Sunday, March 30, 2014

Pick The Violets of March to read

violets of march
The Violets of March, by Sarah Jio
Psssst. I have a secret. When you hear those words, especially with a lowered voice, it gets your attention. This novel is all about family secrets. The story holds added fascination with most of its action set on beautiful Bainbridge Island. Vivid writing brings the Island to life, as if it’s another character in the novel. Sarah Jio lives in Seattle with her family, and enticingly writes about our area. You’ll enjoy her richly descriptive passages about Bainbridge, Seattle, and the surroundings.
The protagonist, Emily, is living in New York and has become weary of a personal life that is unraveling. She yearns for respite and thinks of carefree feelings about her childhood summer visits to a beloved aunt on Bainbridge Island. Despite years of distance, Emily contacts her aunt and then heads west.
Emily’s family is aging. Carrying a burdensome secret has taken its toll . . . . . .  Link to my recommendation

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Harvest - A Heart Pounding Medical Thriller

harvest
Harvest, by Tess Gerritsen
Did anyone ever warn you that sometimes you will reap what others sow? I’m not talking agriculture; this “Harvest” is within a medical thriller. This novel is a chilling, heart-pounding look into the world of transplant medicine. And especially a look into what is reaped when a system goes unthinkably wrong.
Dr. Abby DiMatteo is a medical resident at Boston’s Bayside Hospital, with a bright future ahead. Her career path, her personal life, and her love life are all exciting and promise fulfillment and joy. She has her choice of positions after her residency. She has friends and she is in a relationship with a handsome, successful transplant surgeon at the hospital. She is a happy person, for awhile.
Then Dr. Abby runs head on into an ethical question . . . . . .

Link to the rest of my recommendation

Monday, March 10, 2014

Ashes Where Once The Fire by Katherine Neville

The FireThe Fire, by Katherine Neville
There has been a 200-year-long quest for the fabulous, bejeweled chess set of Charlemagne. The historical and modern people participating in this quest have taken on the persona of each of the different, opposing chess pieces. The Black Queen from the first novel “The Eight” suddenly surfaces in Russia 30 years later, launching the living chess game search once more in the sequel “The Fire.”
You’ll enjoy this sequel, even if you haven’t read the first novel. The children of the previous characters know nothing of their parents’ game, but find themselves drawn into it. Much of the story is told in parallel between the historical actions of characters in the 1800s with the modern players’ actions today. . . .

Link to my recommendation

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

UNESCO's Next City of Literature? Seattle?

Originally published March 3, 2014 at 6:15 AM | Page modified March 3, 2014 at 8:20 AM
Will Seattle be UNESCO’s next City of Literature?
Mary Ann Gwinn’s weekly Lit Life column reports on the movement to declare Seattle a City of Literature, and Washington state’s new poet laureate, Elizabeth Austen.


Seattle Times book editor
Lit Life
The movement to recognize Seattle as the eighth UNESCO City of Literature appears to be gathering momentum. If you’re interested in an update, supporters are gathering at 7:30 p.m. March 12 at Town Hall Seattle at a free event Town Hall Seattle City of Lit. They will present elements of the city’s application, which has been approved by the Seattle City Council, signed by Mayor Ed Murray and is due to UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) in late March.
 
Presenters include novelist Ryan Boudinot, mastermind of the effort. Boudinot recently traveled to several existing Cities of Literature, including Norwich, England, Edinburgh, Scotland, and Dublin, and visited UNESCO headquarters in Paris on a self-financed tour. Boudinot says he cashed in 15 years worth of frequent flier miles to make the trip.
 
The UNESCO Creative Cities network is a group of 41 cities worldwide with specialties in film, literature, design, music, gastronomy, media arts and crafts and folk art. If selected, Seattle would join seven other cities designated as cities of literature, including Edinburgh; Melbourne, Australia; Norwich; Dublin; Reykjavik, Iceland; Krakow, Poland; and Iowa City, Iowa (home of the internationally famous Iowa Writers Workshop).
 
There has been some discussion of city funding for the effort, but both city officials and Boudinot say that Seattle has to win the designation before funding can be considered. “It’s a bit of a chicken and egg thing — the city can’t give money to an organization that doesn’t exist yet, and the organization needs the backing of the city before it can exist,” said Boudinot in an email. “What I do know is that there is broad international, national and local support for our bid.”
 
At the Town Hall event, scheduled presenters includeMurray, Chris Higashi of the Washington Center for the Book at the Seattle Public Library; Gary Luke, Sasquatch Books publisher; Nancy Pearl, NPR books commentator and uber-librarian; Tree Swenson, director of Richard Hugo House; Elissa Washuta of the University of Washington; and Rick Simonson of the Elliott Bay Book Co. Brian McGuigan of Richard Hugo House will moderate.
 
New poet laureate
Washington state has a new poet laureate. It’s Elizabeth Austen, a Seattle-based poet.
Austen is the author of a poetry collection, “Every Dress a Decision,” plus two poetry chapbooks. She produces literary programming for KUOW radio in Seattle and also works at Seattle Children’s hospital as a communications specialist and educator.
 
Austen will serve a two-year term as primary supporter and promoter of poetry in Washington state. In a release, she said that she hopes “to reach people — even people who think they don’t like poetry — by sharing works that are both vivid and relatable.” She gets a $10,000 per year stipend to advance that cause.
 
Austen succeeds Kathleen Flenniken, a Seattle-based poet and author of the poetry collection “Plume,” based on her experiences growing up near and working at the Hanford nuclear reservation.
 
Mary Ann Gwinn: 206-464-2357 or mgwinn@seattletimes.com. Gwinn appears every Tuesday on TVW's "Well Read," discussing books with host Terry Tazioli (go to www.tvw.org/shows/well-read for archived episodes). On Twitter @gwinnma.

Monday, March 3, 2014

When You're at the End of Your Rope

house at end of ho#17F2158
The House at the End of Hope Street, by Menna Van Praag
 
Overwhelmed by life, a magical house offers a 99-night reprieve to women who need an oasis to sort out their way. Why 99? It’s just enough time to transform a life, but not too much time so you’ll procrastinate. At the end of Hope Street, an enchanted house can appear just in time for a distraught young woman. The house is kept up by a beautiful, older woman named Peggy who has lived there her whole life. And there are other residents as well. There is a group of unforgettable literary figures, and a few other meaningful ghosts as well, who counsel and coach the women. Women including Virginia Woolf, George Elliot, Charlotte Brontë and Florence Nightingale, and other notables provide inspiring ideas about how to dream again and change your life.
This skilled author peels the layers away . . . .
Link to my recommendation