MISS BENSON'S BEETLE

If ever there was a title for a book to make me less likely to pick it up and read it, I can’t come up with it!  Thankfully, Miss Benson’s Beetle was recently selected by my Boston Bates Alumna book club because it is a real jewel.  Joyce has written one of the best books about female friendship that I can remember ever reading.

FELLOWSHIP POINT

How very fitting that this gorgeous novel about a lifelong friendship between two women should be recommended to me by my very dear friend, Pam.  The story begins when Agnes Lee and Polly Wister are in their 80s and navigating a new phase of their friendship at their summer homes on Fellowship Point, Maine. Agnes, a famous author who has never married, has plans to  donate her land on her beloved peninsula in Maine as a trust, to ensure that it will remain unspoiled after she dies.

CARRIE SOTO IS BACK

love when I get around to reading a popular book before the buzz has subsided. Not only is this Reid’s 2022 bestseller, but she’s in the media this month because her earlier novel Daisy Jones and the Six has just been released as a TV show on Amazon Prime. While Daisy Jones was not my favorite (too whiny, read my review here), Carrie Soto is well worth a read. 

JUST MERCY

n my non-fiction round-up last month, I mentioned a few books that were difficult to read, but worth it (read round-up here). Just Mercy is an incredible, but devastating addition to that group. You may have seen the 2019 movie starring Michael B Jordan and Jamie Foxx, but I honestly can't imagine the degree of nuance and context that must have been lost in a two-hour movie. And let’s be honest, if you’re an L&L subscriber, I’m sure you’d read the book first anyway!

UNDER THE UDALA TREES

There is certainly something about a Nigerian upbringing, and the journey to ex-pat life in America, that is causing so many young women to write some of the best novels of the last few years. I don't want to flippantly say “it must be something in the water,” because obviously part of that “something” is the political and social oppression and uncertainty of  a country divided by a recent civil war and ongoing ethnic tensions and government corruption. But whatever is inspiring the writers and fueling their novels, I am grateful for each and every one that has come into my life. (read reviews of other books by Nigerian-American authors here).

BLACK CAKE

I was drawn to Black Cake because it seemed everyone, everywhere was reading this debut novel.  The story begins with Byron and Bennie, brother and sister, who have been estranged for years, but who are thrust together to hear their mother Eleanor’s lawyer read them her will and last requests. 

KINDRED

I have my friend Ellen to thank for recommending Kindred.  Written in 1979, Kindred is another landmark Black American novel that I hadn’t read, by a novelist I had always intended to read. Set in modern-day California, Butler tells the story of a newly married woman, Dana, who one day without warning or explanation, finds herself transported to the antebellum South. 

THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD

Originally published in 1937 and recognized as one of the most important novels in American Black literature, I somehow never read this gorgeous novel. I think all of my daughters read it in high school – and I can see why. 

NON-FICTION ROUND-UP

Whenever my mom or I review a non-fiction book, we comment on the rarity of the genre appearing on our reading lists.  And yet somehow, of the last 11 books I’ve read, seven were non-fiction! Year Of Yes I reviewed in November (read review here). But rather than choosing just two books to share with you this month, I’ve written a rapid-fire round-up and hope to spark more non-fiction interest on your reading list.

DEMON COPPERHEAD

It’s always thrilling when I hear that Barbara Kingsolver has written a new book.  She has authored some of the best books I’ve read over the past several years: The Poisonwood Bible; Unsheltered; Flight Behavior; and Animal, Vegetable, Miracle to name a few.  In Demon Copperhead, Kingsolver reimagines Charles Dickens’ David Copperfield and sets her story in modern-day Appalachia.  Her protagonist, like Dickens’, is left to navigate a society where children are powerless, unseen and must fight for survival.

HESTER

Recommended by the owner of my favorite independent bookstore in Kennebunkport, Maine (Fine Print Books), I wasn’t sure what to expect from Hester.  I knew it was set in Salem, Massachusetts and had something to do with witches and Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Scarlet Letter.  But that’s about it.  So, I was thrilled to discover that this is an absolute jewel of a novel!

THE WARRIOR QUEENS

Frazer creates masterful, sweeping surveys of women in history and Warrior Queens is no exception. She starts with Queen Boudicea from 1st century Britain and builds her case from there all the way through to Indira Gandhi and Margaret Thatcher.

HOW TO BE PERFECT

Written by the creator of NBC’s The Good Place, this book is both very funny, and taught me the history of moral philosophy. More than that, it gave me a framework of how to approach everyday and extraordinary decisions from a moral point of view.