Saturday, April 4, 2026

Jonelle Patrick--Let's Talk Comfort Reads

DEBORAH CROMBIE: What fun to have the lovely Jonelle Patrick visiting us all the way from Tokyo this morning! I have no idea what time it is in Japan, but Jonelle is a treat any time of day. She has a new book coming out on April 21st, THE SAMURAI'S OCTUPUS. 




I can't wait to learn the significance of the title, but today she's here to chat about something else. Here's Jonelle!


LET’S TALK COMFORT READS

 

Good morning, Reds and fellow Readers! It’s me, Jonelle, waving at you from Tokyo.

 



The divine Deb kindly invited me here today because I have a new book coming out in April, but first there’s something else I’ve been dying to ask the Reds and Readers about.

Did you open your email this morning and save Jungle Reds for last, knowing it’ll be a welcome antidote to whatever fresh outrage just screamed at you from the headlines? Like me, do you top up your cuppa and come here to be reassured that smart, thoughtful people still care about books and writing and each other? That there are still kind people on this earth who listen to each other, offer condolences in times of loss and sadness, encouragement to those with health woes, and joy at every new book release and award? I don’t know about you, but for me, Jungle Reds is one of those safe havens and islands of goodness I’ve come to rely on in this weary world.

But what do you do in the middle of the night when you need something more to whisk you away from your cares and worries? That’s what I’m here to ask about today.

 

Reds and Readers, what do you look for in a comfort read?

 


 

Sometime during covid I stopped reading thrillers—a genre I used to consume by the truckload—and started seeking out the kind of books that will gently but firmly lure me away from staring at the ceiling at 3:00 a.m. and worrying about test results or fretting over the problems of the world. I’m pretty sure the Reds and Readers are world-class experts on comfort reads, because so many of you write them and we so often recommend them to each other.

 

So…what defines a comfort read for YOU?

 



What must-haves do you look for in a comfort read?

 

What no-fly zones must a comfort read absolutely avoid?

 

What are your favorite comfort reads (and why)?

 

To get us started, want to hear mine?

 

Must-haves: Writing and plot so immersive I need to set a timer if I’ve got somewhere to be; a setting/situation that’s very different from the reality I’m escaping; a satisfying ending (everyone gets what they deserve, good or bad)

 

No-flys: Graphic violence or cruelty; evil triumphing over good in any lasting way

 

Favorite comfort reads: Mysteries have always been my all-purpose comfort read—especially if they take place elsewhere and elsewhen (i.e. not in the present-day USA)—because puzzling over a crime I know is going to be solved in 350 pages stops me from obsessing about the problems that are tougher to solve in real life. I’ve also started reading more historical fiction, because whatever dire straits and evil leaders and wretched conditions the characters have to endure, I know for a fact we survived that era. That the pendulum always swings, humanity lurches forward, and evil goes out of style again.

 

My latest go-to comfort reads:

 

The Wine of Angels by Phil Rickman

The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley

A Letter of Mary by Laurie King

In the Bleak Midwinter by Julia Spencer-Fleming (this whole series, to be honest. Eek, have I developed a vicar fixation?)

Matrix by Lauren Groff

 

So tell me, Reds and Readers, what about you? What do YOU look for in a comfort read?

 



Jonelle Patrick writes what she reads. Her new mystery, The Samurai’s Octopus, takes place in Japan’s Yoshiwara pleasure quarter in the 1780s, where the shōgun rules with an iron fist but women hold all the cards. It’s a place where those with the most power must beg favor from those with the least, and one resourceful girl growing up at the House of Treasures just might bring down a high-ranking murderer if she manages to find the mother she’s never known. If you’re my long-lost twin when it comes to comfort reads, here’s where you can find out if The Samurai’s Octopus checks all your boxes too…

DEBS: Wow, what great questions! Thank you, Jonelle. I can't wait to see what everyone answers! 

Oh, and Jonelle, just wanted to add that your cover is gorgeous! I can't wait to dive into this book!

