- December 19, 2018

When Einstein Walked with Gödel: Excursions to the Edge of Thought
Jim Holt
For the past few years, I’ve been happily reading books about physics, written by physicists for the general public. Many of the authors, such as Brian Greene, Michio Kaku and Carlo Rovelli, are such good writers that they can fool you into thinking you ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

Strange Star
Emma Carroll
I have been reading children’s authors lately. I have been so impressed with the issues they take on to help children see and hear the world, both the positive and not-so-positive. Issues like bullying, or dealing with a disability, or nutrition and growing vegetables, or learning to write computer language or how to ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

Promise
Minrose Gwin
The 1936 Tupelo-Gainesville tornado outbreak is one of the deadliest ever recorded in U.S. history. Minrose Gwin’s 2018 historical novel, Promise, is about this dangerous F5 tornado that hit Tupelo, Mississippi and surrounding areas, without warning, causing wide-spread devastation during the 16-hour rampage which resulted in the deaths of 454 people and ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

The Trouble with Goats and Sheep
Joanna Cannon
When I started this book, I told a colleague that I was predisposed to dislike it because the first few chapters are told from the perspective of 10-year-old Grace. Too charming for me, I thought.
I stuck with it though, and I am glad. There are ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

One Goal: A Coach, A Team, and the Game that Brought A Divided Town Together
Amy Bass
From Kirkus Reviews:
United by a common dream, high school soccer players overcome racism in a town in Maine.
Lewiston was once a nearly all-white mill town on the verge of economic collapse. Then hundreds of Somali refugees poured into the ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

The Woman in the Window
A.J. Finn
One word of advice if you pick up A.J. Finn’s The Woman in the Window: be prepared to clear your schedule. Once you get into the story, you won’t be able to walk away.
Anna Fox, once a child-psychologist who seemed to have it all, is suffering from ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

The Paris Architect
Charles Befoure
During the French Occupation, Lucien Bernard, a gifted, ambitious, unemployed, 35-year-old Parisian architect, despite his best attempts to remain uninvolved in the war, finds himself living a dangerously duplicitous life, engaged to design arsenals for the Reich, and on the other hand, accepting secret commissions by a prospective wealthy client who intends ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

The Immortalists
Chloe Benjamin
Here’s the premise of this story: in 1969, four siblings between the ages of seven and 14 summon up the courage to take a trip from their New York City apartment to visit a psychic in lower Manhattan. Her ability, she claims, is that she can tell people the date of ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

10 Things I Can See From Here
by Carrie Mac
Maeve is utterly sick and disgusted with people’s banal response to her anxiety. She’s heard it all. “Just relax!” they say. “Calm down! Smile! It will all be okay!” Blah, blah, blah. Sure, she thinks, when there are a million ...
Read more… - December 19, 2018

My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry
Fredrik Backman
After her grandmother dies, eight-year-old Elsa is entrusted to deliver a batch of letters to people her grandmother had somehow wronged in life. While it sounds simple enough, the story that Backman constructs around this basic plot line is rich with details and quite entertaining. ...
Read more…