Mark Twain by Ron Chernow #BookReview #HistoricalBiographies

Mark Twain by Ron Chernow

Amazon Charts #5 this week

Book Blurb:

Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Ron Chernow illuminates the full, fascinating, and complex life of the writer long celebrated as the father of American literature, Mark Twain

Before he was Mark Twain, he was Samuel Langhorne Clemens. Born in 1835, the man who would become America’s first, and most influential, literary celebrity spent his childhood dreaming of piloting steamboats on the Mississippi. But when the Civil War interrupted his career on the river, the young Twain went west to the Nevada Territory and accepted a job at a local newspaper, writing dispatches that attracted attention for their brashness and humor. It wasn’t long before the former steamboat pilot from Missouri was recognized across the country for his literary brilliance, writing under a pen name that he would immortalize.

In this richly nuanced portrait of Mark Twain, acclaimed biographer Ron Chernow brings his considerable powers to bear on a man who shamelessly sought fame and fortune, and crafted his persona with meticulous care. After establishing himself as a journalist, satirist, and lecturer, he eventually settled in Hartford with his wife and three daughters, where he went on to write The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. He threw himself into the hurly-burly of American culture, and emerged as the nation’s most notable political pundit. At the same time, his madcap business ventures eventually bankrupted him; to economize, Twain and his family spent nine eventful years in exile in Europe. He suffered the death of his wife and two daughters, and the last stage of his life was marked by heartache, political crusades, and eccentric behavior that sometimes obscured darker forces at play.

Drawing on Twain’s bountiful archives, including thousands of letters and hundreds of unpublished manuscripts, Chernow masterfully captures the man whose career reflected the country’s westward expansion, industrialization, and foreign wars, and who was the most important white author of his generation to grapple so fully with the legacy of slavery. Today, more than one hundred years after his death, Twain’s writing continues to be read, debated, and quoted. In this brilliant work of scholarship, a moving tribute to the writer’s talent and humanity, Chernow reveals the magnificent and often maddening life of one of the most original characters in American history.

His Review:

Growing up in Hannibal, Missouri, along the banks of the Mississippi River, was a perfect environment for a dreamer like Samuel Clemens. His love for the river grew to the point where he figured his lifelong dream was to be a riverboat captain. He apprenticed under a captain who groomed him to command the barges down the mighty river. The young Samuel was a romantic dreamer and the job was perfect.

The cry of “Gold, Gold” found in the American River east of Sacramento drew him west and away from his boyhood home. He was always looking for the next big strike to take him away from life’s worries and into a princely lifestyle. He married a beautiful woman after a number of proposals and she was perfect for his needs. She also came with a substantial dowry and helped smooth his business ups and downs.

Mark Twain by Ron ChernowHe worked in Carson City, Nevada, as one of the print setters for the local paper and soon dreamed of a machine that could automate the process. A good portion of his and his wife’s fortunes disappeared down that rat hole of a dream. He possessed a natural wit and excellent speaking skills and went on lecture tours away from his wife and daughters.

Sam had a caustic side and soon turned on people who did not perform as promised and could be extremely acerbic. Chasing the dream of an automated typesetting machine soon resulted in near bankruptcy. Speaking tours saved him and the family from the poor house. A late 19th century depression nearly caused the family to be completely destitute. Living in high style both in the U.S. and abroad was taking every cent they had.

This book describes a life of true love, chasing dreams, and living on the edge. It is mesmerizing and difficult to put down. The major drawback is the length of the book as it gets into aggravating minutiae with their offspring, relationships, and circumstances. Set aside a few weeks if you choose to read it. I tried. Really tried. But finally gave it up at approximately 46%. DNF.

C E WilliamsWe listened to the audiobook by this author about the life of George Washington on a trip, weighing in at almost 42 hours. If you love digging into biographies, the longer the better, and going back again and again to resume with something akin to an old friend, you may be able to hang in longer than I. Many people did. 4 stars – CE Williams

Many thanks to our local library for providing me with the opportunity to read and review this book (and to renew it several times). Any opinion expressed here is my own.

Rosepoint Publishing: Four Stars Four Stars

 

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Book Details:

Genre: 19th Century World History, Historical Biographies, Author Biographies
Publisher: Penguin Press
ISBN-13: 978-0525561736
ASIN: B0DH1VPLHY
Print Length: 1196 pages
Publication Date: May 13, 2025
Source: Local Library

Title Link(s):

Amazon-US  |  Amazon-UK   |   Barnes & Noble  |  Kobo

 

Ron Chernow - authorThe Author: Ron Chernow won the National Book Award in 1990 for his first book, The House of Morgan, and his second book, The Warburgs, won the Eccles Prize as the Best Business Book of 1993. His biography of John D. Rockefeller, Sr., Titan, was a national bestseller and a National Book Critics Circle Award finalist.

