What I learned from my BFFs (Book Festival Friends)


If Malcolm Gladwell is correct and it takes 10,000 hours to achieve mastery of a skill, I’ve certainly done the time to become a fine reader. Unknown-4The difference between mastery and truly owning a skill is the continuing passion to improve and find new opportunities to learn from others.

For the last ten years I have been taking an intensive course in critical reading, no classroom or tests involved. If you have served with me on a book festival committee or been a member of one of my book groups, I have you to thank for the lessons. So here’s some of what I’ve learned:

  • It isn’t a bad book just because you don’t like it. Not every book works for every reader. Just like the car you test drive or the great looking pair of shoes, it doesn’t always suit.  There is no crime in putting down a book if you really can’t images-5get into it. Figure out what it is that turns you off. There are people very uncomfortable with multiple narrators or time jumping.  Others dislike lengthy descriptions with little dialog or action. Take a few minutes and consider whether someone you know might enjoy it.  And sometimes it is poorly written or flat-out boring and you can chalk it up to experience.
  • Reading a book knowing nothing about it can be exhilarating. Publishers and authors supply bookstores, bloggers, reviewers and book festivals with advance copies to build a buzz and secure orders. This may be the first exposure to a new author. Often these early editions look nothing like the finished product – no Unknown-5fancy cover, no laudatory blurbs. While you may kiss a lot of frogs before finding a prince, it is great when it happens. Sometimes a published book has just been below the radar waiting for someone to wave the flag. It could be you!
  • Authors are interested in what readers take from their writing. I’ve been lucky to facilitate discussions with a few authors about their books and to talk to several one on one. With few exceptions they’ve been curious about what has piqued the most conversation and what characters/situations were liked or troubling. Authors of both nonfiction and fiction spend so much time on research these days. They are very appreciative of questions about how they came to their ideas and the process to get from a glimmer of an idea to a finished title.
  • Sharing the reading experience with others takes time. It just takes longer to read a book that is under consideration as a book group title or to be reviewed. images-2At this point it is almost second nature to create discussion questions as I read and mark passages to go back to later. I spend time thinking about the author’s intention or how a particular title connects to a different author’s work or a museum exhibit I may have seen. My matchmaking goes beyond the people in a living room discussion. It’s so nice when people come up to me about a book they have read and ask for suggestions. My TBR (to be read) pile inevitably gets longer after they share what they have found.
  • Make time for “just for fun” reading. I love a good mystery. While I don’t completely write the genre off for discussion purposes, many are good reads better consumed and passed along to a friend. Thankfully my facilitator eyeshade doesn’t kick in when I settle in to read one.  But don’t be surprised if you see a write-up of a favorite mystery author here before too long because sometimes you just have to share.images-3
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So here’s what YOU are reading

Unknown-8Summer is halfway done and my to-be-read pile is still growing. Thanks to those of you who offered up the titles you’ve been reading this summer. It is a very eclectic list, as you can see below. Seeing what others are enjoying encourages me to expand my horizons. Here are some of your choices:

  • The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant
  • While the Gods Were Sleeping by Enslin
  • The Seven Good Years by Etgar Keret
  • My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me by Jennifer Teege
  • Albion’s Seed: Four British Folkways in America
  • My Father and Myself by J.R. Ackerley
  • Mindset by Carol Dweck
  • In the Unlikely Event by Judy Blume
  • From Frazzled to Focused by Rivka Caroline and Amy Sweetny

And what have I been reading? Well, I’ve finished The Girl on the Train, The Seven Good Years and Alice Hoffman’s new book, The Marriage of Opposites. The review of Hoffman’s book will post on Monday and look for a write-up on the Keret essays soon. Oops, I forgot about The Book of Speculation, Erica Swyler’s book released last month. Watch for my thoughts on that in a few days.Screen Shot 2015-07-28 at 9.59.20 PM

If you were a big Gone Girl fan, The Girl on the Train may be perfect for any trips this summer. Next up is House of Thieves, Charles Belfoure’s new book scheduled for September release.  I posted about his first book, The Paris Architect, and the book group conversations several months ago. I’m hoping to finish Safekeeping by Jessamyn Hope. I started reading it in an electronic Advance Copy which expired before I had a chance to finish. It was one of my buys while on the road.