46 comments:

  1. Congratulations on your new book, Jonelle . . . I’m looking forward to reading “The Samurai’s Octopus” . . . .

    Comfort reads are like getting a hug from a book . . . . you’re left feeling peaceful and your heart is smiling. I have to agree with you, Jonelle, about Julia’s Clare Ferguson / Russ Van Alstyne books being comfort reads; I’d also add “The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe” and many children’s books like “Goodnight Moon” . . . .

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    1. Joan, no surprise, you are a woman after my own heart. I hesitated to mention how many YA books I consume in times of true distress, but now that you've opened the door, Counselor, I'll admit that the Narnia books are in my emergency stash for those dire staring-into-the-abyss nights. YA and childrens' books go that extra mile even beyond cozies, and I think the good ones are some of the finest literature ever written. (Did you ever reread Winnie-the-Pooh as an adult? I was astounded at how it spoke to me on a whole different level than the stories I was delighted by as a child!)

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  2. Joan, no surprise, you are a woman after my own heart. I hesitated to mention how many YA books I consume in times of true distress, but now that you've opened the door, Counselor, I'll admit that the Narnia books are in my emergency stash for those dire staring-into-the-abyss nights. YA and childrens' books go that extra mile even beyond cozies, and I think the good ones are some of the finest literature ever written. (Did you ever reread Winnie-the-Pooh as an adult? I was astounded at how it spoke to me on a whole different level than the stories I was delighted by as a child!)

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    1. At the moment I am working my way through the full cast audio versions of the Harry Potter book. So good, except I can't quite get used to Hugh Laurie as Dumbledore because he sounds like Hugh Laurie!

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  3. Welcome, Jonelle! Do you live in Japan full time? I lived on the Okakyu Line fifty years ago for a couple of years, teaching conversational English and studying Japanese. Your new book sounds fabulous!

    Comfort reads for me are historical and smart cozy mysteries, which is why that's also what I write (as Maddie Day). They were a great comfort to write during pandemic lockdown - my story was pretty much the only thing I could control and make sure things came out right in the end.

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    1. Edith, I have been a fan of yours forever (speaking of smart cozy mysteries!) and I never guessed you'd lived here until you mentioned it the other day! Have you been back since your Eikaiwa days? I have a cultural visa now for writing, so I COULD live here all the time...if all my family wasn't in San Francisco. I spend about half the year here in Tokyo, and the other half ironing napkins for all major holidays (none of my kids has twelve plates, forks or chairs, so I've been unsuccessful at retiring from turkey duty). But you are my sister in writing being a way to escape the various horrors of reality for a few hours (ugh, the pandemic was the worst, wasn't it?) I was so homesick for Japan the first time we moved back (I cried all the way to Narita Airport), writing my first (utterly unpublishable) novel was a way for me to spend four hours a day in Japan, even though my body was on Pacific Coast Time.

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    2. What a marvelous statement, Edith, about your story being pretty much the only thing you could control. Exactly! Comfort reads ease my days. I hope, when finished, my book will be a comfort zone, a place to hide away from the uglies life sends our way sometimes.

      Jonelle, I’m intrigued by your book and your description of comfort reads. You are on my TBR pile. Thanks for being here today.

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  4. Jonelle, intrigued by The Samurai’s Octopus as you are a new-to-me author! and one of my comfort reads is Shelby VanPelts’ octopus tale of Remarkably Bright Creatures. To answer your question about reading Jungle Reds: I just visit the website daily, don’t get the emails. Elisabeth

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    1. Elisabeth, you have wonderful taste in comfort reads. I LOVED Remarkably Bright Creatures! It's going to be one of my future 3:00 am Top Five, once my increasingly tired braincells forget enough of it to make it feel new again. I loved spending time with the characters and know it will all come out right in the end, which my two biggest hot buttons. (And I've seen you here before, never guessing that you do that most dedicated of things: come here without even an email to remind you! It really says something about a community when it's welcoming and safe enough to be part of peoples' everyday lives, don't you think?)