 

 

 

©2025 CE Williams – V Williams

Happiness is a reading buddy

Solid Gold Murder by Ellen Byron #AudiobookReview #cozymystery

Solid Gold Murder by Ellen Byron

Golden Motel Mystery #2

Book Blurb:

Dee Stern’s Golden Motel-of-the-Mountains promises a tranquil getaway for outdoor lovers in the scenic Californian village of Foundgold. But when Dee accidentally triggers a modern gold rush, she suddenly turns her peaceful retreat into a hotspot for mayhem and murder . . .

With the summer season looming, former Hollywood sitcom writer Dee Stern has one small goal—scrubbing her motel’s unflattering moniker as the “Murder Motel.” Dee and ex-husband-turned-business-partner Jeff Cornetta are excited to introduce a family-friendly panning activity complete with fool’s gold just in time for the peak tourist months. Except neither could have anticipated the discovery of a real gold nugget or the ensuing social media frenzy. In a flash, the viral sensation draws grizzled prospectors, wide-eyed adventurers, and trend-chasing thrill seekers to the abandoned mines scattered around the woods . . .

The instant popularity proves great for business, but it also attracts a group of out-of-touch Silicon Valley techies with dreams of striking it rich—again. Dee finds herself particularly annoyed by the insufferably smug Sylvan Burr, a retired CEO who sold his startup before age 30 and won’t let anyone forget it. But things take a sinister turn when Sylvan meets a grim fate at the bottom of a mineshaft, leaving Dee at the center of a deadly mystery that could end her days as a motelier. And while Sylvan had plenty of enemies, Dee suddenly faces adversaries rooting against her own success. Now, with her life and the future of the Golden Motel hanging by a thread, Dee must unearth a minefield of suspects and outwit a greedy killer before she finally digs herself too deep . . .

My Review:

Another new series in which I managed to pick up in Book 2, but read it like a standalone. In this installment, Dee and ex-husband Jeff motel partner have successfully concluded their brainstorming session with the idea of having a gold panning experience.

Touted as a family-friendly experience and expecting to salt the sluice with some fool’s gold for fun, their brilliant idea turns viral when a real gold nugget is discovered.

Solid Gold Murder by Ellen ByronHoping the whole panning idea would smother the nickname of “Murder Motel,” the place suddenly swarmed with paying motel guests also attracting the wrong kind of tourists. When one is found dead, it definitely doesn’t help their rep. Especially when the death is obviously not a natural one.

Some of her guests are serious gold hunters, while others just want to soak up the tree-dotted mountainscape, the clear pine air, the quaint tiny town of Foundgold and Goldgone. Goodness, a lovely cross-section of characters, including Bud the bear, and an old hound dog named Nugget, left behind by the late owner.

It’s an easy, laid back mystery, as much character driven as mystery plot, the characters and setting accounting for much of the charm of the book, particularly the conversations, dialogue between the exes. There are bits of humor interwoven through the plot. Of course, the deceased was a nasty guy with lots of people who’d want to see him at the bottom of an abandoned mine and not moving.

There are twists and turns and lots of theories bantered around, all designed to throw you off the trail. Enjoyable little cozy escape from the everyday, and includes the requisite denouement you may not have seen coming.

Many thanks to the publisher and my local library for providing me with the opportunity to listen to and review this book. The thoughts expressed here are my own.

 

Rosepoint Publishing: Four Stars 4 stars

Book Details:

Genre: Amateur Sleuth Mysteries, Cozy Mysteries
Publisher:  Tantor Media
ASIN: B0DVMHQQ3L
Listening Length: 7 hrs 23 mins
Narrator: Amy Melissa Bentley
Publication Date: August 5, 2025
Source: Local Library (Audiobook Selections)
Title Links:   Amazon-US
Amazon-UK
Barnes & Noble
Kobo

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Ellen Byron - author
Ellen Byron – author

The Author: Ellen is the USA Today bestselling, award-winning author of the Vintage Cookbook Mysteries, Cajun Country Mysteries, and Catering Hall Mysteries (under the pen name Maria DiRico). Her mysteries have won multiple Agatha Awards for Best Contemporary Novel and Lefty Awards for Best Humorous Mystery Lefty awards from the Left Coast Crime conference. Bayou Book Thief, her first Vintage Cookbook Mystery, was also nominated for an Anthony award. A Very Woodsy Murder, debuting in July 2024, will be the first book in her new Golden Motel Mystery series, which is inspired by her former career as a sitcom writer.

Ellen’s TV credits include Wings, Just Shoot Me, and Fairly Odd Parents; she’s written over 200 magazine articles; her published plays include the award-winning Graceland and Asleep on the Wind. She is a native New Yorker who lives in Los Angeles and attributes her fascination with Louisiana to her college years at New Orleans’ Tulane University. She also worked as a cater-waiter for Martha Stewart, a credit she never tires of sharing. Have an early copy of Martha’s first book, ENTERTAINING? Ellen’s standing right next to her in the group shot.

