Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Reviews of physical books, ebooks, and audiobooks personally read or listened to by me! booksbydorothea - Instagram; booksbydorothea - Threads; Books by Dorothea - Goodreads
The Haunting of Hecate Cavendish by Paula Brackston (ebook)
OVERVIEW
This is the first book that I have read by Paula Brackston. Most of her earlier books are about witches which makes the comparison to Alice Hoffman. But I don't see the comparison at all.
This book is a gothic mystery set in Victorian England. It is a hard book to qualify as it has mysterious beasts, paranormal activity, Greek mythology, and some romance. Due to the paranormal subject matter, it may be a book that only some enjoy or are interested in reading.
OVERALL REVIEW: 4.5 stars
Writing: 4.0 stars
The novel has dense, deep, and detailed writing which goes along with the Victorian period. It was a meaty novel with unfamiliar British terms and it took me a few chapters to get into it. I enjoyed it and am looking forward to more books in this series.
Character development: 4.5 stars
The primary character is Hecate (assistant librarian at the Hereford Cathedral). Hecate is a very unusual woman who works outside the home during the rigid Victorian social class time. I adore the Hecate character and cannot wait to see what she will do in the rest of this series!
The secondary characters are Edward (Hecate's father and former archaeologist), Beatrice (Hecate's mother), Charlie (Hecate's brother), and other friends of the family and people working at the cathedral.
The tertiary characters are paranormal activity characters. They play a huge role in the storyline and the mystery.
Storyline: 4.5 stars
The storyline begins with Hecate working as the assistant librarian when paranormal activity begins and she confides in her father for guidance and advice. An other-worldly event occurs at the cathedral and then the mystery needs solving (I have to be careful not to give anything away).
The main location was Herefordshire, England.
Memorable/Informative: 4.5 stars
This novel is about preserving our memories through books and how almost anything can be learned through libraries.
This novel was also the book that broke my reading slump. It was my first book read in almost a month.
Book cover: 5.0 stars
Gorgeous.
Book title: 4.5 stars
Excellent.
STRONG recommend
BOOK INFORMATION
NetGalley ARC (ebook)
The Haunting of Hecate Cavendish by Paula Brackston
352 pages
St. Martin's Press
Release date of 07/23/2024
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
With this update (05/17/2024), this is the new rating system terminology I will use to review books in the future. There are some wording differences, but the star ratings are the same.
I have said this before, but I wish Goodreads had ½ stars, but unfortunately, they do not. In my reviews on Goodreads, NetGalley, and Books by Dorothea; I will continue to review with ½ stars.
Here is the breakdown of my ratings and reviews:
5-stars "HIGHLY RECOMMEND"
These are the best of the best! These are the books that I
cannot and will not stop recommending! They have moved me deeply and are books
that I will think about and remember forever. Also, these are the books that I
normally buy for my library and are books that I will reread.
4.5-stars "STRONG RECOMMEND"
They are excellent books. They are enjoyable, but these
books didn't reach into my soul like the 5-star books. These are outstanding books!
4-stars "DEFINITE RECOMMEND”
These are great books. Please, don't get me wrong, they are
worth reading! I recommend them as I thoroughly enjoyed them.
3.5-stars "RECOMMEND”
They are good books. I enjoyed them, but many of these
books are more "fast food" reading. Interestingly, many of them are books
in very long series.
3-stars "LUKEWARM RECOMMEND”
These books are okay but just okay. I enjoyed the book, but
it wasn't memorable to me. Something missed the mark - plot line, character
development, or writing.
2-stars or 1-star "DNF" (Did
Not Finish)
I do not review these books, period. These are books that I
“DNF” or books that were not good at all. I do not believe in leaving strictly negative
reviews. Instead, I don't review the book.
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
P.S. I was in a book slump for about two weeks due to family illness and not finding a book that I wanted to read. Sorry to be missing without an explanation!
Hi, everyone!
Well, this has been an interesting
month with only FIVE books read. It is what it is with my birthday AND everyone in my immediate family (including me) down with illness.
