Beach House Book #11 – At the Water’s Edge by Sara Gruen

I must admit, that I was not at all enthusiastic about reading “At the Water’s Edge” by Sara Gruen.  This novel is a period piece…set in the 1940s during WWII… and part of the plot involves the hunt for the infamous fabled Loch Ness monster.    I am not attracted to period pieces, much less such pieces involving large serpent dragon dinosaur monsters living in lakes in a foreign land.  I  much prefer reading something that relates to the present or recent past…characters that seemingly live in my lifetime….in my reality.    To this day,  I struggle with historical novels, fantasy and plots set much too far into the future.   I may struggle with “being present” in my own life, but when I read, it is definitely the preferred time frame.

Because of it’s ranking as #2 on Southern Living’s Best New Summer Books of 2017 list, I cast aside my reluctance to spend the little free time that I have on a story about filthy rich, irresponsible, disrespectful, American youth getting their jollies chasing a dragon during WWII.   I finally gave it a go and actually very much enjoyed “At the Water’s Edge.”    At first, the initial characters, Ellis, Hank and Maddie were definitely difficult to relate to, much less like.    In the end, Ellis and Hank were still despicable and offensive in character, but Maddie was quite respectable.  I grew to love her.  The story of spoiled youth chasing a silly monster during horrific war times, transformed into a story of Maddie facing a hard reality, in essence, learning some difficult lessons about herself, about her powerless role in her marriage and about the horrors of war.  For me, “At the Water’s Edge,” suddenly grew into something I was eager to read, a page-turner about Maddie’s struggle and ultimate maturation, the real monster that Maddie conquers and Maddie getting what she deserved in the end.

 

Beach House Book #10 – Love & Gelato by Jenna Evans Welch

The surprise was all mine! This book was listed on Southern Living Magazine’s The Best New Books of Summer 2017, so I never ever considered that an adult was not exactly the audience that Welch had intended.  I was halfway through  Love & Gelato, when I flipped it over and saw the words “visit us at simonandshuster.com/teen.”  Now I know why I thought that it was interesting (i.e., odd) that the main character of the book was a teenager and the plots lacked the depth of other novels I had read this summer.  Now I know.  I was not the intended reader.

Despite not being the intended audience, I enjoyed the story, I truly did.  Meet Lina, a teenage girl, whose only parent that she has ever known dies.  As result of her mother’s wishes, she moves to Italy for the summer, to live with a stranger, her Mother’s old friend,  named Howard.  Within a few short days of living in Florence, she unlocks the untold secrets of her mother’s past and unravels the beginnings of her own existence.  This book wraps up with a nice big bow of a multiple happy endings with Lina coming to terms with the loss of her mother and gaining love in multiple capacities in her life.

I have to applaud Welch, and any adult authors for that matter who write stories aimed at a teenage audience.  How difficult it must be to put aside your adult experiences and tell a story through the eyes of a teenager.  I imagine, for an adult, it must be like trying to create a piece of art with playdoh or coloring a dog magenta, in a coloring book.  I find it difficult to find my inner child and take things, as an adult, out of true reality.  There are no magenta dogs so you cannot color them magenta.   I find reality skews my own perspective…what we know or have experienced changes the way we are able to see things. Although I enjoyed the story, it was really difficult to read a book written for teenagers, from the lenses of my 40+ year-old eyes.  I found it difficult to replace the cynic of my older, wiser self, with the hopeful, faithful wonder of a teenage girl…to believe that such happy-ending outcomes exist for the long-term.   My lens has become jaded by what happens after the perceived happy ending.  Maybe my lesson from this innocent read should be to strive to live in such wonder of being present and enjoying the moment, to reconnect with my teenage self, where everything and anything is possible.

Related Posts:

I Will Judge a Book by its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Beach House Book #4 – All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch

Beach House Book  #6 – The Book of Summer by Michelle Gable

Beach House Book #7 – Commonwealth by Ann Patchett

Beach House Book #8 – The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick

Beach House Book #9 – Hello Sunshine by Laura Dave

 

 

Beach House Book #8 – The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick

From death comes life…from darkness comes light…and from the ashes the Phoenix bird, too, will rise.  The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick was featured on Southern Living Magazine’s list of the Best New Summer Books of 2017.  It lightened my heart to read that it was Patrick’s first novel.  So bravo dear Phaedra. Congratulations!