©2025 V Williams

Happy Thursday

The River is Waiting by Wally Lamb #AudiobookReview #LiteraryFiction

The River is Waiting by Wally Lamb
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#1 Best Seller in Literary Fiction

Book Blurb:

AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
OPRAH’S BOOK CLUB PICK
A USA TODAY BESTSELLER

#1 New York Times bestselling author Wally Lamb, celebrated for two prior Oprah Book Club selections, returns with an exceptional third pick, a propulsive novel following a young father grappling with unbearable tragedy as he searches for hope, redemption, and the possibility of forgiveness.

Corby Ledbetter is struggling. New fatherhood, the loss of his job, and a growing secret addiction have thrown his marriage to his beloved Emily into a tailspin. And that’s before he causes the tragedy that tears the family apart. Sentenced to prison, Corby struggles to survive life on the inside, where he bears witness to frightful acts of brutality but also experiences small acts of kindness and elemental kinship with a prison librarian who sees his light and some of his fellow offenders, including a tender-hearted cellmate and a troubled teen desperate for a role model. Buoyed by them and by his mother’s enduring faith in him, Corby begins to transcend the boundaries of his confinement, sustained by his hope that mercy and reconciliation might still be possible. Can his crimes ever be forgiven by those he loves?

My Review:

I’ve read a number of Oprah’s Book Club picks before. Sometimes she’s wrong.

This isn’t one of them.

I’m not sure whether I should sob uncontrollably or be angry. But then who would receive the wrath? The main character, Corby Ledbetter, or “the system”?

This is a book that will rip at your heart—first at the tragic beginning to the novel, or how it all ends?

I’m torn. Should I feel sorry for Corby? No. I just can’t.

First, it’s an intensive, insightful look at the heart of a man thrust into a role he’d never conceived of performing—that of stay-at-home-dad of twins after the loss of his ego-cementing job. When it is increasingly obvious that employment won’t come back easily, he begins to deal with his anxiety and growing depression first with doctor-prescribed narcotics, then self-enhanced by an increasing demand for a hard liquor kicker.

It is the pills and booze, along with a neighbor’s innocent distraction on a morning out of routine, that cause a disastrous accident. One that he’ll not recover from, nor his wife forgive. Even as I could see what was coming and cried out, I could not change the plot.

The grief is crushing. The prison is a new brutal reality, cruel, desperate. The narrative eases the reader into merciless prison life and follows Corby as he learns to cope with prison life. The characters are given such intensity the scene can fill the reader with dread or heart-pounding blood pressure.

The writing is alternately filled with compassion and empathy while at the same time painting a picture of deeply flawed characters, each seeking to survive another day. The author presents the staff in humanity (as in the librarian) and inhumanity (as in the prison guards), juxtaposed against each other. There is no time to catch a breath—you don’t have that luxury.

Corby alternately blames others and himself. An authentic story of friendship, grief, love, and forgiveness. But can a heinous act ever truly be forgiven, whether accidental or deliberate?

My first book by this author—it was heavy and one that has sticking power. Did you read it? Did it continue to nag at you?

Many thanks to the publisher and my local library for providing me with the opportunity to listen to and review this book. The narrator does a great job emotionally delivering the novel. The thoughts expressed here are my own.

 

Rosepoint Publishing: Four point Five Stars 4.5 stars

Book Details:

Genre: Literary Fiction, Crime Thrillers
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
ASIN: B0DHLQ8WS7
Listening Length: 14 hrs 40 mins
Narrator: Jeremy Sisto
Publication Date: June 10, 2025
Source: Local Library (Audiobook Selections)
Title Links:   Amazon-US
Amazon-UK
Barnes & Noble
Kobo

