This month's selection was
The Piano Teacher by Lynne York
From Amazon.com
From Booklist
An easy journey into familiar territory: the small North Carolina town of Swan's Knob sometime in the late 1970s. Known as Miss Wilma, the gentle, upright piano teacher of the title keeps her life in order and finds comfort in it. She comes home after playing the organ for a wedding to find her daughter Sarah--thin, uncommunicative, and tense--on her doorstep with her granddaughter, Starling, but not with Starling's dad, Harper. York moves the point of view between Miss Wilma, Sarah, Harper, and Roy, the local distinguished gentleman who finds himself quite taken with Wilma, as all hell breaks loose. A handsome stranger comes looking for Sarah and is soon accused of murder. Harper's weaknesses are of the hippy-dippy kind but loathsome withal. Sarah doesn't get her mother's bone-deep kindness. Sad family stories leak out of direct, well-wrought prose. Romance, justice, and family win--probably. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Everyone liked the book, although everyone agreed that it started off slow!
In usual book club fashion I have one of these up for grabs!
Book Club selection for July is
Barbara Delinsky's Flirting With Pete
From Amazon.com
From Publishers Weekly
Cassandra (Casey) Ellis, 34, a single, successful psychotherapist, is the newest of this prolific writer's heroines. The novel opens with a memorial service for Dr. Cornelius Unger, a brilliant and reclusive psychologist who is also Casey's father. She never knew him personally, since she was the product of her mother's single encounter with Unger, and is shocked to learn that Dr. Unger has left her a $3 million townhouse on Boston's Beacon Hill, complete with a maid, Meg, and a gardener, Jordan. Casey has always felt hostile toward her famous, mysterious father, even though her mother never expressed any anger. She's uneasy at first about living in a luxurious house haunted by her father's presence, but soon finds its meticulously attended gardens a source of relief from professional stress and the emotional turmoil of caring for her mother, left comatose after a recent accident. Moreover, she is attracted to handsome, virile Jordan. While she's rooting through Dr. Unger's personal papers, she comes across the story of Jenny Clyde, a young woman in her 20s who was abused by her father for years before being rescued by a police officer. Casey becomes intrigued: is this incestuous relationship fiction or one of Dr. Unger's case histories? Why did her father leave it for her to find? Delinsky (The Woman Next Door, etc.) weaves Jenny's story through the novel, and meshes her and Casey's fates in a melodramatic climax. Both stories have some lapses in credibility and underdeveloped supporting characters (Meg is particularly weak), but the plot is more sophisticated and fast-moving than some of Delinsky's earlier work. It will satisfy her fans and may even win her some new readers.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Sounds like a good one! My neighbor gave me her copy to borrow so I will start it after finishing the book I'm currently reading.
I also ordered one off www.paperbackswap.com so I will have one to give away.
Make sure you check back next month to win one!
13 comments:
oohhh fun! they both sound like neat books! i'm in dire need of a new read!
Oh you know how I love books and I love free books even more!! LOL!!
My 2nd comment will be on FB, I'm already a follower.
Sounds like a good one:-)
Lucy
I'm a follower now...
Books sound great. Of course then I'm going to need a bookmark for it...what a great excuse =+).
I love the character names in the first book you listed!
Sounds good...I need a new hobby! LOL
And you know I follow you! Your blog is the only one I check daily! :)
And you know I follow you! Your blog is the only one I check daily! :)
ooo looks like a good one.....
just popping in to say hello!!
not a book for me, i am currently reading a book about a journalist that followed the Hell's Angles around back in 1965. Drinking, fighting and manliness at its worst. Now there is a novel that might get your book clubs goat lol.
How fun to be part of a book club! I could never join one of those because I am a slow reader and if parts get boring or slow, I tend to skip a few parts.
Damn! I missed my chance to get ANOTHER book!!
LOL, I'm just kidding!
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