write! But there were so many of his opinions, interpretations, and viewpoints in the book. It just didn't work for me with all the "Malcolmisms".
Narration: 4.0 stars
Malcolm has a nice voice for narration.
The guitar music playing in the background made it difficult for me to concentrate. As a segue between chapters, it would have been fine. But there was music with the narration - audiobooks do not need a soundtrack.
Character development: 4.0 stars
There weren't characters per se, but there were characters within the stories. Having real people or actor-portrayals of these individuals was a nice touch.
I disliked that the information was not presented in one chapter and done. It just was ill-conceived and messy.
Memorable: 4.5 stars
This audiobook gave me little tidbits of information I want to independently verify and research. The narcotic prescription three-part form was something that interested me due to the correlation to opioid epidemic deaths.
Entertaining/Educational: 4.0 stars
I feel like this book was a jumping point to dig in deep into many of the topics covered: Los Angeles bank robberies, Miami Medicare fraud, opioid crisis, "Poplar Grove" high school suicides, corporate boards, Harvard's rugby team, Will & Grace and "Holocaust: The Story of the Weiss Family", and COVID pandemic.
Book cover: 4.0 stars
Okay.
Book title: 4.5 stars
True, but not true.
DEFINITE recommend
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) borrow: audiobook
Revenge of the Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell
8 hours, 25 minutes
Little, Brown, and Company
Release date: 10/1/2024
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL)
TRIGGER WARNINGS: Suicide, gun violence, drug addiction, medical content, genocide, classism, racism, pandemic
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Sunday, May 18, 2025
Review - Before Dorothy (eARC/ebook)
OVERVIEW
I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own
This is the third book by Hazel Gaynor I have read. As soon as I read the book's premise, I knew I had to read it. It is a prequel fairy tale ode to the original book that I loved, as imagined by Hazel!
This book combined several important things for me - The Wizard of Oz (books and movie), childhood favorites. The Dust Bowl in the 1930s affected my paternal grandfather, his mother (my Granny), and siblings left Arkansas and Oklahoma for a better life in California. I'm grateful every day that they left for more in my beloved state.
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars.
Writing: 5.0 stars
Hazel writes beautifully. She wrote an incredible homage to the original book and movie. There are subtle references to the original book that are like finding Easter eggs throughout the book. The descriptions are so vivid, yet not overbearing. Lovely, lovely, lovely!
Character development: 5.0 stars
The main characters are Dorothy (yes, that Dorothy), her uncle Henry, and her aunt Em (the same ones). We discover why they are in Kansas, Dorothy lives with her aunt and uncle, and so much more!
The secondary characters are Annie (Dorothy's mom, Emily's sister, and John's wife), John (Dorothy's mom, Henry's cousin, and Annie's husband). Yes, Annie and Em did marry cousins!
The tertiary characters are the friends in Chicago and Kansas, Em and Annie's family from Ireland, unbelievable fleeting characters, and the Kansas prairie, including the Dust Bowl and the Depression.
Storyline: 5.0 stars
This is a historical novel, but a beautiful homage to The Wizard of Oz, as Hazel imagines. Beautifully done!
Several time frames are utilized to create this amazing prequel. Chicago 1922-1924, 1932; Kansas 1924-1929, 1932; and "many years later".
The Chicago years primarily cover when Annie and Em live together and work together as "Field's Girls". They meet and marry their husbands, and then their life trajectories change. Annie stays in Chicago while Em moves with Henry to Kansas. Then the story really takes off!
The locations were primarily Chicago, Kansas, and some in Ireland.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
I love how the author mentions in her Author's Note how Auntie Em kept whispering in her ear to write this book! I'm so glad that Hazel listened!
Hazel mentions watching The Wizard of Oz on Christmas Day in the United Kingdom. In the United States, it was Easter Sunday evening! We watched it on different days with the same strong memories that books and movies can conjure!
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Perfect!
Book title: 5.0 stars
Short, but sweet!
HIGHLY recommend
NetGalley eARC/ebook
Before Dorothy by Hazel Gaynor
400 pages
Berkley
FUTURE release date: 6/17/2025
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
TRIGGER WARNINGS:
Guns, the Depression, tornadoes/dusters, mild cursing, pregnancy, infidelity
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Thursday, May 15, 2025
REVIEW - Read This To Get Smarter (audiobook)
OVERVIEW
First, I started following Blair Imani on Instagram for her amazing "Smarter in Seconds" reels. Then through her podcast,
"Thoughts About Feelings" with Mychal Threets, I learned about this amazing book.
I must admit that each of the chapters on "Identity", "Relationships", "Class", "Disability", "Race and Racism", and "Sex, Gender, and Sexual Orientation" taught me something new. The chapter on Sex, Gender, and Sexual Orientation educated me the most. Thank you, Blair, for making me smarter!
As much as I enjoyed listening to Blair's narration, I would have retained so much more with a physical or digital copy. So there will be a digital copy to reread in my future!
Finally, as an aside, Blair grew up in San Marino, a town a few miles away from where I grew up. So proud of this local making it big!
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 4.5 stars
The writing was not the most important part of this book. But it was strong, but not great literature (thank goodness).
This book was written in an easy-to-understand style with so much passion and matter-of-factness.
Narration: 5.0 stars
Blair narrated this audiobook in a personal, emotional, and real manner. As an educator, she made it so easy to follow and understand everything she was teaching (even if you didn't realize you were getting smarter).
Character development: 5.0 stars
There really weren't characters per se, but Blair shared about herself, her family, and her friends. These personal and beautiful stories made this book so very special.
Memorable: 5.0 stars
This audiobook taught me so much, even though I think of myself as an open-minded liberal mom who loves learning.
Entertaining/Educational: 5.0 stars
This book dovetailed beautifully with These Heathens by Mia McKenzie, which I finished yesterday. It was about the race, class, gender, and LGBT+ intersectionality in 1960s Atlanta.
Blair did a deep dive into the topics I had recently read about, and it made me even smarter! The bottom line is treating everyone with respect and dignity.
Finally, I loved the Reflection Questions at the end of every chapter. It made me think and ponder these issues, which isn't always easy or pretty.
Book cover: 4.5 stars
Pretty!
Book title: 5.0 stars
Excellent.
HIGHLY recommend
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL) borrow: audiobook
Read This To Get Smarter by Blair Imani
5 hours, 27 minutes
Random House Audio
Release date: 10/26/2021
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL)
TRIGGER WARNINGS: Minor negative references to all of the topics covered in the noted chapters above
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