Typically, unless it is a suspense or mystery novel, the books I select almost always have a female perspective and point-of-view.  So as the summer is winding down, a male perspective was quite refreshing.   Meet Arthur Pepper, our hero in this story.  He is a senior citizen, a widower, living almost a hermit’s life in York, England.  And before I speak further about dear old Arthur, let me say, having lived in the UK years ago,  I found myself reading silently, not in my inherited southern accent, but in my own contrived British accent and loving the nuances and stylistic differences that are ever so apparent between the Queen’s English and our own American use of the language.  But before I digress and begin reminiscing about my own adventures in that lovely little country, let me get back to Arthur.  Arthur’s tale begins similar to many of the chapters in our own lives.  Essentially his story begins at the end of one of life’s chapters, in a state of loss, from having lost a loved one.  On the anniversary of his wife, Miriam’s, death, he begins to sort through her closet only to discover a 40-year old secret…an elegant charm bracelet she has hidden amongst her belongings.  And so his adventures begin as he unravels the truth behind each of the charms.

Arthur is so relatable through this story.   As we would all be in this precarious situation, he is saddened by the secrets and the stories of his Miriam’s past…stories she never confided in him.  As such, his insecurities abound about his own place in her life and about their life together.  But he continues, fearlessly chasing the truth.  Through his quest, he not only discovers the history behind each charm, but he receives an answer to a greater, more haunting question…an answer to the riddle of his life and his purpose.  Indeed, Miriam’s charms may have initially breathed life into his essence, but in the end he breathes all on his own.

The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick is such a lovely read.  Go grab yourself a copy and enjoy with your next spot of tea.

Cheers!

Related Posts:

I Will Judge a Book by Its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Beach House Book #4 – All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch

Beach House Book #6 – The Book of Summer by Michelle Gable

Beach House Book #7 – Commonwealth by Ann Patchett

Beach House Book #7 – Commonwealth by Ann Patchett

Sigh.  I wanted to love this book.  I desperately wanted to love this book.  I wanted to love this book way before I even saw it on Southern Livings Best New Summer Books of 2017 list.  As I am typing, I have before me an article on this book from “Reading Room,” which was published in the Oprah Magazine issued in October 2016.  I tore this article out of that magazine, littered my house with it for over six months, so that I’d remember to read this book. That is how much I wanted to love this book.  I chased this book.  And like many things in life the chase was better than the prize.   Interestingly enough, that is what this book, or at least part of this story, is about.

Commonwealth by Ann Patchett, is a story of two families, the Cousins and the Keatings, that are initially torn asunder by a gin and juice induced stolen kiss at a christening party.  This kiss leads to the demise of two marriages, yet connects these two families to the very (bitter or not bitter, you decide) end.  Patchett presents us with a somewhat uncomfortable view of cause and effect, a fictitious reflection of how our choices today can have an unsavory outcome in the future.  This story, which spans decades of the family members’ lives, is told from the various view points of the family members and interestingly enough is the story in the middle of the story.

In hindsight, my initial words are probably too harsh.  I actually am happy that I read the book.  I’m just not sure it would make it to the shelves of my beach house.

Related Posts:

I Will Judge a Book by its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Beach House Book #4 – All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch

Beach House Book #6 – The Book of Summer by Michelle Gable

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch

This book was not on any of my best of summer reading lists; however, I stumbled upon it entering my local library to retrieve a book that was on one of my lists, so I am making an exception.  The book literally fell into my hands, a reminder that life cannot be so rigid.  Interestingly enough In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch skirts around the rules we create for ourselves…the life that we think that we will have and the life that we actually live.   This book found me…maybe because, just like the characters, over 20 years ago, I graduated from a small university in Pennsylvania…maybe because I struggle with my purpose in this life…maybe because I don’t remember who I was back then.  If only we could all go back in time, trade a day of wisdom and relish in the joy of youthful optimism, recklessness and innocence.

The setting is Philadelphia…a reunion of UPenn grads…not your typical college reunion, but a gathering of friends that were inseparable in college beckoned together 20 years later.  Each faces a reconciliation of their skeletons, regrets and personal sorrow with the courageous, optimistic, and energetic ghosts of themselves from 20 years prior. This story is about soul searching, reflection and purpose.  The story is about who we all thought we’d be and where we are now.  This story is about  somehow embracing your youth of yesterday with the wisdom that comes with age.  This book is about surrender.

