Today is Small Business Saturday and the bookstore is hopping. Unfortunately, I am not at the store for the first SBS in 6 years, but I'm there in spirit! As a follow up to last week's Nonfiction November intro, our employee's Covid-19 test was negative (thank goodness!) and so things are mostly back to "normal."… Continue reading Week 4: The TBR Pile Overflows
Category: Nonfiction
Week 3: Expert Opinion
To say that it's been a stressful week would be an understatement - we have had our first incidence of a staff member at the bookstore needing a Covid-19 test, a test we still don't know the results of. I'm a few days late here, but hopefully no one will hold my tardiness against me!… Continue reading Week 3: Expert Opinion
Dandelion by Gabbie Hanna
I'm not a bit poetry person, and I didn't entirely love Gabbie's style in Adultolescence, I did relate to the content. When I saw the digital advance copy come through, and then saw how many people were hate-rating Dandelion on Goodreads before having access to it, I realized that it was my responsibility as a… Continue reading Dandelion by Gabbie Hanna
Week 2: Nonfiction, Meet Fiction
I LOVE doing "If You Like This, Try This" lists - we have a whole section for them at the bookstore and it's such fun. One thing we haven't done, however, is pair fiction and nonfiction so I'm excited to do so now! I may also throw in some binge watching/book pairings here as I… Continue reading Week 2: Nonfiction, Meet Fiction
Displacement by Lucy Knisley
A Travelogue I don't entirely remember what led me to pick up Displacement, but it came out around the same time my grandfather was moved to a nursing home and was suffering severe memory loss. But however this book came to be in my possession, it started a years long love of Lucy's books which… Continue reading Displacement by Lucy Knisley
The Last Pirate of New York by Rich Cohen
A Ghost Ship, a Killer, and the Birth of a Gangster Nation It's another Nonfiction Book Club selection! This was one that I put forth to the group for voting and it was definitely a compelling read. Synopsis From the publisher marketing:Handsome and charismatic, Albert Hicks had long been known in the dive bars and… Continue reading The Last Pirate of New York by Rich Cohen
Week 1: Year in Nonfiction
I am so excited to be participating in my first Nonfiction November! I've been following the reviews on What's Nonfiction and had so many lovely comments back and forth with Rennie that I figured it about time I commit to joining in for the month, even though it's a hectic one at the bookstore (and… Continue reading Week 1: Year in Nonfiction
The Nine of Us by Jean Kennedy Smith
Growing Up Kennedy This summer, the last of the nine Kennedy siblings, Jean, passed away at the age of 92. I'd had a copy of The Nine of Us sitting on my shelf as an ARC and as I've been working my way threw all my old ARCs, I figured it time to read The… Continue reading The Nine of Us by Jean Kennedy Smith
Shit, Actually by Lindy West
The Definitive, 100% Objective Guide to Modern Cinema When the world is crap, we need some brevity to cheer ourselves up. Shit, Actually, is that brevity - and I enjoy everything Lindy West writes, so reading this was a given. Synopsis From the publisher marketing:New York Times opinion writer and bestselling author Lindy West was once… Continue reading Shit, Actually by Lindy West
Belonging by Nora Krug
A German Reckons with History and HomeFirst published in German as Heimat: Ein Deutsches Familienalbum I've had the advance reader copy of this book for longer than I'd like to admit, and just recently got around to reading it. As a second generation German-American whose grandmother lived in Germany during WWII, I related to the… Continue reading Belonging by Nora Krug