I am still on an audiobook quest for
a good biography or memoir to listen to for next month. Most audiobooks seem to come
in big drops, and I haven’t found one that interests me! Any suggestions???
I learned something about myself this month - I need to continually remind myself it is fine to DNF (Did Not Finish) a book. I kept reading a book for almost two weeks and read 26% of the book, but it wasn’t for me. I know that there are a lot of other books out there but for some reason, I really wanted to like this book.
April's overall scores improved
over March with a score of 4.0 stars. I had five books "stair step" from 5.0 down
to 3.0 stars which is a first. Thankfully, I did have a standout book!
2nd ANNUAL “booksbydorothea”
BEST BOOKS OF 2024:
All
We Were Promised
by Ashton Lattimore (January) 5 stars
Miss
Morgan's Book Brigade
by Janet Skeslien Charles (February) 5 stars
The
Lost Story
by Meg Shaffer (March) 5 stars
How To Read A Book by Monica Wood (April) 5 stars
GOODREADS READING GOAL:
For 2024, my goal will be 100
from the very start!!! As of 04/30/2024, I have read 38 books, or 38% of my
goal.
APRIL 2024 STATISTICS:
5 total books
4 e-books; 1 audiobook; 0
physical books
2 books were an ARC
(Advance Reader Copy)
2 books were library books
0 books were purchased
1 book was an Amazon First
Reads
1 book was a Book Club
Girl
Audio listening time in April:
8 hours, 44 minutes
Pages read in April:
1,074 pages
Average review rating: 4.00
stars
APRIL BOOK RATINGS with BOOK COVERS:
5.0-star book (1)
4.5-star book (1)
4.0-star book (1)
3.5-star book (1)
3.0-star book (1)
If you want to read my full review of
any of these books, there are individual review posts for each ebook or
audiobook next to the name and author of the book. Click on the specific
book link to get to that book review!!
Happy reading!
Dorothea 💜
P.S. For more information
about my book ratings, you can find out more HERE.
I will not be finishing this book, unfortunately. I have read 26% of this book and have tried to read it for almost two weeks. This is a situation of trying to make a book work when I just should have let it go a week ago!
The book is dense, overly descriptive, and hasn't had anything happen in over 1/4 of the book.
OVERVIEW
Writing: 4.0 stars
There is no doubt that Christine is a strong, powerful, and technical writer. But, this was not a book where she could poetically rhapsodize in similes and metaphors. It was raw, shocking, and real.
The best part of Christine's writing is that she occasionally speaks in "surf talk" (as she is a hardcore surfer) and uses many phrases that are second nature to me as a Southern California native. These surfing phrases along with her salty language (which I loved and was so appropriate) made me love her.
Narration: 3.5 stars
Christine has a very distinct voice. She is not a professional narrator, but she told her story in her own words which I prefer in memoirs. Her voice is a little monotone and non-emotional which may be what she needed to do to narrate her story.
Character Arc: 4.0 stars
She talks about her life before and after the assault (very little of the assault is talked about) and discovers Brett's nomination to the Supreme Court nomination while on a beach in Santa Cruz. Christine agonizes over testifying but ultimately is forced to testify as her name is revealed in the media. She and her family's lives were upended before, during, and after the testimony including physical security for more than a year. The vitriol she received on social media, in the press, and in letters written to her is unconscionable.
I really loved that she wrote this book for the letter writers to her - those who has similar and/or worse stories to tell.
She writes the book in a very chronological manner which flows very nicely for the reader.
Memorable: 4.0 stars
Christine (and Anita Hill) are exactly why women do not come forward after their sexual harassment, assaults, or molestations. It is wrong.
After listening to Christine's book, I realized that I was also sexually assaulted in high school. It was the same type of situation with alcohol involved and I dismissed my feelings as overreacting. I think that there are many of us out there who have suppressed these experiences.
Entertaining: 4.0 stars
It was not entertaining, but enlightening.
Book cover: 4.0 stars
Very pretty.
Book title: 4.0 stars
So appropriate!
DEFINITE recommend
STATISTICS
Release date of 03/19/2024
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
How To Read A Book by Monica Wood (ebook)
This is the first book that I have read by Monica Wood. Now, I want to read all of her previous books as I loved this book so much!
