The Book of Lost Friends goes back and forth between the stories of Miss Silva and Hannie. Both stories are fascinating and tell how the people’s history in one small town in the south is intertwined between former slaves and their former masters. The Book of Lost Friends by Lisa WingateThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged historical fiction on April 26, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
The Wive of Los Alamos tells the story of the families who moved to Los Alamos with their husbands and couldn’t tell anyone where they were going. They would come to find out their husbands were working on the atomic bomb. The Wives of Los Alamos by TaraShea NesbitThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged Non-Fiction on April 19, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
We all want to be the best version of ourselves. By looking at our habits and trying to build up good ones and stop bad ones, we can do just that. Atomic Habits is not just about what habits to have and not have, it’s about how to start small and make it easy to do the things you set your mind to do. Atomic Habits by James ClearThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged Non-Fiction self-help on April 12, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
Sarah Anne's Bookshelf - April 2021 Sarah Anne’s Bookshelf – March 2021This entry was posted in Reading and tagged bookshelf on April 7, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
Eight stories are woven together through time by one special rock in Treasures. A shamrock shaped rock that first finds itself in the hands of St. Patrick eventually becomes a key item in several people’s stories throughout the ages and even into the future. Treasures: Visible and Invisible by Teresa Linden and other authorsThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged Fiction Religious on April 5, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter