What I Read On My Summer Vacation

I took a month off from posting just to give myself a break. But I’m back now and looking forward to sharing again! I’ve been having a great reading summer even if the weather hasn’t been the best for reading outside. Reading in the AC is good too.

Here are the best of the best, my 4 and 5 star reads from the July 2025. My theme seems to be books that are sad but hopeful.

The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver - My son read this for his freshman English class and I’ve been meaning to read it since. (He’s a senior now 🤷‍♀️)

I loved it. It touches on a lot of sad topics, but with a lot of hope.

The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters - Have you read this book yet? It‘s been on my list since it came out and I finally read it this weekend. It‘s so sad and happy all at the same time.

Woodworking by Emily St James - I’ll add my praise to that of other reviewers. Every time this verged on cheesy or over the top St James brought it back to the likable but flawed characters. I loved it.

A Tortoise For The Queen of Tonga by Julia Whitty - Finally got to this book of short stories after buying it for #ReadingOceania last year. Only the first story took place in Tonga, but I enjoyed all of them. They were about different things but I liked how they embraced nature and took place in unique locations.

Death of the Author by Nnedi Okorafor - This one started as a low pick for me- story within a story very rarely is my thing. I have a very hard time stopping myself from skimming over those parts. The ending though, if I understood it correctly, blew me away.

The Hungry Tide by Amitav Ghosh - This novel revolved around several lives in the Sundarbans - river islands on the border of India and Bangladesh. There’s a scientist studying freshwater dolphins, the prodigal nephew returning for the first time since he was sent as a punishment as a child, the young family struggling with expectations, and the hospital administrator quietly living her life as the unsung hero among those doing big things. The description of the area made me want to get in a boat and sail there right away. This is a slow start but I’m really glad I stuck with it.

The Favorites by Layne Fargo - The drama upon drama in this book made it perfect summer reading for me. I think ice skating/Olympics fans will enjoy this one.

That’s all for this month! I’m looking forward to getting back into the swing of things with you all!

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On My Nightstand May 18, 2024

It’s another busy weekend! Prom tonight, soccer tomorrow, and prep for a week of end of year parties and banquets. Then Friday my son turns 16, and early Saturday morning we leave for a graduation party in Massachusetts. It’s an eight hour drive, but I wouldn’t miss it! (Plus that’s 16 hours of audiobooks.)

Have a great week!

Quote of the week

Edwin might have clung to England a little longer, but he holds secretly radical views which emerged unexpectedly at a dinner party, thus speeding up his fate.
— Sea of Tranquility of Emily St. John Mandel

What I’m Reading This Week

On Kindle - The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin - I didn’t get very far with this last week, but this is the week! I’m hoping for a lot of long nights on my porch with this one.

On Paper - Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel - I’ve been loving diving into her books this month with the #AuthorAMonth group on Litsy. I put this one off a few days because I didn’t want to be done with my little project, but now’s the time.

On Audio- I need to start The River We Remember by William Kent Krueger before it disappears from Everand again.

This post is linked to The Sunday Post on Caffeinated Reviewer.

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