Below are the first lines of the books I finished reading in September. An even split between fiction and nonfiction plus one DNF. Includes one children's book and one graphic book (nonfiction).
Seen while canvassing in 2019:
frogs reading and sipping tea.
Book 1
Sister Bernadette Ohlson paused outside the main entrance of The Abbey:Senior Living to inhale the earthy smell of autumn.
Book 2
On Monday, June 1, 2020, at 7:06 p.m., the president of the United States strode defiantly across Washington, D.C.’s Lafayette Park–trailing a retinue of aides, Secret Service agents, his daughter Ivanka, the attorney general, and America’s top military leaders, including the secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff–in order to be photographed holding a Bible in front of St. John’s Church, whose parish house had sustained minor fire damage during protests the previous evening.
Book 3
(The book begins with graphic pages)
“Happy birthday to Youuuuuuuu.”
“What’s this, Donald?”
“This is your birthday present. It is a Ulysses Super-Suction, Multi-Terrain 200X! Happy birthday.”
“It’s a vacuum cleaner.”
Book 4
The Ransomes had been burgled. “Robbed,” Mrs. Ransome said. “Burgled,” Mr Ransome corrected. Premises were burgled; persons were robbed.
Book 5
Suddenly, the Same Thing
“I just hate terrorist attacks,” the thin nurse says to the older one. “Want some gum?”
Book 6
York, December 1952
Each day of the week has its own feel – or so I think. Mondays are universally loathed, whilst Fridays bring a spring to the step.
Book 7
It may have been a butterfly that first started me thinking seriously about biology.
Book 8
I was born Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey, in Talbot County, Maryland, on a plantation owned by Colonel Edward Lloyd. More than twenty years of my life were spent within the peculiar institution known as slavery.
Did not finish
Monday, March 7
The morning air off the Mojave in late winter is as clean and crisp as you’ll ever breathe in Los Angeles County.
The titles and authors revealed:
Book 1
Dropped Like a Bad Habit (Nun the Wiser Mysteries Book 2)
By Melissa Westemeier
327 pages. First published August 2025.
The eavesdropping nun is back! Along with her police pal and former student AJ, Sister Bernie solves several mysteries, both small and large, on what has to be the friendliest but also the unluckiest street in Eugene, Oregon. This book is the second in the coziest mysteriest series the “Nun the Wiser Mysteries”. I enjoyed both books a great deal. Yes, it’s a murder mystery, but in these divided times, it also shows us an example of what a community can be. It takes place in autumn, my favorite season, which added to my enjoyment reading it.
There is an appearance of tea (something I look for in novels) and an instance of cupcakes. And an awesome Halloween party. The author recognizes that Halloween parties at retirement centers are a big deal. Back in 2012, my aunt, as a new resident of the retirement center, was invited to judge the Halloween costume contest. She received a fair amount of pressure from entrants! And the pumpkin decorating contest entries were top notch.
Book 2
How we Learn to Be Brave: Decisive Moments in Life and Faith
By Mariann Edgar Budde
224 pages • first pub 2023
nonfiction, religion, self help
with a preface written in 2025.
Lots to ponder in this reading. These are times in which bravery is called for.
Book 3
Flora and Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures
Kate DiCamillo with K.G. Campbell (Illustrator)
240 pages • first pub 2013
fiction, fantasy, middle grade
Third re-reading because I love this book. In these times we need to read about a superhero squirrel. And be careful with your vacuum cleaner.
Book 4
The Clothes They Stood Up In
By Alan Bennett
174 pages • first pub 1998
fiction, mystery, short stories
Meh. This was just weird but not in any delightful or enlightening way. I wouldn’t have finished but it was short so I pushed on through in the hopes of some grand unifying theory of life at the end, but nope. Also, I am not a big short story fan.
Book 5
The Seven Good Years
By Etgar Keret
194 pages. Published 2015.
nonfiction essays memoir
(The copyright years in the front of the book run from 2006 through 2015. I am going to guess that these were once individual essays, compiled into this book).
I almost gave up on this, because some of the statements at the beginning were jarring, given the events in Israel on Oct 7, 2023 and following. The birth of the author’s son was mentioned early on, but most of the short memoir-essays do not focus on the child. Some parts I found very interesting indeed, especially the essay near the end where a stranger builds a narrow house for the author, which he finds fitting to honor his chosen genre of short stories. Rabbi mentioned Keret in his Rosh Hashanah sermon. I guess he’s a pretty famous Israeli author.
Book 6
Murder at Holly House (Frank Grasby Mystery #1)
By Denzil Meyrick
362 pages • first pub 2023
fiction crime historical mystery
I read the paperback version.
A funny murder mystery which moves along. Loads of quirky characters with Dickensian names. The main character, who is an incompetent police inspector, is sent to a remote village to investigate local thefts. But there is SO much more going on. Beware of remote British villages!
There is a goodly amount of tea drinking in this book.
This book has four beginnings. The first is the often-used fake introduction of the text as a serendipitous find in a left-behind carton or suitcase. The second purports to be a note from the author. The third purports to be a police wire, and the fourth begins the story itself. I included the fourth start.
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Tea time on a quilt, shown at the retirement home. 2019. |
Book 7
What Is Life?: Five Great Ideas in Biology
By Paul Nurse
160 pages • first pub 2020
nonfiction history science
Good overview of biology. An easier read for me than the Mukherjee book, which focusses more immediately on cancer. I learned that the yolk of a chicken egg is a single cell. And that, as I have suspected for some time, biology is really chemistry pulled together in interesting ways.
Book 8
The Life of Frederick Douglass: A Graphic Narrative of an Extraordinary Life
By David F. Walker (content), Damon Smyth (art), Marissa Louise (colors), James Guy Hill (letters).
192 pages • first pub 2019 (view editions)
Graphic non-fiction
An excellent overview of Douglass’ life. The drawings are very well done. The graphic chapters are interspersed with occasional text chapters on the history of the time period, including a fascinating page telling us that Frederick Douglass was one of the most photographed people of his time. He always looked straight at the camera, and never smiled for a photo. I have only read one of his memoirs (he wrote three) and was unaware of his self-doubts, as they are expressed in this book.
Did not finish
The Lincoln Lawyer (The Lincoln Lawyer #1)
By Michael Connelly
404 pages • first pub 2005
fiction crime mystery thriller
Good story-telling, interesting characters, and I managed to make my way through a lot, including some descriptions of horrible violence, and a general undercurrent of seedy grifting. I stopped about half-way, when the plot became WAY too creepy for me. I am not one for thrillers in the first place. And also, Part Two is titled “A World Without Truth”. I feel like we are now living in a world without truth, or at least fully half of our country’s leaders cannot can tell the truth ever. I just couldn’t stomach reading any more about the criminal underworld and their lawyer. It is the choice for Book Club 1 in October. It was the Common Household Husband’s suggestion, so I am going to hear about my DNF.
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Dear reader, how about you? What have you read lately? Have you ever entered a pumpkin decorating contest?
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1 comment:
I love the frog statues and the pumpkin contestants! The Holly House murder mystery sounds right up my alley.
I am listening to Fleishman Is in Trouble (by myself) and The Egypt Game (with my daughter). The former is entertaining, but I'm not sure I like it, and I have no idea what the story is. The latter is entertaining and fills me with nostalgia for the age when I played pretend with friends.
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