Saturday, February 24, 2024

Darn it, I wish I'd written that!

JENN MCKINLAYIt happened again. I discovered a book that has so captured my imagination, I wish I’d written it. 


Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett is just perfection – in my opinion. A brilliant yet socially inept heroine, a charming and mysterious hero, and an adventure seeking and cataloging “The Folk” (faeries) of a remote Norwegian village for the Dryadology department in which they both work at the University of Cambridge in 1909. If Lessons in Chemistry and Grimm’s Fairy Tales (the originals not the watered down versions) had a book baby this would be it. It truly is the perfect winter tale. 


So, that’s my latest - Darn it, I wish I’d written that! - book.


How about you, Reds? What books have you read recently that are so good you wished you’d written them?



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Wrong Place, Wrong Time, by Gillian McAllister. It’s a terrific novel of suspense, where in chapter 1, a woman sees her son murder someone. She’s baffled and astonished and horrified, and cannot figure out why this would happen! The next morning, she wakes up. And it’s the day before the murder. And the next time she wakes up, it’s the day before that. But! She remembers everything that happened. It’s hard to explain, and incredibly wonderful to read, and I cannot imagine how she wrote it. Highly highly recommend it.

 It’s not only a terrific mystery, but absolutely poignant, and touching, about how our lives go by so quickly and  we don’t notice the sweet and important little things, and we even forget our own happiness. 



HALLIE EPHRON: Whenever I read a book by Peter Abrahams (aka Spencer Quinn) I am transported and delighted, whether it’s one of his books for children (“Down the Rabbit Hole”…) or one of his Chet and Bernie books (“Doggone It”...), I am in awe. I’ve been a fan ever since I was gobsmacked by his mystery novel “Oblivion” more than a decade ago (opens with the narrator testifying in court while losing consciousness and his memory to a brain tumor–a tour de force) when I was reviewing crime fiction for the Boston Globe. So add his latest, “Mrs. Plansky’s Revenge,” to my list of Peter’s books that I wish I could have written. 



LUCY BURDETTE: My list is long (and I’m not including my blogmates)! Any of the Ann Cleeves Shetland or Vera books (love the characters and the setting,) Barbara O’Neal’s The Art of Inheriting Secrets, Ann Mah’s The Lost Vintage, Juliet Blackwell’s The Paris Key.


This is making me think I’d better get back to work ASAP!


RHYS BOWEN: The thing I most wish I had written was not a book but a TV series. The Bletchley Circle. When I saw that the first thing I said was “This is brilliant. Why didn’t I think of it?”  But among recent books I wish I had written LESSONS IN CHEMISTRY. I loved that it was quirky, funny and didn’t fit any genre. Different. I really want to write a book that is different from anything ever written. That’s not easy. Oh, and I was impressed with Magpie Murders. I thought the story within the story was so clever, and the TV version was fantastic.



JENN: Oh, I loved, loved, loved, Lessons in Chemistry. And I agree, it defied categorization. Such an achievement.


DEBORAH CROMBIE: I hadn’t read anything by David Nicholls before we watched the Netflix series based on his novel ONE DAY. The series is astoundingly good–I can’t say much more than that because, spoilers, of which even the critics from a lot of major media have been guilty. (Maybe they assumed everyone had read the book? Or seen the Anne Hathaway/Jim Sturgess adaptation?) As soon as the last episode finished I had to dive into the book to see if it was as good, and there is my “Oh my gosh, I wish I’d written this,” moment. Such clever construction–the two characters meet on the day of their university graduation, July 15th, and the novel is a snapshot of that one day in their lives for the next twenty years. It’s funny, sexy, heartbreaking, human, and ultimately life-affirming. Just genius. Big sigh of envy and admiration from me!



JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Oh, this is hard. I often get the severe case of the green-eyed monster over one aspect of a book or another.  I remember reading BLOOD IS THE SKY the year after I met its author, Steve Hamilton, and wishing SO HARD I could write with his spare precision. Carol Goodman’s debut, THE LAKE OF DEAD LANGUAGES, is as perfect a blend of genre and literary as I’ve ever read, and damn it, I wish I could write like that! Who doesn’t wish they had written GONE GIRL, which not only won every award and was a major bestseller, but achieved the rare feat of jump-starting an entire new type of novel in the crime fiction realm.