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  5. Edith, I have been a fan of yours forever (speaking of smart cozy mysteries!) and I never guessed you'd lived here until you mentioned it the other day! Have you been back since your Eikaiwa days? I have a cultural visa now for writing, so I COULD live here all the time...if all my family wasn't in San Francisco. I spend about half the year here in Tokyo, and the other half ironing napkins for all major holidays (none of my kids has twelve plates, forks or chairs, so I've been unsuccessful at retiring from turkey duty). But you are my sister in writing being a way to escape the various horrors of reality for a few hours (ugh, the pandemic was the worst, wasn't it?) I was so homesick for Japan the first time we moved back (I cried all the way to Narita Airport), writing my first (utterly unpublishable) novel was a way for me to spend four hours a day in Japan, even though my body was on Pacific Coast Time.

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  6. Congratulations on your new book, Jonelle, I love histoical mysteries and it is going on my TBR.
    Since the pandemic, I also have been searching for comfort reads. The Jungle Red Writers' books are all on the list, but I have also been reading lots of historical mysteries and lots of romances and romantic mysteries. In particular, I have gravitated towards books that are laugh-out-loud funny, devouring series like the Shackleford Sisters by Beverley Watt and The Carsington Family Series by Loretta Chase. If you like to laugh, I cannot recommend anything funnier. I just read A KING'S RANSOM by Janet Evanovich and could hardly put it down. I do set timers in order to get to appointments.

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    1. Oh my goodness, a new Janet Evanovich that comes this highly recommended from you? Straight to the TBR! And thank you for the laugh-out-loud funny recommendations that hooked you into reading an entire series. You know how some books start out funny, but the style of humor wears thin by the end? Hearing of a writer whose funny bone goes the distance is like GOLD.

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    2. Judy, I too enjoy Janet Evanovich's mysteries. I just started A King's Ransom (at your suggestion earlier) and it moves quickly, a page turner. If you like romantic mysteries you might enjoy Rebecca by du Maurier, if you aren't already familiar with this book/movie. It's set in the late 1930's in England.

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  7. Welcome to JRW Jonelle! I recently also read REMARKABLY BRIGHT CREATURES and adored it! I'm going to look for your book as soon as I finish here. I'm dying to know what you're doing in Japan!

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    1. Oh Lucy/Roberta, I love your writing, and my goal is for my characters to meet in wonderful Japanese places and discover as much fabulous food as your characters do in Key West! You're so good at making the place you love come alive (even for readers who've never been there) so you know that it's the little day-to-day details (even the annoying bits) that really add that depth of experience that makes an exotic place also feel familiar. Even after twenty years, I still wake up here every day and see (or eat!) something I'd never see anywhere else. What brought me here in 2003 is that my husband's mother is Japanese and he has lots of family here, so when he had a chance to work in Tokyo for a couple of years, we jumped at the chance. But it's me who fell in love with the place and kept coming back for more, and now it's the excuse of book research that puts me here about half the year.

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  8. Lisa in Long BeachApril 4, 2026 at 8:06 AM

    Competence porn does it for me. Good people (flawed but caring) solving problems and trying to make things better. Lately The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells, the Rivers of London, and all of Becky Chambers have been my go-to reading.

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    1. Lisa in Long BeachApril 4, 2026 at 8:17 AM

      Also Japanese cozies like THE FULL MOON COFFEE SHOP series by Mai Mochizuki, DAYS AT THE MORISAKI BOOKSHOP by Satoshi Yagisawa and THE CAT WHO SAVED BOOKS by Sosuke Natsukawa.

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    2. OMG my long-lost sister, I am such a Murderbot and Becky Chambers fangirl. Have read all Murderbots multiple times, the Wayfarer books at least twice, and give Psalm for the Wild-Built to everyone I know. So it surprised me that you also like those Japanese cozies—what do you love about them? I found them sort of quirkily charming, but am slightly baffled at how hot they've become outside of Japan.

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    3. I am a huge Rivers of London fan (favorite series) and of Murderbot Diaries. Martha Wells has a new Murderbot book out next month, I think. Now I have to look up Becky Chambers.

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  9. Hi Jonelle, and welcome to JRW. I loved your first photo -- and immediately had to show it to my husband because last August we visited the very spot you are standing and it is always a thrill to have those places pop up.