If you signed up to receive these posts via email I will be sending you a message tomorrow to see if the announcements of the posts are arriving consistently. I’ve been hearing some people have not been receiving them regularly.  Please reach out through the comments or by email if you have any thoughts.

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David Liss’ The Day of Atonement – Audiobook review

Unknown-6David Liss has created a special niche in historical fiction. His books provide a rich portrait of difficult business and social interactions at pivotal points in commercial history. My first exposure to his work was The Coffee Trader which takes place in 1659 in Amsterdam at the beginning of coffee as an international commodity. In each of his novels the main protagonist is Jewish, well-versed in the different business and social customs of the times and often at odds with those governing Jewish communal norms in the city. Liss is expert at describing the look of the city, its clothing and foods, taverns and houses of worship, elite and servant classes.

In The Day of Atonement, Liss brings a young man, Sebastian, back to Lisbon from London in 1755, during the latter days of the Inquisition. Sebastiao Raposa was smuggled out of Lisbon a decade earlier just as his family was taken by Inquisition. While in London he had been mentored by a man with a keen eye for  business and conspiracies as well as great fighting skills. As Sebastian Foxx he returns to Lisbon with the intention of seeking retribution against those that destroyed his family, killed his father and separated him from his first love.

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Every aspect of the story is seen through Sebastian’s eyes. Characteristically, the priests of the Inquisition pitted neighbor against neighbor and were ever vigilant to any inkling of Judaization among New Christians, those Jews who were forcibly converted to Catholicism more than 200 years earlier. Lisbon was at the nexus of international trade and English Protestants were major traders, forming an alliance for their own protection. Both New Christians and Protestants were at peril of being imprisoned by the Inquisition at any time for almost any reason. Continue reading David Liss’ The Day of Atonement – Audiobook review

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Road trip – I brake for bookstores!

Screen Shot 2015-06-26 at 3.43.28 PMCome summer it is time to get moving and time to chill out. Whether on vacation or just eking out one more experience with the extra hours of daylight, the pace definitely changes.

My reading changes as well. Summer is a catch up time when I have fewer book group titles to read and prepare. IMG_2926After going to Book Expo, it is also the opportunity to search for the yet-to-be-released jewel I can share with my book loving friends.  Right now I am reading Alice Hoffman’s The Marriage of Opposites. Its historical fiction set in the Caribbean and France in the 19th century and tells of the family origins of Camille Pissarro, the Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painter.

We’re off on a road trip and have already picked out  (thanks to www.indiebound.org) the independent bookstores we’ll be stopping at en route through North Carolina. I’ll let you know where I go and what local gems I find.

Speaking of sharing, I’d like to ask for your feedback. I’m so pleased when someone tells me s/he has been reading this blog. It may come as a surprise but information on who and how many people are looking at the blog is very difficult to come by.  Since you are reading this could you please let me know you are out there? And to make it more appealing to everyone, let me know what you are reading now and I’ll put a list in an upcoming post.

If you are seeing this via email, either reply or comment.

If you read this on Facebook, comment with a title or PM if you’d prefer to remain anonymous. If you like what you are seeing here I’d be thrilled if you’d share it so others can see it as well.

And if you happened upon the post some other way, welcome and I’d love to know how you found me.

Thanks for joining on my journey!

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2017 UPDATED: A Book + Dad + You = A Great Gift

happy-fathers-day-facebook-timeline-cover1When I was growing up, books and reading were always very important. Like many other fathers, my dad spent long hours at work and volunteered in the community.  He read the local newspaper daily but much of his other reading was reports and minutes and quotes and diagrams.

While he still spends lots of time volunteering and reading reports, Dad dedicates time each day to reading for pleasure. An engineer by training and methodical to a fault, his reading tastes are now rather eclectic. Dad reads memoirs and mysteries, histories and titles with a touch of fantasy. His willingness to read outside the box is delightful and gives us many opportunities to talk about topics that otherwise wouldn’t come up.

With my father in mind, here are some titles that your father or another important person in your life might like to receive this Father’s Day. No need to worry about size or color, and there’s no ugly tie involved. Love you Dad!

If you don’t have a local independent bookstore, consider choosing to support one in another community when you shop online. Many will also give advice and take orders over the phone. Find one at www.indiebound.org. Continue reading 2017 UPDATED: A Book + Dad + You = A Great Gift

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