If I could pick just one, though, it would be THE GLASS HOTEL by Emily St. John Mandel. A little less known than her also-amazing STATION ELEVEN, The Glass Hotel is beautiful and page turning and astonishing and heartbreaking and original and compelling - ugh! So good.


So, how about you, Readers? Is there a book you wished you'd written or a book you wish you could read again for the very first time?

87 comments:

  1. A book I wish I could read again for the very first time? So many good books that I'd love to experience for the very first time once again . . . I'll say Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" . . . .

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    1. That one is transformative, for sure. I still remember reading it in high school.

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  2. I was going through a tough time after my dad passed and I was chatting about it on goodreads and this author sent me his ebook to read at the beach where I was going to contemplate life. His name is Rob Kaufman and his book One Last Lie and I drove my husband nuts going wow I didn't see that coming. Especially the ending. I couldn't wait till I was back home to write a review it was that good and I wanted everyone to know it. I would love that experience again.

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    1. Oh, I love books that surprise me. I'm adding that one to my list.

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  3. There are sooo many, so I'm going with the one that jumped to the front of my mind when Julia mentioned Steve Hamilton. His The Lock Artist blew me away. And now that I'm thinking about it, I want to go back and re-read it.

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    1. I've heard wonderful things about that book.

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    2. The Lock Artist was amazing, wasn't it? It deserved all the acclaim it received.

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    3. Oh, yes! And when he was asked: why doesn't your protagonist talk? His answer was: I had written fifty pages, and realized he hadn't said a word. And after that, he just never did.

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  4. I wish I'd written anything by Susan Howatch. Her ability to write in different voices is astonishing. And the dialogue! Maybe not realistic but so intelligent and often witty. After reading her Starbridge and St. Benet's series, I feel as if I know the history of her characters inside out. (Selden)

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    1. From Celia: Agreed, Howatch is an amazing storyteller.

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    2. Oh, another one I have to revisit! I'd forgotten how much I love her work.

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  5. Debs, we just finished watching "One Day" - now I'd better read the book! What wonderful recommendations from all of you.

    This might seem like playing favorites here, but I have often said that if I could write like Julia Spencer-Fleming, I would die happy. Out of the Deep I Cry, especially, but any of her books.

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    1. Flora here, Out of the Deep I Cry is a particular favorite of mine!

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    2. And you know, I have to say - I don't feel particularly brilliant! (This may be a legacy from my mother, who would say, "Okay, and what could you have done better?" when I brought home good grades.)

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  6. Great question, Jenn. I am making a new TBR list of the the books the Reds recommended above. Last month I read three books Jenn recommended during a Poisoned Pen interview several months ago and was so happy. Don't you love it when rom coms make you laugh out loud.

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    1. (Whoops) ?
      The three books are historical (hysterical) rom coms by Loretta Chase.

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    2. What is the current trendy saying on social media? Oh, yes -- Loretta Chase's books are my Roman Empire (meaning you think about it all the time) and the Carsington Brothers is THE BEST!

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  7. From Celia: so many great books so little time, such a long list. Four Seasons in Rome, Anthony Doerr. The story of his year at the American Academy trying to write - Well the novel is never named but I think it was All the Light We Cannnot See. He arrives in Rome with no Italian, plus his wife and twin sons who are not yet a year old. His account of finding their way around, the Italian love of babies which helped and finding himself with writers block but writing about their experiences is masterful. It’s a book I won’t lend and there are very few of those on my shelves.

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  8. It's humbling, isn't it, to read something so good you can't even imagine where the inspiration could have come from? Lessons in Chemistry was like that for me. A self-educated genius who cooks using chemistry, plus rowing, plus a sentient dog and a precocious child. Sounds like an AI-generated plot, but so, so much better.

    Then there's Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible, which is narrated by four different people in the same family, from different perspectives and ages, with their own unique voices. It was such a departure from her previous style, too. So much was happening in Africa at that time, but almost nothing was written about the horrors of living there as a missionary, aside from The Nun's Story, by Kathryn Hume, which was made into a movie in 1959. I wonder if Poisonwood ever will be.

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    1. Like Celia, I have one book I had to stop lending because I never got it back, Helen Simonson's Major Pettigrew's Last Stand. It was also an under the radar groundbreaker, a grown-up love story between seniors. Since then Frederik Backman has written similar stories, which is a good trend in my opinion.

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    2. The Poisonwood Bible was amazing - and I read it while living in Burkina Faso in West Africa!