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Wally Lamb - authorThe Author: Wally Lamb’s first two novels, She’s Come Undone (Simon & Schuster/Pocket, 1992) and I Know This Much Is True (HarperCollins/ReganBooks, 1998), were # 1 New York Times bestsellers, New York Times Notable Books of the Year, and featured titles of Oprah’s Book Club. I Know This Much Is True was a Book of the Month Club main selection and the June 1999 featured selection of the Bertelsman Book Club, the national book club of Germany. Between them, She’s Come Undone and I Know This Much Is True have been translated into eighteen languages. Lamb is also the editor of the nonfiction anthologies Couldn’t Keep It to Myself: Testimonies from Our Imprisoned Sisters (HarperCollins/ReganBooks, 2003) and I’ll Fly Away (HarperCollins, 2007), collections of autobiographical essays which evolved from a writing workshop Lamb facilitates at Connecticut’s York Correctional Institute, a maximum-security prison for women. He has served as a Connecticut Department of Corrections volunteer from 1999 to the present. Wally Lamb is a Connecticut native who holds Bachelors and Masters Degrees in teaching from the University of Connecticut and a Master of Fine Arts in Writing from Vermont College. Lamb was in the ninth year of his twenty-five-year career as a high school English teacher at his alma mater, the Norwich Free Academy, when he began to write fiction in 1981. He has also taught writing at the University of Connecticut, where he directed the English Department’s creative writing program. Wally Lamb has said of his fiction, “Although my characters’ lives don’t much resemble my own, what we share is that we are imperfect people seeking to become better people. I write fiction so that I can move beyond the boundaries and limitations of my own experiences and better understand the lives of others. That’s also why I teach. As challenging as it sometimes is to balance the two vocations, writing and teaching are, for me, intertwined.” Honors for Wally Lamb include: the Connecticut Center for the Book’s Lifetime Achievement Award, the Connecticut Bar Association’s Distinguished Public Service Award, the Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Award, the Connecticut Governor’s Arts Award, The National Institute of Business/Apple Computers “Thanks to Teachers” Award. Lamb has received Distinguished Alumni awards from Vermont College and the University of Connecticut. He was the 1999 recipient of the New England Book Award for fiction. I Know This Much Is True won the Friends of the Library USA Readers’ Choice Award for best novel of 1998, the result of a national poll, and the Kenneth Johnson Memorial Book Award, which honored the novel’s contribution to the anti-stigmatization of mental illness. She’s Come Undone was a 1992 “Top Ten” Book of the Year selection in People magazine and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award for Best First Novel of 1992. Wally Lamb’s third novel, The Hour I First Believed, explores chaos theory by interfacing several generations of a fictional Connecticut family with such nonfictional American events as the Civil War, the Columbine High School shootings of 1999, the Iraq War, and Hurricane Katrina. The book will be published by HarperCollins in November of 2008. Find Wally Lamb at Wally Lamb dot net.

Lamb lives in Connecticut with his wife, Christine, and they have three sons. [Goodreads]

©2025 V Williams

Have a great Week!
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Great Big Beautiful Life: Reese’s Book Club by Emily Henry #BookReview #TuesdayBookBlog

Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry

Amazon Charts #9 this week 

Book Blurb:

A REESE’S BOOK CLUB PICK ∙ AN INSTANT #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER ∙ Two writers compete for the chance to tell the larger-than-life story of a woman with more than a couple of plot twists up her sleeve in this dazzling and sweeping novel from Emily Henry.

As featured in The New York Times ∙ Rolling Stone ∙ People ∙ Good Morning America ∙ NPR ∙ Vogue ∙ The Cut ∙ USA Today ∙ Cosmopolitan ∙ Harper’s Bazaar ∙ Marie Claire ∙ Glamour ∙ ELLE ∙ E! Online ∙ The New York Post ∙ Bustle ∙ Reader’s Digest ∙ BBC ∙ PopSugar ∙ SheReads ∙ Paste ∙ and more!

Alice Scott is an eternal optimist still dreaming of her big writing break. Hayden Anderson is a Pulitzer-prize winning human thundercloud. And they’re both on balmy Little Crescent Island for the same reason: to write the biography of a woman no one has seen in years—or at least to meet with the octogenarian who claims to be the Margaret Ives. Tragic heiress, former tabloid princess, and daughter of one of the most storied (and scandalous) families of the twentieth century.

When Margaret invites them both for a one-month trial period, after which she’ll choose the person who’ll tell her story, there are three things keeping Alice’s head in the game.

One: Alice genuinely likes people, which means people usually like Alice—and she has a whole month to win the legendary woman over.

Two: She’s ready for this job and the chance to impress her perennially unimpressed family with a Serious Publication.

Three: Hayden Anderson, who should have no reason to be concerned about losing this book, is glowering at her in a shaken-to-the core way that suggests he sees her as competition.

But the problem is, Margaret is only giving each of them pieces of her story. Pieces they can’t swap to put together because of an ironclad NDA and an inconvenient yearning pulsing between them every time they’re in the same room.

And it’s becoming abundantly clear that their story—just like the tale Margaret’s spinning—could be a mystery, tragedy, or love ballad . . . depending on who’s telling it.

My Review:

Why, oh why, do I get sucked in on what looks promising and a Reese’s Book Club pick to boot? I really need to research more before borrowing a book on a waiting list from the library.

So, did I learn nothing from Funny Story? Or in a hurry, remembered the author’s name and hopped on the list. And what happened with Funny Story? A Goodreads Choice Award winner for Readers’ Favorite Romance (2024). Yeah, I don’t do RomComs, but didn’t consider Great Big Beautiful Life one either. Surely, this one won’t follow the Funny Story path…please.

Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry
Great Big Beautiful Life-US cover

It’s an old trope, predictable. And slow burn? Oh, honey, the first part almost had me giving up waiting for something to spark. The second part went swiftly from hate to love and between the sheets before I could even check for bed bugs. As each got more graphic, I was forced to skip read.