This book is adult contemporary fiction and is a departure from my favorite genre of historical fiction. This novel had it all - good writing, good storytelling, and good characters. All that one would want in any novel was in this book!
OVERALL REVIEW: 5.0 stars
Writing: 5.0 stars
The novel is told in the first person by the three main characters. I thoroughly enjoyed how Monica wrote in each character's voice. It was perfection!
Her writing is easy to read, but meaty with description and important details. Even the end notes were well-written!
Character development: 5.0 stars
The three main characters are Violet (parolee); Harriet (prison volunteer); and Frank (husband of Violet's victim). They could not be more different, but they are so similar as they need each other.
The secondary characters are Mischa (Violet's boss); Sophie (Harriet's niece); and Kristy (Frank's daughter). These secondary characters allow the three separate lives to blend and become one.
The tertiary characters are the prison inmates and correction officials; the lab workers and birds; the prison Book Club; and friends and family members.
Storyline: 5.0 stars
The storyline, at first, was unbelievable to me. But after I thought about it, this story could only happen in a beautiful place like Maine or someplace similar.
The storyline is about Violet who makes a mistake and is sent to prison. While in prison, she discovers books through a book club led by prison volunteer, Harriet. Harriet and Violet accidentally meet at a bookstore where Frank happens to be working. Then the story is off to the race.
The main location was Maine.
Memorable/Informative: 5.0 stars
This novel is all about how books are important in our lives. The title says it all by stating "How" to read a book. That is what it all boils down to in life with each of us being the book of our own life. "How" we read our books is what makes our life ours.
Book cover: 4.5 stars
Nice.
Book title: 5.0 stars
So perfect!
HIGHEST recommendation
BOOK INFORMATION
Book Club Girl via NetGalley ARC (ebook)
How To Read A Book by Monica Wood
283 pages
Mariner Books
Release date of 05/07/2024
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜
This is the third book by Denny S. Bryce that I have read. She discovers fascinating historical characters and writes amazing historical fiction about their lives. I always learn something new with each book that I read by this author.
This book made me question how little race has been addressed in this country. It is a mix of historical, cultural, ethnic, and religious issues with so much complexity and a need for common sense. For instance, I recently discovered that the Census Bureau finally created a new race category for Middle Eastern/North African folks. This was an easy fix to make everyone feel welcome and a part of our country.
OVERALL REVIEW: 4.5 stars
Writing: 4.5 stars
Denny can write beautifully. Her writing is easy to read, yet nicely descriptive without getting bogged down in SAT words! Denny did include some of the slang of the period and different language usage of the time which was great!
Character development: 4.5 stars
The two main characters, Alice Jones (wife) and Kip Rhinelander (husband) are married even with the challenges of being from different races and socio-economic backgrounds.
The secondary characters are the two families - the Jones family is welcoming to the marriage and Kip; however, the Rhinelander family is vehemently opposed to the marriage and fights the marriage from the beginning.
The most difficult character to qualify and quantify is race in this novel.
Storyline: 4.5 stars
The storyline is only something that could happen in the USA. Two people of two different races meet and fall in love when they are from radically different parts of society.
The novel is told in two different periods during the 1920s and 1940s with an epilogue in the 1980s. It was a great way to tell the story with Alice talking about her life to her niece.
The main location was New York City with a little Connecticut.
Memorable/Informative: 3.5 stars
Obviously, race is a piece of this story. Unfortunately, I don't understand why the Jones family didn't think that the father and daughters were Black (used as Colored or Negro during the period and in the book). Was it because race was not as much of an issue in England, where the parents emigrated, versus the USA?
Book cover: 4.5 stars
So very pretty.
Book title: 5.0 stars
Exactly on point.
HIGHLY recommend
BOOK INFORMATION
NetGalley ARC (ebook)
The Trial of Mrs. Rhinelander by Denny S. Bryce
352 pages
Kensington Books
Release date of 07/23/2024
INFORMATIONAL LINKS
Happy reading,
Dorothea 💜