Reviews of physical books, ebooks, and audiobooks personally read or listened to by me! booksbydorothea - Instagram; booksbydorothea - Threads; Books by Dorothea - Goodreads
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Wednesday, August 2, 2023
REVIEW - Hello, Molly! AUDIOBOOK
SPECIAL NOTE
This is a new and different format for memoirs. I will also be updating my format for fiction books. This is a continual work in progress to find exactly what works for me and you!
OVERVIEW
OVERALL REVIEW: 3.0 stars
Narrator: 3.0 stars
Molly Shannon and Sean Wilsey (contributor)
Writing: 3.0 stars
The writing was really lovely at times and just weird at other times. She had some moments when she mentioned so many names of people at one time that I had no clue who they were. The celebrity name-dropping really bothered me.
The chapters about her mother were so beautiful. I could really feel the pain of her loss in her family of origin. But on the other hand, she used her loss of her mother as a reason to excuse her and her father's bad behavior.
Other chapters, I absolutely detested like the hotel scene in Time Square and the chapters that included shoplifting and scams. It was like she still found this behavior funny. It was not!
She ended the memoir with a great chapter on how she raised her kids to find joy in life. I loved it! It is very evident that she is an amazing mother!
Character Arc: 3.0 stars
The story begins with a family tragedy and ends with how generational curses can be broken. Her family on both sides were recent immigrants to the U.S. from Ireland. The identity of being an Irish Catholic was consistent throughout the memoir - it was a beautiful reminder that we ALL are immigrants from somewhere.
However, the chapters were inconsistent to me and all over the place. I especially did not like her NYU and Los Angeles years at all. Yes, we all do stupid stuff when we are young, but I felt that she glorified it and was proud of some of these stupid things. Plus, I didn't get what some of it really had to do with the arc of her life.
Memorable: 3.5 stars
It was meh.
Entertaining: 3.0 stars
It didn't have me laughing out loud which I would have expected from her.
Book cover: 5.0 stars
I LOVE it!
Book title: 5.0 stars
Just so perfect.
Gut feeling: 3.0 stars
I had no clue as to how I would feel about this memoir. So I was in the middle!
Suggestions:
Molly Shannon was OVERLY animated at times during the narration. Maybe, tone it down a little. I understand that, but it was annoying when I was drifting off to sleep.
Lukewarm RECOMMEND
STATISTICS
Hello, Molly! by Molly Shannon
7 hours 5 minutes listening length
Listened as an audiobook from the library
Release date of 04/12/2022
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
REVIEW - A Council of Dolls
This is a new and different format for fiction. The format was also recently updated for memoirs. This blog is a continual work in progress to find exactly what works for me and you!
OVERVIEW
I just cannot imagine how I read another amazing book ARC!! This historical fiction book was just amazing. Another book in the running for my Book of the Year 2023.
The writer is a female Native American author and she wrote a beautiful love letter to the strong women in this book. There were THREE very strong women who lived in different and important times in Native American history in the U.S.
The book works backward in time which is a nice and unique change and ends in somewhat current times. The three main characters are Sissy (born 1961), Lillian (born 1925), and Cora (born 1888). Each of these women lived in a different, difficult time for Native Americans, but there is an invisible string of their dolls and their love that surrounds them.
The book was so beautifully written even with the horrible and devastating events that occur in this book. It also made me so disgusted that we treated these dignified and beautiful Native Americans so horribly. Unfortunately, there is no change in their mistreatment with the continual breaking of long-standing treaties. So very convicting.
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
Mona Susan Power has a beautiful and powerful voice in her writing. The time and events in this novel were not pleasant to read or write. But, it was her gorgeous writing with so much character development that helped me understand and love this book. I cannot wait for what else she will write.
Character development: 5.0 stars
The character development of the main characters was so intense and thorough. I could feel all of my senses viscerally engaged as I read. Interestingly, they were the main characters in the current chapter and then secondary characters in the following chapter.
There were many secondary characters in the book. The partners and friends of the main characters also were thoroughly explored. The three dolls that connect all of the main characters are given voices to understand so much of the history.
Of course, the United States government, white Christian patriarchy, and many evil institutions were horrible tertiary characters that invaded all parts of the novel.
The character development was thorough, but not overdone. It was perfection.
Storyline: 5.0 stars
The storyline goes backward in time to end in the recent present. The three main characters each have a doll that is an integral part of their lives and binds them together. Without the dolls as the main fabric of the story, it would not have been as rich and meaningful.
Sissy, the daughter, was a young child during the American Indian Movement and was born off of the reservation. Lillian, the mother, was born on the reservation and attended Indian Boarding schools closer to home which helped spur her activism for her people. Cora, the grandmother, was born during the time of the murder of Native Americans for their land and when children were forced to attend Indian Boarding schools far away from home.
The main locations were Chicago, North/South Dakota, Eastern Pennsylvania, and Minnesota.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
I had no idea that there were so many Indian Boarding schools. I need to research if there are any locally here in California.
Unfortunately, California did not avoid having its own horrors. We had the legacy of the mission system which enslaved the Native Americans and forced them to convert to Christianity.
I am not sure which was worse.
Book cover: 4.0 stars
Beautiful
Book title: 5.0 stars
It is exactly what the dolls represented
Gut feeling: 3.5 stars
I knew very little of Native American history. Now I want to read and learn more and not the whitewashed history.
Suggestions:
A glossary of the Native American words used. I could figure out more of it, from context but it would have been a nice touch.
HIGHLY RECOMMEND
BOOK INFORMATION
A Council of Dolls by Mona Susan Power
304 pages
This was a Kindle ARC from Book Club Girls via NetGalley
Release date of 08/08/2022
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Tuesday, August 1, 2023
July 2023 Reading Wrap-up
Hi, everyone!!