The FMC is all sunshine, optimism, and a chronically happy girl while hiding an unhappy childhood and a critical mother. She’s a journalist. She coulda been a contender—or something–somewhere else.

Duh emojiThe MMC is a grump (sound familiar?). I don’t care how gorgeous he is; I wouldn’t have gotten past the first crotchety word. If he’s a world-famous author, what is she doing there anyway?

The plot with the reclusive Margaret pitting them against each other is okay, except it starts back when her ancestors emerged from a communal cave. I guess you have to have something to throw in some interest, and I can’t fault the author for her prose, sense of humor, or clichés that run rampant.

“Because even the doorknobs here are buttered,”…

The description of the locale is interesting, always gives me pangs I no longer have access to a coast, left or right. The mansion, castle, grounds where Margaret lives are amazing and I wonder if her residuals really paid for all of that. Also I learned a new word:

Unicursal. One beginning, one end. Used in this context as a meandering pathway.

Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily HenryIt doesn’t make sense that Hayden and Alice could have any chemistry between them. Is she really that desperate? As they continue their interviews, they manage an ah ha moment or two but still swear Margaret is hiding something. Does anyone care?

Lots of pillow talk heart-to-hearts with both divulging big secrets. There’s a kind of anti-climax that eventually turns into the last twist. (Thank heaven.) But still doesn’t make sense to me. It leaves me wanting to knock their heads together.

I did enjoy some of the writing style, but nix on the biographer study or romcom. Many thanks to my library for providing me with the opportunity to read and review this book. The thoughts expressed here are my own.

Rosepoint Rating: Three Stars three stars

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Book Details:

Genre: Contemporary Women’s Fiction, Romantic Comedy
Publisher: Berkley
ISBN: 978-0593441244
ASIN: B0DGCLB3X3
Print Length: 427 pages
Publication Date: April 22, 2025
Source: Local Library

Title Link(s):

Amazon-US  |  Amazon-UK   |   Barnes & Noble  |  Kobo

 

Emily Henry - authorThe Author: Emily Henry is the #1 New York Times and #1 Sunday Times bestselling author of Happy Place, Book Lovers, People We Meet on Vacation, and Beach Read. She studied creative writing at Hope College, and now spends most of her time in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the part of Kentucky just beneath it. Find her on Instagram @EmilyHenryWrites.

©2025 V Williams

4 Bestseller Pubs
*Wall Street Journal stopped publishing bestseller lists in Nov 2023.

The Other Side of Now: A Novel by Paige Harbison #AudiobookReview #FriendshipFiction

The Other Side of Now by Paige Harbison

Rosepoint Publishing: Five Stars  5 stars

Book Blurb:

Read by the author, this hilarious and heartfelt audiobook about how loves and lives are never truly lost, is perfect for fans of Rebecca Serle and Taylor Jenkins Reid.

With a leading role on a hit TV show and a relationship with Hollywood’s latest heartthrob, Meg Bryan appears to have everything she ever wanted. But underneath, her happiness is as fake as her stage name, Lana Lord. Following a tiny nervous breakdown at her thirtieth birthday party, she books an impromptu trip to Ireland. Specifically, to the village where she and her best friend Aimee always dreamt of moving.

When Meg arrives, the people in town don’t just recognize her, they seem to know her. She quickly—reluctantly—realizes she has somehow slipped into an alternate reality. One where she did move to Ireland as a teenager, one where she never got famous, and—most shocking of all—one where Aimee is alive and well.

She just wants nothing to do with Meg.

Despite her bewilderment, Meg is clear-eyed about one thing: this is a once-in-two-lifetimes chance to reconnect with her friend and repair what she broke . . . or else risk losing Aimee all over again.

A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin’s Press.

My Review:

Oh good grief! Is this a YA? And a fantasy? And I read it? And loved it?!
It is and I did!

Meg and Aimee are high school besties, who, out for a fun night, decide to see a fortune teller. But while Meg has a dual life line, Aimee’s reading is curt, cut short, and reveals nothing. Kind of a downer ending a thirtieth birthday party, but then she is already feeling a bit let down.

Meg has found success as Lana Lord, a hit TV show. Aimee was killed in a traffic accident not long after the birthday party. Meg shuts down. She is beyond consolable and on impulse books a trip to Ireland where she and Aimee had dreamed of going to college.

With the way our family moved throughout my school years, I never had a chance to experience a “bestie.” So, no, I couldn’t identify with how closely connected Meg was to Aimee, but it wasn’t too difficult to understand how she could find herself at a traumatic crossroads in her life at age thirty.

The Other Side of Now by Paige HarbisonThe experience in Ireland, however, is not at all what she expected but it’s obvious something major is going on when everyone appears to know her.

POV switches back and forth from Ireland to her life in Hollywood. The hot bartender in Ireland may be an “ex” for one thing, the boyfriend at home may have been cheating on her. But is it really possible Aimee is living in Ireland—with her family? Why is she mad at her?

