Reviews
All reviews are subject to the library's Patron-Generated Content policy.
Afro Sheen : how I revolutionized an industry with the Golden Ru | Posted by JoanL on Sunday, June 8, 2025 | At 97 years old, George E. Johnson has written an inspiring memoir about his success at founding the Johnson Products Company. And I am so glad that he did. The book is filled with his coming of age story how without a formal education, he pushed through racial barriers to achieve success. Starting out by working odd jobs as a teenager, he learned that practicing the Golden Rule was the key to growing his multi-million dollar business. His impact is is inspiring and captivating as he highlights how courage and perseverance can create a legacy. |
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33 Place Brugmann | Posted by JoanL on Thursday, April 24, 2025 | Set in Brussels, the story revolves around the inhabitants of a Beaux Arts apartment building in the early years of the Nazi occupation. In this debut novel, Alice Austen builds her unique cast of characters with care and reverence. Having lived in the building at one point in her life, neighbors shared stories of what had gone on during the years of the occupation. She listened as they told stories of this small community, trying to survive one of the darkest times in history. Art student Charlotte who lives in 4L with her father who is a prominent architect, is a quiet observer of people. Julien Raphael in 4R, lives with his family of art collectors, and with Charlotte, creates films of the world around them. They, as well as the others, are confronted with cruel choices of loyalty and survival. Ann Patchett calls 33 Place Brugmann "Beautiful and deeply " engaging, and I completely agree. |
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The Serviceberry: abundance and reciprocity in the natural world | Posted by JoanL on Friday, February 21, 2025 | As in her bestseller "Braiding Sweetgrass" Robin Wall Kimmerer gently explains the ethic of reciprocity, interconnectedness and generosity. As a member of the Citizen of Potawatomi Nation she draws on the Indigenous belief that we are partners with nature. “Serviceberries show us another model, one based upon reciprocity, where wealth comes from the quality of your relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.” The serviceberry shows us the idea of "gift economies" in which wealth is not something to be hoarded, but used to strengthen relationships in order to survive. We pick the abundant fruit, and give back by planting a tree, or baking a pie to gift to a neighbor. The birds eat the berries, and leave the seeds for more trees to prosper. Gratitude, reciprocity and community are at the core of her essays, and are reminders that wealth comes from the quality of your relationships. |
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From his award winning book… | Posted by JoanL on Tuesday, January 14, 2025 | From his award winning book This is Happiness, Niall Williams returns to the fictional village of Faha, in West Ireland. The story follows Dr. Jack Troy, who like his father in taking care of the townspeople, sets himself apart and lives a more solitary life alongside his daughter Ronnie who has moved home. As Advent and Christmas approach a child appears in their lives and upends their quiet existence.
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There Are Rivers in the Sky | Posted by JoanL on Tuesday, November 19, 2024 | Water, a drop to be exact, begins this captivating novel. Elif Shafak takes us from the River Tigress to the Thames, from Mesopotamia to the present. She ties together the importance of water in so many lives throughout the centuries. It begins with King Ashurbanipal in the ancient kingdom of Nineveh, then moves onto a baby named Arthur, born in the slums along the Thames in 1840's London. Modern day stories intertwine with ancient tales with Narin, a young Yazidi girl in Turkey as well as Zaleekah a professor in London. These characters all seem to be struggling with their past as well as their futures, but each one has a relationship to the waterways that surround them. There are Rivers in the Sky intricately weaves together the way water connects us all through our histories and memories. And, it all begins with one drop. If you love a grand, epic tale that spans centuries, you will love this book. I certainly did. |
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Tell Me Everything | Posted by JoanL on Monday, September 16, 2024 | Elizabeth Strout is back with another novel that delves into the beloved characters we have been introduced to before. Crosby, Maine is the backdrop of a murder investigation. Bob Burgess begins to work on the defense of the accused, who happens top have a friendship with Lucy Barton, and Olive Kitteridge shows up as well. As she has done in the past, Strout brilliantly weaves all of her characters into the story showing us how interconnected we are in our small communities, and how we yearn for the same connections. The NY Times puts it best "The tie that binds all of Strout’s characters is their shared yearning, not for a reprieve from their suffering but for just one person to really see it — for the solace and dignity of acknowledgment" Tell Me Everything is another beautifully written novel by one of our greatest artists. |
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Greta and Valdin | Posted by JoanL on Monday, July 1, 2024 | A charming fast paced story about a brother and sister as they navigate queerness, the ups and downs of searching for love, as well as their unique Maaori-Russian-Catalonian family. Valdin, still reeling from a break-up finds himself in South America confronting feelings he tried to ignore. Greta, missing her brother, is juggling work, unrequited love and all the family dramas, is struggling to finish a Masters thesis and find her way in the world. Each character, the siblings and the whole extended family are quirky, and endearing. You find yourself cheering for everyone to get what they want and need. |
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North Woods | Posted by JoanL on Monday, April 15, 2024 | This is one of the most unusual, complex books I have read in a long time, and I loved it! It takes place in Western Massachusetts as it follows a plot of land, and a home through several centuries of those who have inhabited this house. The author takes us from the the 1600's to the present, with nature writing, intricate characters, plot twists, animal instincts, and even ghosts. At times is is lovely, and at times it is brutal, but it is astounding. As a doctor and an author, Daniel Mason has become a very successful historical novelists. |
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The Vaster Wilds | Posted by JoanL on Saturday, December 23, 2023 | In early 17th century New England, reminiscent of Jamestown, Va., a young servant girl escapes the fort where others are starving, freezing and suffering from smallpox. Her journey in near solitude finds her on a daily quest for simple survival. She knows if she stays it will kill her, so choosing an unknown path to Canada is her only hope. Catching salmon, eating grubs, roasting any small animal she can find, picking berries and roots give a respite in her constant quest to live another day. Details of her bitter cold, her hunger, and several dangerous threats explore the experience of how a human body can survive in untamed nature. |
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Leonard and Hungry Paul | Posted by JoanL on Saturday, November 4, 2023 | I tend to use the term "Breezy Fiction" for books that are well written, have a good story line and characters, but are also rather charming, Leonard and Hungry Paul is one of those books.. The title characters, both men in their 30's are charming and thoughtful friends. They are content with the ordinariness of their lives. Leonard writes children's encyclopedias, and Hungry Paul volunteers in the community. Spending time with their families, and meeting up to play board games seems to be enough for them, until it isn't. When Leonard's loneliness is too much and he meets someone at work, and Hungry Paul's life starts to expand, their status quo suddenly shifts. There are colorful relatives and friends who fill the pages as we see the quiet changes of these simple lives. This debut novel by Ronan Hession is heartwarming, and thoughtful and will find you cheering the quiet bravery of these two friends as they test the waters of a grown up life. |