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    3. Karen, I loved Major Pettigrew, but it is funny (as in odd, not hahah) that it did not pass muster at Book Club. Most of them don't like Bachman either. Guess I need new book friends!

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    4. LOVED Lessons in Chemistry - so imaginative and brilliant but in an understated way. I'm going to look for Mr. Pettigrew - sounds lovley!

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    5. I loved Major Pettigrew but couldn't get through her next novel.

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  9. Shalom Reds and readers – I am not a facile writer. So, when I read something that truly deserves five stars, I seldom think that perhaps, “I could have written that.” And for me, five-star writing only gets better with each re-read. I think my most favorite piece of writing is a short story, called “A Letter From Sakaye.” It was written by Barbara Mitchell and published in The Fiddlehead, (a Canadian literary journal) in 1974. I came across it in a collection called Best Short Stories of 1974 (probably a few years after the fact). I’m pretty sure I still have that book amongst my many books, though I wouldn’t know where to start looking. I also don’t think that I read any other stories in that collection. And very few things have touched me as deeply as that one story did.
    My great regret now, is that my TBR list will most assuredly outlive me by quite a few years.

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    1. I know what you mean. I have become much more choosy about what I read - no time for bad books.

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  10. Jenn, Not a writer, but I agree with you about the Emily Wilde book. I have just started reading the 2nd in the series and see in the back of book that there will be a 3rd also. Marjorie

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    1. I am impatiently waiting... *sigh* Book two was excellent as well.

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  11. So many books! A Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin (how did he do that?). Anthony Doerr's Cloud Cuckoo Land, a love song to libraries and story telling with threads of story amazingly interwoven together. Then there's Animal Dreams by Barbara Kingsolver. I have a quote from Animal Dreams on my refrigerator and it's become a touchstone for me. The short version: "What I want is so simple I almost can't say it: elementary kindness. Enough to eat, enough to go around. The possibility that children will grow up to be neither the destroyers nor the destroyed. That's about it."

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  12. Ann Cleeves, THIN AIR, both for masterful juggling of multiple points of view and incorporating setting as a character.

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    1. I love it when the setting is a character.

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    2. Very cool. I just picked it up on a hold from the library!

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    3. Heather S here- Ann Cleeves Shetland is incredible, the setting rules and the plot and characters have depth.
      Louise Penny’s Gamache series is one of my favorites.
      An older one is The Milagro Beanfield War by John Nichols. It captures Northern New Mexico setting and culture like nothing else I have read.
      Geraldine Brooks’ Caleb’s Crossing - wow! Her ability to take an historical event and build a world defies description in my opinion. I shall stop now…..

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  13. I remember my kids discovering the first Harry Potter book. We read (audiobook) it in the car from Ontario to Cape Breton. Absolute Silence! Then to hear by 5 year old parse the difference between the book and the movie. Oh, to be so totally captured like that!

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    1. I feel like Harry Potter gave the love of reading to that entire generation for which I am extremely grateful.

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    2. You bet! My job, when the first Harry Potter appeared, was to follow the media industries. At the time, all the news was about interactive, electronic, new media. On and on. And THEN: the industry phenomenon 2-ton gorilla, was - ha-ha! - a book. On paper. The old fashioned way.

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    3. And then along came Jim Dale with his incredible narrations of the audio versions of the books. Brilliant meets Brilliant.

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    4. So true, Jim Dale is amazing (Heather S here)

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  14. Hallie, I too loved Mrs. Plansky's Revenge. Just plain hilarious. Not something I could ever write. The author is new to me, so I must investigate further...And here is an older author whose books I have repeatedly wished I could write - not one "as good as" but the actual one I just read, Penelope Lively. Who I still want to be when I grow up.

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    1. Oh, how wonderful! I'm definitely reading Mrs. Planksy's Revenge. I remember Penelope Lively - must revisit.

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    2. Ah, yes must read more of her fiction. I have read most of her nonfiction works, one of my favorite authors. Marjorie

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  15. JENN: Thanks for the recommendation of ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FAERIES novel. I look forward to reading the book.

    To my surprise, I loved LESSONS IN CHEMISTRY. I found it easier to read than I thought it would be. The other books that the Reds wish they had written were novels that I found quite challenging to follow.

    Diana

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  16. THE LITTLE PRINCE. I read it for the first time in a French class and fell in love. I still read it whenever I need a lift. Had to buy another copy during the pandemic. The pages on mine were growing thin.