I loved the characters; the prose the author delivers is lovingly and emotionally delivered, believable. The atmosphere of Ireland fleshes out the scenes and leaves you yearning for her decision to stay. Must she return?

The author, once again, has a couple twists in store for the reader. Oh, the delicious fun!

How do you pull a satisfying conclusion to this conundrum?

Stay.

Go.

Stay.

Go.

Themes of friendship, family, loss and grief, dogs (yes, dogs!), happiness. Wait, did Meg remember that fateful night differently than Aimee?

My heart fell at one point. Not the ending I was hoping for. Then—NOT the ending—and my goodness, that writer can pull another one out of the hat. Amazing. So satisfying.

If you missed this one, I’d recommend you check it out. Have I ever steered you wrong?

This audiobook is narrated by the author and she certainly does a credible job. Thank you to my local library for the borrowed copy.

Book Details:

Genre: Friendship Fiction
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
ASIN: B0DK7NHJ93
Listening Length: 10 hrs 22 mins
Narrator: Paige Harbison
Publication Date: June 3, 2025
Source: Local Library (Audiobook Selections)
Title Links:   Amazon-US
Amazon-UK
Barnes & Noble
Kobo

Add to Goodreads

 

Paige Harbison - author
Paige Harbison – author

A little bit about me…

I grew up in the Washington D.C. area, raised by a musician and a writer. I graduated high school early, and went to college in St. Augustine, FL. Then, between Freshman and Sophomore year, I wrote my first novel. Everything in my life changed when, the following semester, I signed my first contract at age nineteen.

I transferred schools three times for fun, and changed my major from Theatre to Painting in order to accommodate my new career. I graduated early from Towson University and continued to work on my first three published novels, all YA: Here Lies Bridget, New Girl, and Anything to Have You.

Throughout the next decade I worked as a bartender and ghostwriter, traveling as much as I could, living it up in the name of book inspo.

At the start of the pandemic, I moved with my family to Palm Springs, CA and finally slowed down enough to start thinking about my own next chapter, which led me to leave the service industry, take some opportunities in film and TV, and start work on my next book.

I am now based in Los Angeles, California, where I live with my dog, Tarot, my partner, Richie, and the 12-9000 uninvited spiders that live in and around our home.

find me on instagram and TikTok, where I do comedy videos! @pharbeaux

©2025 V Williams

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The River’s Daughter by Bridget Crocker #AudiobookReview #TuesdayBookBlog

The River's Daughter by Bridget Crocker

Editors' Pick Best Biographies and Memoirs

Book Blurb:

A vivid and propulsive memoir about finding courage and meaning in a life outdoors, by a world-class whitewater rafting guide.

After Bridget Crocker’s parents’ volatile divorce, she moved with her mother from Southern California to Wyoming. Her life was idyllic, growing up in a trailer park on the banks of the Snake River with a stepfather she loved, a new baby brother, and the river as her companion—until her mother suddenly took up a radical new lifestyle, becoming someone Bridget barely recognized. The one constant in her life—the place Bridget felt whole and fully herself—was the river. When she discovered the world of whitewater rafting, she knew she’d found her calling.

On the river, Bridget learned to read the natural world around her and came to know the language of rivers. One of the few female guides on the Snake River, she then traveled to the Zambezi River in Africa, some of the most dangerous whitewater in the world, where she faced death and learned to conquer her fears—both on the water and off. The river taught her how to overcome years of betrayals and abuse, to trust herself, and, finally, how to help heal her family from generational cycles of trauma and poverty.

A beautifully rendered memoir of a woman coming into her own, The River’s Daughter opens us to the possibilities of transformation through nature.

My Review:

White water on the American RiverThe Snake River. The CE knows it well, having grown up in Twin Falls, ID. When our kids were late teens, our daughter’s then-boyfriend persuaded us into taking a rafting trip on the American River (California). While I know our little ride (see photo) didn’t compare with what is described in this book, I only know I wasn’t into looking for greater class rapids than these, one of which almost pitched me out of the raft.

But it was fun and I’ll never forget it.

So there were several things that caught my attention about this book. And it didn’t disappoint.

The author describes her early life with first, an abusive father, then a mother tuning in, turning on, and then checking out. Too bad, as she had learned to love the step-father. It was a chance to ride some rapids that gave her a calling. She loved the river. It spoke and sang to her. It didn’t take long before she doubled down to learn how to guide, rather than just ride.

The revelation of her childhood is prefaced with trigger warnings of abuse and sexual assault. Parents who were themselves abused who knew no other way to parent. Bridget watches the metamorphosis of her mother into a flower child she didn’t know, couldn’t understand, and really didn’t want the responsibility of her daughter anymore.

Bridget’s choice of male companions reflects what might have become a generational cycle trying to repeat itself and usually ends in abandonment and the realization that what she had was not the love she’d hoped.

