Sarah Anne's Bookshelf - July 2021 Sarah Anne’s Bookshelf – July 2021This entry was posted in Reading and tagged bookshelf on August 4, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
2 Project Hail Mary is not just for science fiction lovers. Readers of good fiction will enjoy this story about what people will do to save other living creatures. Project Hail Mary by Andy WeirThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged science fiction on August 2, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
The Switch is a perfect summer read and was a fun book to escape into when I read at night. It’s all about family, friends, love and making sure you don’t overlook the people right around you. If you’re looking for something fun and light, you’d enjoy The Switch. The Switch by Beth O’LearyThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged Fiction on July 26, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
The Wright Sister picks up when Katharine marries at 52 to a widowed family friend and Orville no longer speaks with her. The book is fiction other than that, but I feel like I got a glimpse into Katharine’s personality. The Wright Sister by Patty DannThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged historical fiction on July 19, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
Do you know how to find your way in the world without a GPS? Can you look at the clouds after lunch and know if it will rain or not? Can you tell the prevailing wind direction from looking at a tree? Tristan Gooley knows how and he share his knowledge in the books he’s written to make nature’s signs accessible to all people. Natural Navigator and Lost Art of Reading Nature Signs by ...This entry was posted in Reading and tagged Non-Fiction on July 12, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
Sarah Anne's Bookshelf - June 2021 Sarah Anne’s Bookshelf – June 2021This entry was posted in Reading and tagged bookshelf on July 7, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
The Kinship Series by Jess Montgomery has three books. I read the first book, The Widows, in 2019. Montgomery is an Ohio author and the books are set in Ohio. I live in Ohio, too, so the series appealed to me. The Hollows and The Stills by Jess MontgomeryThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged historical fiction on June 28, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
The Four Winds tells so much about life in America in the 1930s without sounding like a history book. The Four Winds by Kristin HannahThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged historical fiction on June 21, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
In The Book of Lost Names, warned by a family friend that the Nazis are coming to round up 20,000 French Jews, Eva wakes in fear when there is a knock on her parents’ door. They didn’t want to leave. It turns out to be a neighbor who needs help watching her children. Eva and her mother go stay but while they are sleeping, Eva’s father is taken by the French police. The Book of Lost Names by Kristin HarmelThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged historical fiction on June 14, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter
Brideshead Revisited is framed by Charles visiting Brideshead when he is a soldier in WW2. His artwork still dons the walls, but the family does not live there anymore. It starts and ends with him there as a soldier, which ties the book together to show how deeply the Marchmain family impacted him. Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn WaughThis entry was posted in Reading and tagged Classic on June 7, 2021 by Sarah Anne Carter