This was an AWESOME book month! But my
reading has slowed down a bit as I have been doing some great television
bingeing hiding from the heat and humidity!! Currently, I am bingeing NYPD Blue
– I love police dramas! Any suggestions for me!?!
Okay, so, this month AGAIN, I have another
contender for the best book of 2023!! It is How to Say Babylon by Safiya
Sinclair!
So now I have THREE books in the
running for the best book of 2023:
· Lady Tan’s Circle of Women by Lisa See (June)
· How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair (July)
Three months in a row with outstanding
books. For July, the majority of books were 4.5 stars!! I hope August is just as good with another 5-star
book!!
STATISTICS:
6 e-books; 1 audiobook
ARC (Advance Reader Copy): 1 e-book NetGalley link
Amazon Prime First Reads book: 1 e-book Amazon First Reads link
Library books: 4 e-books and 1
audiobook Los Angeles Public Library link
Audio listening time in July: 5 hours,
59 minutes
Pages read in July: 2217 pages
BOOK RATINGS with BOOK COVERS:
5.0 star books (1)
How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair - Review HERE
4.5 star books (5)
The
Midford Affair
by Marie Benedict - Review HERE
The
Spectacular
by Fiona Davis - Review HERE
4.0 star books (0)
3.5 star book (0)
3.0 star books (1)
The Life That She Wanted by Anita Abriel - Review HERE
If you want to read my full review of any of Jul's books, there are individual review links under the book covers!
I look forward to reading and reviewing more great books for you in July!!
Have a Happy National Dog Month! I love almost every single
dog that I have ever met!!! 🐶
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
P.S. For a reminder about my book ratings, this link is HERE.
Thursday, July 27, 2023
REVIEW - Good Night, Irene
The three main characters are Irene (AKA Gator) and Dorothy (AKA Dot) plus the important impact of the war on all of the individual characters that they encounter.
REVIEW: 4.5 stars
Writing: 4.5 stars
The writing was incredibly lovely, but the storytelling was the part that really hooked me. Yes, it is rare to have a writer who can do both - writing and storytelling well. Luis Alberto Urrea does both tasks magnificently.
I really wanted more of the stories of the young women of the Clubmobiles. That is also another sign of a well-written novel - I want more!
Character development: 4.5 stars
The character development was very strong. We knew the back stories of the two main characters as well as the lives that they lived during WWII while on and off duty. Also, the deep friendship between Irene and Dorothy was fully explored.
There was the additional primary character of the war which really made me feel that I was there with all five of my senses activated reading about the horrors. I know that war was Hell, but this novel really made me feel it!
The secondary characters were also interesting and developed as well as secondary characters should be. Not overdone, but just right!
Storyline: 4.5 stars
This historical fiction novel really laid out all that the young ladies in the Clubmobiles had to endure from getting to Washington D.C. to Liverpool to mainland Europe during WWII. I had not considered some of the horrors that they had to endure on their journies to serve the servicemen of our country and the Allies.
The storyline had a lot of twists and turns. I had no clue how the story would end. It was a surprise ending that had me guessing until almost the very end!
Book cover: 4.0 stars
I think that there was a lot of opportunity for the cover of this novel to be so much more!
Book title: 5.0 stars
Perfection!!
Gut feeling: 4.0 stars
I had no clue as to how I would feel about this novel. But, I knew that Jamie Ford would not lead me astray!
Suggestions:
A map of where the women of the ARC Clubmobiles traveled would have been interesting if it was even possible.
Highly RECOMMEND
INFORMATION/LINKS
Good Night, Irene by Luis Alberto Urrea
465 pages
4 days to read it (I could not put it down)
Read as an ebook from the library
Release date of 05/30/2023
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Tuesday, July 25, 2023
Monday, July 24, 2023
Likewise
Okay, so I have had a Likewise account for a LONG time and completely forgot about it! It is a website and phone app that will tell you what you SHOULD like based on what you HAVE liked. It is for books, television, and podcasts.
I just uploaded my Goodreads list. I'll check it more thoroughly in a week or so as I also want to add my television favorites. It will be interesting to see what it comes up with for me!!
If you are interested, the link is: Likewise.
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
My next read is...
Sunday, July 23, 2023
REVIEW - The Life She Wanted
OVERVIEW
The main character is Pandora Carmichael who is the daughter of a tennis pro living on an estate in the Hudson Valley. She is "rich adjacent" not coming from wealth herself. She grows up among the uber-wealthy in the area and it is her life story that we uncover.
REVIEW: 3.5 stars
Writing: 3.0 stars
The writing was just okay for me. The writing just wasn't beautiful enough for me. It may partly be due to the recent book hangovers I have from some exceptional novels recently!
Character development: 3.0 stars
The character development was the weakest part of this novel. The only real character was Pandora Carmichael. Her character got weaker as the book progressed and I really disliked her by the end. There was a whole cast of characters but nothing was really learned about any of them in any great detail. There was a big plot twist that bothered me as it just didn't seem to belong in this story.
Storyline: 3.0 stars
It started out interestingly as a rags-to-riches storyline, but it went all over the place. The ending did not do it for me.
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Gorgeous!
Book title: 5.0 stars
The title was perfect!
Gut feeling: 4.0 stars
I was disappointed as the book wasn't as strong as I expected.
Suggestions:
A name index as there were so many characters and places mentioned.
RECOMMEND
INFORMATION/LINKS
The Life She Wanted by Anita Abriel
287 pages
3 days to read it (very easy read)
Read as an Amazon Prime First Reads
Release date of 07/01/2023
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