The River's Daughter by Bridget CrockerStill, that might also have been instrumental in her continued striving to become an independent world-class white water guide, and she conquers that goal when she finally writes of the rapids of Zambia’s Zambezi River. The writer waxed poetically, often confirming her love of the wild, with prose that delighted the mind’s eye, lent perfumed mist to the air, and authentic African sights and sounds.

Descriptions of treacherous waters, boulders and spray, and the peculiarities of eddies and precipitous drops were detailed with emotional clarity. OOH!! I loved those descriptions and the descriptions of her various guides on world-class rafting rivers.

Sorry, but I loved those sections. Not so much her attempts at reconciliation with both mother and father. Why? She has fully transformed herself. Won her struggle with the trauma…healed. She is awesome.

Ever thought you’d like to try out some white water? You might wish to check out this book first. I recommend it. And rafting? I figure you have to experience it at least once.

 

Rosepoint Publishing: Four point Five Stars 4.5 stars

Book Details:

Genre: North America Travel & Tourism, Adventure Travel
Publisher: Spiegel & Grau by Spotify Audiobooks
ASIN: B0DJHDN97L
Listening Length: 9 hrs 11 mins
Narrator: Bridget Crocker
Publication Date: June 3, 2025
Source: Local Library (Audiobook Selections)
Title Links:   Amazon-US
Amazon-UK
Barnes & Noble
Kobo

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Bridget Crocker - author
Photo and bio courtesy Goodreads author profile.

The Author: Explorer. Storyteller. Guide.
A leading whitewater explorer and river guide, Bridget Crocker writes adventure memoir for life travelers forging new directions in their relationships and lives. Crocker’s writing transports readers to far-flung locations filled with flawed characters overcoming incredible adversity. A trauma survivor, Crocker explores themes of recovery and overcoming multi-generational cycles as well as sexism and racism in the outdoor industry. In her work as an author, speaker and leader of women’s empowerment river workshops, Crocker helps others strengthen their connection with the natural world and find the courage to navigate harrowing obstacles both on and off the river.

©2025 V Williams

#Audiobooks

Two Audiobooks Mini-Reviews – Hell Is Empty and Return to Sender by Craig Johnson #WesternFiction #TBT

Audiobook Reviews, Walt Longmire Mystery Series Books 7 and 21

Walt Longmire Mysteries Books 7 and 21

Yes, time for catching up on the Walt Longmire series! Gees, the last I read was The Longmire Defense, Book 19, back in February 2024. (Dang, I missed Book 20? I’ll have to remedy that.) So, yes, I try to go back and pick up an old one I missed back when, as well as keeping up with the new installments.

Recorded Books has always released the Longmire audiobook series and fortunately for all of us, George Guidall narrates. He is the quintessential Sheriff Longmire.

Return to Sender: Walt Longmire Mysteries, Book 21

Date Released: May 27, 2025

My Thoughts

Return to Sender by Craig JohnsonDefinitely a switch here in that Sheriff Longmire of Absaroka County comes to investigate the disappearance of a mail person who has the longest route in Wyoming.  In this particular investigation, however, he doesn’t pursue the missing person without going incognito—undercover.

Pursuing any leads he gleans, he crosses paths with religious cult leaders nomading around the Red Desert. Between desperate scenes, assassins, and twists, the pace is, as always, fast.

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subject divider 

Hell Is Empty: A Walt Longmire Mystery, Book 7

Date Released: June 8, 2011

My Thoughts

Hell is Empty by Craig JohnsonIn this installment, as well as many of the others, Walt Longmire connects with the myths and magic of the Cheyenne Nation. He is befriended by a Cheyenne ghost of the past that imparts life-saving support as he confronts a blizzard while tracking down escapees into the mountains. It becomes a mystical journey, seen or experienced by him, given his affinity for the traditions of the local tribe.

Always some good quotables:

“Cigarettes are killers, they travel in packs.”

“I couldn’t die, I’d have too many women who’d kill me.”

Just when circumstances can’t get much worse, there comes a humorous note to break the tension. Sometimes you’ll exercise a little disbelief. It’s okay. Enjoy the author’s writing style. They are fun, fast reads, but do yourself a favor and listen to the gritty tones of the narrator as he carries you through another escape into a different world.

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It amazes me how long the man can keep going, given that he must have aged a little since the series began in 2004. I love the support characters and his closest allies, his undersheriff, now fiancé, Vic, and Henry, a member of the Cheyenne Nation. They are not featured so much in Return to Sender, even so, these as well as any of the others could be read as standalones. His books are heavily spiced with a sardonic sense of humor and an extremely quick wit. If you’ve watched any of the Netflix Longmire series, you’ve come to love the atmospheric setting and the characters. It’s well written and immensely engaging and entertaining.

Many thanks to my local library for providing me with the opportunity to listen to these books. Any opinion expressed here is my own.

