What a great book to start off the year! The Frozen River is the first book I've read by Ariel Lawhon, and it won't be the last. Lawhon creates a spirited, compassionate protagonist in Martha Ballard, a real-life midwife. The book is based on the journals she kept from 1785-1812. Lawhon weaves a captivating life story in colonial America, birth, murder, and justice.
🪵🥶👶🏻🦊
Guide Me Home by Attica Locke is the third and final book in the Highway 59 series. I have been reluctant to read it because Locke creates a flawed, tragic hero in Darren Matthews, a black Texas Ranger. His twin uncles raise him after the death of his father, convincing his sixteen-year-old mother to give him up. Darren reflects Texas: independent, burdened with racism, and proud of its history, but refusing to see the hidden damage. Darren wants to love his state but is being crushed by its shortcomings. He fights to regain his hope and confidence, but he must face the pain of his past to move into his future. Locke created a beautiful, complex man who lives a powerful story of an honorable man. I highly recommend it.
Here are my reviews of the previous books in the series: https://barbpruittwrites.blogspot.com/search?q=Attica+Locke
⭐️🛣️🌲
This is my second time reading Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds. After the shooting death of his older brother, a young man, Will, is wrestling with the rules of his community: No crying, No snitching, Revenge. Will doesn't cry and doesn't snitch. He takes his brother's gun and gets on the elevator to get revenge. As he descends, he meets those whose lives reflect following the rules. They challenge Will to consider his plans.
"ANOTHER THING ABOUT THE RULES
They weren't meant to be broken.
They were meant for the broken
to follow."
They weren't meant to be broken.
They were meant for the broken
to follow."
😵🚬🚬🚬🚬🚬🚬🛗
If the title didn't clue you in--The Village Library Demon Hunting Society by C.M. Waggoner--let me assure you, this was a weird book. Like if Agatha Christie's Miss Marple suddenly discovered St. Mary Mead had a demon problem. The book is quirky but enjoyable. I wondered where it would go next. The mystery solver, a 60+ librarian named Sherry Pinkwhistle, is the one everyone turns to when there is a suspicious death in the community. Then, she becomes suspicious of so many suspicious deaths. She assembles her crime-solving, demon-hunting squad, including her possessed cat, Sir Thomas Cromwell, and they get to work.
🐈👿📚
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