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    1. Love The Little Prince. I have a copy on my permanent shelf and must go find it now.

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    2. Me, too - not only the words but the wonderful illustrations. So simple and profound AND often laugh-out-loud funny.

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    3. I reread The Secret Garden the first spring of the pandemic. It made me giddy. I'd add that to my all-time list.

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  17. Too many to even think of a single stand-out novel--just look at my shelves--what I keep I love so much and re-read again and again, marveling at the stories and writing anew each time. That said, if I could write like William Stafford or WS Merwin, or Louise Gluck--Robert Frost--the poets make me cry with despair that I could ever match their accomplishments.

    Plus, I came to JRW because of Deborah Crombie and Julia Spencer-Fleming--I hate how 'genre' fiction gets dismissed by some as 'less than' real literature. These two captured my attention because of the quality of their writing and I'm happy to say I've found many other fine writers on this blog--other JRW authors, naturally, but many among the guests too (Charles Todd and William Kent Krueger come to mind). (Flora)

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    1. Thank you, Flora! I almost put Kent's ORDINARY GRACE on my list, but I honestly can't imagine anyone but Kent writing that book. It's truly the perfect meeting of author and subject.

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    2. Thank you, Flora. And I agree on the genre fiction thing. So annoying.

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  18. Jenn - thank you for the rec for ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF FAERIES. I’m binging SFF right now so I can do Hugo award nominations and will try to squeeze this one in. I just finished and loved A DEEP SKY by Yume Kitasei. Mysteries on a spaceship are the intimate locked-room mysteries.

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  19. Full disclosure: I am not a writer, just an avid reader. And I read across genres fairly indiscriminately. I found this group after reading Deborah’s Crombie’s series several times, and then seeing that Rhys Bowen and Hallie Ephron were part of the group. Right now I’m smitten with Hank’s books. I often wish I had written a book but fairly recently I have truly fallen for the Circle of Ceridwen historical fiction series by Octavia Randolph. I would love to able to write like she does, spinning a meticulously researched and gorgeously written tale about a woman in 9th century England and the Viking raiders who came looking for land and treasure. It’s incredible. Her descriptions are incredible, reminding of Deborah Crombie’s writing, and the characters just as fully formed. Like Duncan and Gemma, I feel like I know these people. Also, I just read a recent book by Kelley McNeill called Mayluna, and found myself constantly going back to re-read passages that were just so gorgeously written I could almost weep for the beauty of them. It’s the story of a young woman, a rising rock band, and the frailties of being human. Sure wish I had written that!

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    1. So happy to see you here, Melinda. And "meticulousy researched and gorgeously written" is the standard to which we aspire!

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    2. Thank you, Melinda, and I am immediately going to look up your recommedations, especially Mayluna, which sounds like something I need to read right this minute!

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    3. Turns out I have Mayluna already in my Kindle library! Moving to top of the queue!

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    4. You've just added to my TBR, Melinda!

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    5. OH! I just stood and applauded. Thank you! xxx

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  20. Just wish I had the ability to write a book, including the ‘agony and the ecstasy’ that authors go through in the writing process.
    I read a lot of mysteries and I am particularly attracted to humor. An Edmund Crispin from the Golden Age and more current ones such as E.J. Copperman and Donna Andrews who always make me laugh, something we need these days.
    In a non-mystery vein, anything written by John McPhee, a non-fiction author who has written on everything from geology to the description of a tennis match between two top players. I’ve read books of his on subjects that I didn’t really have an interest but read because he wrote them.
    He has such a wonderful usage of language in his descriptions that he makes whatever he writes about worth reading.

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    1. I love authors like McPhee - brilliant use of language is magical.

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    2. John McPhee changed my life in so many ways. In 1982, I even named one of my dogs after him. Brilliant.

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  21. Jenn, the sequel--Emily Wilde's Map of the Otherlands--is just as much fun as the first in the series.