Craig Johnson - authorThe Author: Craig Johnson is the New York Times bestselling author of the Longmire mysteries, the basis for the hit Netflix original series Longmire. He is the recipient of the Western Writers of America Spur Award for fiction, the Mountains and Plains Booksellers Award for fiction, the Nouvel Observateur Prix du Roman Noir, and the Prix SNCF du Polar. His novella Spirit of Steamboat was the first One Book Wyoming selection. He lives in Ucross, Wyoming, population 25.
http://www.craigallenjohnson.com/

George Guidall - narratorThe Narrator: George Guidall is a prolific audiobook narrator and theatre actor. As of November 2014, he had recorded over 1,270 audiobooks, which was believed to be the record at the time. Wikipedia

 

 

 

©2025 V Williams

#Audiobooks

Red Shadows at Saugatuck by Randy Overbeck #BookReview #ParanormalFantasy

The Haunted Shores Mysteries Series Book 4

Rosepoint Publishing: Five Stars 5 stars

Red Shadows at Saugatuck by Randy Overbeck

Book Blurb:

Darrell Henshaw hoped he was past it all. After all, no ghosts had visited him for years. Instead, he learns his five-year-old-son, Leo, has inherited his “gift.”
Now, they both can see ghosts.
Upon his parents’ insistence, Darrell drives his young family 800 miles to celebrate his aunt Gertrude’s 80th birthday. But, once they arrive in the resort town of Saugatuck, Michigan, their participation gets derailed by the spirit of a Native teen who went missing weeks earlier. When he and Leo inquire about the girl, the locals dismiss their concerns—”Those girls run away all the time.” Still, as questions pile up and threats grow, Darrell senses they may have stumbled onto something far worse and even more evil than one missing teen.
Can Darrell continue to pursue justice for the girl if it places his wife and son in danger?

His Review:

The main characters include a father who has just discovered on a trip to Michigan with his family that his five-year-old son apparently has the same “gift” he has with seeing ghosts. They are being summoned by the ghost of a Native teen but realizing that trying to help her plight may gravely endanger his own family. The writing is gripping, emotional, sensitive, and pocked with twists that’ll keep the reader on the edge of their seat.

Red Shadows at Saugatuck by Randy OverbeckMany young Native American women go missing each year. Many of the young women leave to gain a better quality of life. The belief is that they run away from home in their early teens and are never heard from again. The actual reason is much more sinister. The plight of Native Americans is the breaking of treaties by the government and displacement of the tribes into some of the poorest areas and non-arable soils in our country.

Randy Overbeck has written a very fine exposé on the actual reason that they seem to be missing. The resulting crimes are neither investigated nor prosecuted! C E WilliamsThis story made me angry because of the lack of attention to this matter by any governmental group. Shame on our country for not protecting these people and prosecuting the criminals. Read the story and see if you don’t agree.  5 stars – CE Williams

[Note: We’ve both been given the opportunity to read installments in the Haunted Shores Mysteries series, including Blood on the Chesapeake and Crimson at Cape May. Read one and you’re hooked. This can be read as a standalone, but each is a treat and we can heartily recommend. V Williams]

Many thanks to the author for providing me with the opportunity to read and review this book. Any opinion expressed here is my own.

 

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Book Details:

Genre: Paranormal Fantasy
Publisher: The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
ASIN: B0F89DGNMF
Print Length: 361 pages
Publication Date: July 23, 2025
Source: Author

Title Link(s):

Amazon-US  |  Amazon-UK   |   Barnes & Noble

 

Dr Randy Overbeck - authorThe Author: Dr. Randy Overbeck is an award-winning educator, author, speaker and podcaster. As an educator, he served children for more than three decades and has mined that experience to create captivating fiction, authoring two series, the bestselling series, “The Haunted Shores Mysteries,” and the award-winning series, “Lessons in Peril.” His novels have won critical acclaim and garnered national awards including Mystery of the Year (ReaderViews) Best Book Award (Chanticleer Books and Reviews) and the Gold Award (Literary Titan) and amassed hundreds of 5-star reviews on Amazon and Goodreads. Dr. Overbeck also hosts the popular podcast, “Great Stories about Great Storytellers,” which reveals the unusual and sometimes strange backstories of famous authors, directors and poets and can be heard wherever listeners get their podcasts. He is a speaker in considerable demand, sharing his popular presentations about ghosts and the world of book publishing with hundreds of audiences all over the U.S.

As a member of the Mystery Writers of America, Dr. Overbeck is an active member of the literary community, contributing to a writers’ critique group, serving as a mentor to emerging writers and participating in writing conferences such as Killer Nashville and the Midwest Writers Workshop.

When he’s not researching, writing, speaking or podcasting, Randy enjoys traveling with his wife Cathy and visiting both his far-flung family and the scenic locations around this country, often in search of inspiration for his next great story.

©2025 CE Williams – V Williams

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