If I owned a beach house, there would be several copies of this book scattered about…as a gentle reminder to those that lose themselves in her pages, of where they wanted to be, where they are standing now and where they must go.   It would be a wish to marry your youthful optimism with your age-old wisdom and go forward so that your next 20 years are truly your best.

Read this book.  Remember you. Make changes. Move forward.

Related Posts:

I Will Judge a Book by its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Beach House Book #4 – All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

 

 

Beach House Book #4 All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Wow!  And I’ll say it again! Wow!  If you own a beach house, this is definitely one to stack on your shelves and share with your guests!  I grew up in a small town in the South where one of the highlights of summer was the county fair and let me tell ya going home was never this exciting (nor would I ever desire it to be).   This book is amazing and its no wonder that Southern Living had it ranked as #1 in its list of Best New Books of Summer for 2017.  I finished this book in very little time…the story is gripping to say the least. If you are like me,  you’ll take a copy everywhere just to find out “who done it” and “what the heck happened.”  Be careful though, I am afraid I am going to be fined by my local library because my copy is waterlogged from reading in the pool.

This book is set in rural North Carolina and the main character, Nicolette, comes home to face a mystery that haunts her from her past…and a new mystery that will define her future.  It’s a suspenseful story based on repercussions of decisions we make, loyalty that we choose,  and the desperate measures we take to protect the ones we love.   One of the most intriguing parts of this story is that Miranda wrote backwards in time…so you read the ending of the story and work your way back to the beginning, which basically spans a 15-day period.   If you are one of those people that like to read the end of a book, before the beginning, to find out how it turns out…well you just have to start at the beginning like everyone else.  This presentation was very clever.  All of the assumptions I made about the characters and what I thought happened,  changed as I continued to read so you have to pay attention to the content in the earlier chapters (the end of the story) because they may be conclusions to things that happen in the later chapters (the beginning of the story).  For me, the only remaining mystery of this story is… how Miranda wrote it…from beginning to end (back to front) or end to beginning (front to back).   I think I’ll have to read it twice…starting from the back this next time around just to see if I pick up on anything new.

Don’t hesitate on this one! Summer will be over before you know it!  All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda is a must for a summer Beach House Book!

Related Posts

I Will Judge a Book by its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch

 

 

Beach House Book #3 – Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty

Have you ever contemplated the two simple words, “what if?”  Have you ever felt grateful or regretful because something so seemingly innocuous changed the course of your life and “if only” or “what if” rang in your conscience because those moments altered everything?   Well unlike my favorite “choose your own adventure” books from childhood, you can’t always see how things turn out if you made a different choice.  Reality is the hand you are dealt…

Fortunately, my reality had my toes in the water basking in the Florida sunshine while I read, Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty  on the water, on the beach, on vacation.  This beach house book read was listed as #3 on Southern Living’s list of Best New Summer Books of 2017.    This page turner evolves out of the complexities of a relationship between childhood friends, their spouses and an innocent invitation to a barbecue.   Moriarty contemplates the “what ifs”and “if onlys” in our lives and the emotions that we often endure silently and, perhaps often, incorrectly…our reactions of shame, guilt and misunderstanding as we deal with our own interpretation of reality.

Moriarty keeps you on your toes (even if they are buried in the sand) and your eyes on your children, as the events of the mysterious barbecue only reveal themselves halfway through Truly Madly Guilty.  Only after the introduction of each character and their unique perspectives does she reveal the binds that tie them and you turn the pages even more quickly.

This book was the perfect beach house read.   I loved the suspense, the relationships and the characters, especially Vid, and his Tony Soprano-esque personality and love of food.   I hope you enjoy this as much as I did.

Add Truly Madly Guilty by Liane Moriarty to your own personal beach house library now!

 

Related Posts

I will Judge a Book by its Cover

Beach House Book #1 – Secrets in Summer by Nancy Thayer

Beach House Book #2 – Perfect Summer by Luanne Rice

Beach House Book #4 – All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Beach House Book #5 – In Twenty Years by Allison Winn Scotch