    I too, have pretty much lost my taste for thrillers in the current days. I kind of enjoy escaping into well written magical realism, like everything by Sarah Addison Allen, or even whatever genre one would call Ben Aaronovich's Rivers of London series. I also enjoy finding books with a good quirky main character to love, like Where'd You Go Bernadette or Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine or When We Were Vikings. I don't read romances per se, but a good dose of romance in a mystery or serious novel can be a fine thing. I stumbled across a relatively unknown author named Emma Jameson who wrote the Lord and Lady Hetheridge mystery series that is police procedural with just the right romantic spice and I devoured them.

    My no-fly list is about the same as yours. I would just add anything that makes my stomach roil as I read it. Life is too short and currently too full of real world drama to spend my reading time feeling that way.

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    1. Amen to real word news providing way too much stomach-flipping drama! I admire you for having the bandwidth for magical realism, and am noting your recommendations, because maybe I just haven't read the RIGHT magical realism yet. The fact that you've read whole series makes me want to give those a try.

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    2. Susan, thank you for suggesting Emma Jameson's books. It turns out that I already have the first one in my Kindle. I bet I bought it after one of the JRW "what we're reading" blogs. Moving it closer to the top!

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  10. Must Haves: The World Wars and living through them – Jacqueline Winspear, and Molly Dobbs, Charles Todd and Bess Crawford. Susan Elia MacNeil. Lately Kate Thompson (British) and her stories. I don’t like the ones that are historical, but more mushy love story than the time line.
    No Flys: Psychological thrillers. Some authors who have outstayed their welcome – stories become just formulaic.
    Reading Right Now: Gerald Durrell The Garden of Gods – The writing could have used editing, but you can just imagine the island, the people, and the fact that we watched the tv shows, the people who portrayed the family. I have to ignore all the snakes.
    Have To Dole Out Carefully: Jena DeLeon. Since I met the ladies, and since I read of their antics in bed, and since they keep me up all night laughing, I have to dole these books out carefully. I need my sleep, and don’t want to reach the end.
    Favourite Comfort Reads: Louise Penny. Going to Three Pines is always a place of comfort even if there is weather and murder, and usually a government issue. We lived in Eastern Ontario when her books first began. I personally knew all the ‘characters’ – they lived on my street or in my neighbourhood. When she said Gabri and Olivier – my husband was rebuilding their B&B. There was a Ruth – she didn’t have a duck, but she was just as outspoken even if her language was a bit less crusty. We saw the government of Quebec and knew of the politics that she spoke of. The original Ralph Cosham spoke the language as it was to be spoken – toque pronounced correctly. Now that we no longer live there – she creates memories of a life and friends we loved.

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    1. OK, any books that have to be "doled out carefully" so you won't come to the end are going straight onto my TBR stack. And weirdly, I don't enjoy reading Louise Penny as much as listening to them as audiobooks. Ralph Cosham was so amazing as Inspector Gamache, but he also gave the other characters their own distinct voices without being campy.

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  11. Welcome, Jonelle ~ and I love your name! Congratulations on your latest book "The Samurai's Octopus". You mentioned two interesting comments: #1. You asked if the Jungle Red Readers saved opening this blog first or last while perusing morning emails. If I am not heading out the door for an appointment I like to perk a pot of coffee and leisurely read through the Jungle Red email after finishing the task of opening the other emails. Saving the best for last as well as that first cup of java is a great way to start the day. :-) And #2. You shared that you took a break from reading mystery novels during Covid. I did just the opposite. Our household was balancing major and frightening medical issues at the same time the pandemic hit and my head was not only spinning with confusion and chaos but my mind had scrambled down the rabbit hole as well. It was difficult to stay focused on day to day tasks but somehow reading a mystery novel brought me front and center into a feeling of normalcy. Crime fiction forces one to concentrate and pay attention and it was a Hank Phillippi Ryan murder mystery that pulled me back into reading again. I had abandoned all forms of reading prior to that and I believe that I mentioned that to her during one of the Jungle Reds blogs. As life is always an adventure of the unexpected this year has proven to be a rather challenging one and so I am constantly seeking out ways to settle down and find those moments of normalcy. It may be the enjoyment of changing out the winter wreaths to spring ones and scattering pots of colorful viola/pansies in the courtyard. Out comes the rabbit decor to replace the winter reindeers. Or it may be watching a Masterpiece Theatre series or black and white noir movie with a hot cup of tea or treat. Or call a friend. Or bake some cookies. Whatever I need to do to "find the joy" I seek that out and it's a great form of therapy. Uncomplicated and free. :-) Right now I am switching back and forth between two books ~ "Raising Hare A Memoir" by Chloe Dalton and "Ikigai" (The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life). The second one I have been "nursing" for several months; it's a pleasant way to remind myself that the simple joys are often the answer to being happy. As a side note my late Aunt Saiko was born in Tokyo and although she lived happily in the States for many years she always missed her home in Japan. I think it's wonderful that you are able to split your time between San Francisco and Tokyo!