    And speaking of fun, I looked at my list of books read since 2006 and picked out those I rated the highest, so I apologize in advance for taking up so much space. There's No Place Like Here by Cecilia Ahern, anything by Sarah Addison Allen, My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You I'm Sorry by Fredrik Backman, The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid by Bill Bryson (a must for Baby Boomers!), The Precious One by Marisa de los Santos, The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh, Can't Wait to Get to Heaven by Fannie Flagg, Lessons in Chemistry (of course!) by Bonnie Garmus, Valley of the Moon by Melanie Gideon, A Place Called Hope by Phillip Gulley, The Humans by Matt Haig (lesser known, but wonderful), The Keeper of Lost Things by Ruth Hogan (her newest ARC, The Phoenix Ballroom, is fantastic), Have You Seen Luis Velez? by Catherine Ryan Hyde, True Evil by Greg Iles, The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce, Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good by Jan Karon, The Rabbit Factory by Marshall Karp, 11/22/1963 by Stephen King, The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune, Two if by Sea and Cage of Stars by Jacquelyn Mitchard, Me Before You and After You by Jojo Moyes, Run by Ann Patchett, 400 Things Cops Know by Adam Plantinga, Delicious! by Ruth Reichl, Shatter by Michael Robotham, The Invisible Life of Addie Larue by VE Schwab, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Shaffer and Barrows (just watched the movie),The Rosie Project by Graeme Simson, The One-in-a-Million Boy by Monica Wood, Small Blessings by Martha Woodroof. Whew!

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    1. Yes, I just finished it! Loved it so much. What an excellent list! Whew, indeed!

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  22. First, Rhys, I agree with you about Bletchley Circle. I loved that series and wish they had continued with more episodes. And Margie Bunting, I found a number of books on your list I read and enjoyed. 11/22/63 is one of my all-time favorite books ever! I don’t read horror so hadn’t read anything by Stephen King, but my goodness, I now know why he has so many fans! What a wonderful writer!

    I just took a quick glance at recent books that I particularly enjoyed (besides Lessons in Chemistry, oc). The two that I have been recommending to anyone who will listen are Don’t Forget to Write by Sara Goodman Confino (about a teenage girl sent to live with her great-aunt for the summer in 1960) and Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt. Both are feel good stories which sometimes you just need to read. — Pat S

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    1. My daughter LOVED Remarkably Bright Creatures, Pat. I must read it! She also loved the Stephen King, which I started and just couldn't get into. Maybe I should try again...

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    2. LOVED Remarkably Bright Creatures - so incredibly imaginative!

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  23. Thanks, Jenn for starting the ball rolling with the sharing of all of these new authors for me. I now have a list that I will need to investigate further! To begin with, I just ordered Heather Fawcett's Encyclopedia of Faeries books which should arrive before I leave for a week-long trip to Finland. As I am half Swedish, I am really fascinated by these stories!

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  24. "Time and Again" by the late (and truly great) Jack Finney. Time travel, but with oh, what a difference! Lenita

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    1. I love time travel - especially Jodi Taylor's Chronicles of St. Marys. Love, love, love it.

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    2. Loved Time and Again! Did you know there was a musical adaptation made of the book? We saw it in the 90s in San Diego but I don’t think it ever went to Broadway. — Pat S

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  25. Well, since I have now reached the age of crafty old crone, turned 70 today, my answer will no doubt be full of pith and wonder. Actually, it will be full of the challenge to think of an answer. Jenn, I have thought about the Fairie book more than once. Hank, Wrong Place, Wrong Time was a favorite of mine when I read it, which was before Kevin was shot and killed. I can't tell you how many times I've thought about that book in terms of waking up the day of my tragedy until I work out the solution where he lives. Rhys, I think that Lessons in Chemistry is a book that will always be a favorite, and I'd love to reread.

    I always envy readers who are just now reading any of the Jungle Red Writers series or single books. I also would love to be reading Elly Griffiths' and Annette Dashofy's and Catriona McPherson's and Laurie King's books again for the first time, and Edith and Triss and others here. But, I want to mention some books not talked about that much. In 2022, I read The Lioness by Chris Bohjalian and was completely gobsmacked by the writing and the story. Another one is one I have recommended for years, The Girls by Lori Lansens. I would have loved to have written The Girls. Then, there's State of Wonder by Ann Patchett and Caleb's Crossing by Geraldine Brooks (this one was mentioned above.)

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    1. I love anything by Ann Patchett. What an exemplary list, Kathy, and, yes, some fiction cuts really close to the heart. Thanks for sharing your recs. You have added to my TBR significantly!

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    2. Oh, Kathy...yes --I can only imagine how powerful that was for you. xxx

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  26. I've read the Key West Mysteries individual books ... several times!
    The series I wish I had written makes me a little old fashioned, but it's the Wooster & Jeeves books by Wodehouse.

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