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  12. Congratulations on your new novel, Jonelle and welcome to Jungle Reds! Yes to all of your questions.

    Your list of no-fly is a good start. I wanted to add a few things to the no fly list. Misogyny never sat well with me. If women are ALWAYS the murder victims, that is another Big NO. Unpopular opinion here: I am NOT a fan of cliffhangers.

    Not a fan of thrillers, though. Life is too short and there are many books, which I have not read yet.

    My comfort reads must have a sense of calm in the story. A comfort read is any book that leaves me feeling happy and hopeful. Often, my comfort books are the novels by Alexander McCall Smith.

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    1. Oh my gosh, it's time for me to catch up on my Alexander McCall Smiths! Thank you for reminding me of that ultimate comfort series. I love those because I also accidentally learn something new about Botswana life and society every time I read one. It's not easy to do that without being Lord Explainington, and I really admire how he makes readers feel like insiders, even if we've never been there. (And yes, thank you for adding the ugh about books where women are always the victims! I'm tired of those too.)

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    2. Diana, thanks for mentioning Alexander McCall Smith, I especially love his No! Ladies' Detective Agency where the women are the smart ones and seem to have all the answers!
      I agree it does leave you feeling happy and hopeful.

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  13. Hi Jonelle, Welcome! I will look for your new book. When I think of a comfort read, my first thought is big historical novels, like those of the late Sharon Kay Penman. I love just immersing myself in the past. Novels with humor are a big help too. Cynthia Harrod-Eagles' Bill Slider mysteries come to mind. She is so clever and funny.

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    1. Yes to big historical novels! The fatter, the better! I'm going straight out to investigate Sharon Kay Penman's books, and try a sample of the Bill Sliders. Thank you for the recommendations!

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    2. Oh, the Bill Sliders! I am so behind. Must remedy!

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  14. Hi, Jonelle, nice to "meet" you! You never know who is lurking around here, do you? LOL Yes, JRW is one of my daily comfort reads, especially these last six years or more. Bless you all, for the amazing conversations.

    May I say that The Samurai's Octopus is one of the most intriguing titles I have ever seen? I will definitely add this to my teetering TBR pile, since--especially since COVID--reading stories that take place in exotic other lands, times, and cultures has become one of my personal favorites, too. It makes my imagination work harder, which in turn causes the real world around me to fall away. Bliss!

    Like you, I stopped reading thrillers, although I was already starting that trend before the pandemic. Having three adult daughters, two of whom travel the world, often alone, I could no longer stomach the trend of about 20 years ago of fem jeop, torture, and cruelty to women. Nope, nope, nope. I worry enough about my offspring, without having my imagination tweaked.

    Favorite comfort reads: all of Rhys's books, including her standalones. Jenn's books. Helen Simonsen's Major Pettigrew's Last Stand. Remarkably Bright Creatures. Kevin Wilson's This is no Time to Panic, and Nothing to See Here. And lots more, too many to list!

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    1. PS I don't get the emails, JRW is my home page on one of my four browsers!

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    2. My fellow armchair traveler, come right over here and sit by me! Your favorite comfort reads overlap so significantly with mine, I'm now curious about what international fiction has most transported you? I too enjoy books with international settings, because I love it when an author makes me feel like an insider, even if I've never been there. I love seeing new places through the eyes of characters who have to deal with the day-to-day annoyances as well as the delights. (For example Michael Dibdin's Aurelio Zen and Donna Leon's Inspector Brunetti have both figured out how to navigate the arcane ladder of Italian bureaucracy with delightfully dark humor.) What about you? What parts of the world you like "visiting" best?

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    3. Pulling up a chair. Somali Dev's books take place in the US, primarily, but a lot of them spill over into India. Butter, by Asako Yuzuki. Fiona Grace's Tuscany and Sicily series. Tangerine, by Christine Mangan (not exactly a comfort read, but to a foreign land). Pachinko, by Min Jim Lee. Anything by Frederik Backman. Anything by Lisa See, but especially Snowflower and the Secret Fan. The Jaipur Trilogy by Alka Joshi. Sujata Massey's Purveen Mistry series. Isak Dinesen's books. Beryl Markham's, which also take place in Kenya. 100 Years of Lenni and Margot, by Marianne Cronin. West with Giraffes by Lynda Rutledge. Miss Benson's Beetle, by Rachel Joyce.

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  15. Morning all ~ The no-fly zone things you mentioned are mine as well. And, Diana, I too wonder why it’s pretty much always women who are killed. Not always, but lots. Some cliffhangers are so stressful. I’ve started several books, like 5 or 6, in the last month and have had to put them down bc they are just too stressful in content. One of my go-to requirements is fabulous descriptions of all things nature, a walk in the woods, a nest, a garden, a waterfall. Not over done but just right to set the scene of calmness and thinking time. Paula Munier writes such a series.

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    1. Oh, and the rest of the questions: I read Jungle Red every day just as soon as my coffee is ready. What a delightful way to start my day. So happy to have found it. Paula B

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    2. Paula, I too have put down more books in the past three years than in all the rest of my life, because they just pushed me into the ruts already being worn too deep by the daily news. Life is too short for books that make me feel worse instead of better. And thank you for reminding me that books with excellent nature settings are restorative in a whole new way. Is "A Borrowing of Bones" where you'd start with the Paula Muniers?

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    3. Jonelle, you will love Paula's books!! And, yes, A Borrowing of Bones is the first.

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  16. I consider some mystery series to also be comfort books (think: Maisie Dobbs series). I also love classics as comforting books and recently re-read The Good Earth and re-loved it. On a recent trip to England, I visited the town of Hartfield (the setting for the Winnie-the-Pooh series), so I have been on the hunt for the antique versions of the series to re-read. With the visual setting in my mind, I suspect I will be transported back to my childhood… and beyond…!

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    1. Stacia, I have those antique versions--they were mine-- but sorry not lending:-))

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    2. I did not know that there was a real town where Winnie-the-Pooh was set! MUST GO. (I don't know if you read the comments upstream, but I was just saying that reading the Pooh books as an adult was such a revelation to me. I was bowled over by how those familiar little stories had such witty depths when I read them to my children years later. My respect for A.A. Milne is limitless.)

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  17. Welcome Jonelle, it must be getting late in Japan! I loved reading Winnie the Pooh (as an adult) to my young daughter. Like you say there is so much depth ("You are braver than you believe, stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think" AND "Sometimes, the smallest things take up the most room in your heart") to the stories and the lovable characters.

    Milne was such a brilliant writer. Years ago I was browsing in the library and found A.A. Milne's The Red House Mystery (pub. 1922). It was his only mystery.
    Can you tell us a little bit more about your life in Japan - I'm so curious.

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  18. Comfort books for me are defined by what is going on in my life. Pandemic? Lots of international thrillers that I could track via my world atlas. It let me feel less claustrophobic being trapped in my apartment. Turmoil in my personal life? I need humor and comfort cozies. Earlier in this stream you asked about the Japanese cozies popularity and I would say for me it is the fact that they are gentle and wise. Don't hit you over the head, but let you find your own wisdom in the words. Right now, life is trying to get into a rut so I'm reading a mishmash of books in an effort to keep my brain agile. The latest book surprise that lifted my spirits and kept me up late at night finishing it is T. Kingfisher's Paladin's Grace. It is a romantasy filled with humor, humanity and hope. Just what I needed! Glad you visited with us today and congrats on your latest book! -- Victoria

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