When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, thou hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.
It is well...with my soul... It is well, it is well, with my soul...
Kathryn Stockett: The Help
A girlfriend book to beat all girlfriend books. A classic goonie girl teams up with two black women in 1960s Jackson, Mississippi, to get the better of a bunch of Junior League meanies. I LOVE THIS BOOK! (****)
Joan Didion: The Year of Magical Thinking
Didion's gives a controlled, unemotional account of her first year as a widow after her husband John Dunne dies suddenly of a massive coronary. The reader gets the feeling that the screams, however, are still just below the surface. (***)
Caitlin R. Kiernan: The Red Tree
IMO, Kiernan's best work to date. I was fascinated with the tree, and I'm always fascinated with New England legends and spookery. Great work, Cait. Congrats. (****)
William Arntz: What the Bleep Do We Know!?: Discovering the Endless Possibilities for Altering Your Everyday Reality
Started out very well on its attempt to link science and God. But somewhere about 3/4 way through, it started getting weirder and weirder until I thought I had truly fallen down the Rabbit Hol.e (***)
Scott Smith: The Ruins
College students on Cancun vacation embark on day trip to Mexican ruins. Bad idea! This is one of the scariest books I've ever read. If you have a weak stomach, weak heart, or bad nerves, don't even touch this one. (***)
V.C. Andrews: My Sweet Audrina
Who was The First and Best Audrina? Why did she die, and why does her father want the second Audrina to become just like the first? And who is the father of Vera? And how come Father won't bring Sylvia home? And who's killing all the women at Whitefern? Those are just a few of the questions that arise in this novel from the 1980s. (**)
Katherine Howe: The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane
A new take on the Salem Witch Trials. Beautifully written and smartly plotted, one of the best books I've read this year. (****)
David Baldacci: Hour Game
A serial killer of sorts has detective team Michelle and Sean hopping--and dodging. Lots of characters to keep up with, but a pretty exciting read. (***)
Anne George: Murder Shoots the Bull: A Southern Sisters Mystery
Southern sister sleuths Patricia Anne and Mary Alice (Mouse and Sister) come to the aid of Mouse's next door neighbor, who has been arrested for murdering his first wife by putting poison in her Sweet & Low. Sort of confusing. (**)
Gregory Maguire: Missing Sisters
(Book for young people.) Wonderful story about twin girls separated as babies. One is adopted by loving parents; the other is raised in a Catholic children's home. They meet when they're 12 years old and immediately start plotting how they can be together. (***)
Dan Simmons: Summer of Night
Very, very scary book. What ruined it for me was very, very poor editing: unnecessary repetition, drawn guns that mysteriously appear back in pockets, someone described as a sound sleeper when what the author meant was a light sleeper, statements like "he stood standing there." One or two of these can be excused, but this book is full of them. Otherwise, it would have merited 4 stars. (***)
Dan Brown: Deception Point
An Arctic discovery of a meteorite containing a fossilized creature leads to deceit, murder, and all kinds of danger. A real fast-paced thriller. (***)
Paulette Jiles: Enemy Women: A Novel
Beautifully written story of the impact of the civil war on southeastern Missouri, especially its women. I highly recommend this one. (****)
Dan Simmons: The Terror: A Novel
A thrilling and terrifying adventure based on the Sir John Franklin expedition to find the Northwest Passage in he 1840s. Dubbed as a horror novel, but it's so much more. One of the best books I've ever read. (****)
Sarah Waters: The Little Stranger
Very good haunted house book. Set in a crumbling old mansion in England in the 1940s. Waters is an excellent writer. (****)
Jodi Picoult: Plain Truth
I was a little disappointed with this book. Not Picoult's best. She talked a lot about quilting, and it was obvious she didn't know anything about the craft. Also, the ending was completely unbelievable. (**)
Caitlin R. Kiernan: Alabaster
Is this a story about a holy warrior or just a little white girl who happens to be an arsonist/murderer? Whatever, it's a great story. (****)
David Baldacci: The Whole Truth
Think there's no harm in passing along unverified e-mails or believing everything you read on the Internet? WRONG! Such things could lead to nuclear holocaust. (***)
Wally Lamb: I Know This Much Is True
An intriguing story of identical twins. Wally Lamb is a excellent writer. (****)
Dodie Osteen: Healed of Cancer
Diagnosed with incurable lung cancer in 1981, Dodie (mother of Joel Osteen) was sent home to die. But she and God had other ideas. Twenty-eight years later, she's as alive, active, and beautiful as ever. Thanks be to God. (*****)
Dean Koontz: Watchers
Another book with a doggie hero--and what a hero Einstein is. This is the best Dean Koontz book I've ever read. (***)
Laura Hillenbrand: Seabiscuit: An American Legend
The story of the little horse who could--and did. I loved this book. It took me back to my childhood and books like The Black Stallion series, NATIONAL VELVET, LASSIE COME HOME, etc. (***)
Barack Obama: Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance
Interesting looking into President Obama's childhood and young adulthood. Extremely well written. (***)
Jeffrey Eugenides: The Virgin Suicides: A Novel
Gothic and often darkly humorous, this is one of those must-read books, IMHO. The plot centers around the suicides of the five teenage Lisbon daughters who live with their mother and father in an affluent neighborhood of Grosse Point, Michigan. (***)
Beverley Nichols: Down the Garden Path
Enchanting and funny. It doesn't matter whether or not you garden (I don't), if you love gardens, humor, and good writing, you should enjoy this book, written in 1932 by an English writer/gardener about creating a garden at Allways, his cottage in central England. (***)
Dorothy Allison: Bastard Out of Carolina
A horrific semi-autobiographical novel about the poster family of dysfunctionality. Told by Bone Boatwright, 12-year-old illegitimate daughter of Anney Boatwright, the story centers around the sexual molestation and abuse of Bone by her stepfather and her mother's inability to choose her daughter over her sick, broken husband. (****)
Linda Hogan: People of the Whale: A Novel
A magical story of struggle, redemption, and bringing life into balance. Written in a prose style that is almost hypnotic, this is a book you need to read. So say I. (****)
Bernhard Schlink: The Reader
15-year-old German boy's affair with a 36-year-old former SS guard--and the aftermath. (***)
Joyce Carol Oates: The Gravedigger's Daughter: A Novel (P.S.)
The novel was based on the life of Oates's grandmother, whose father, a gravedigger settled in rural America, injured his wife, threatened his daughter, and then committed suicide. (****)
Katharine Weber: Triangle: A Novel
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 is the backdrop for this intriguing story. Unfortunately, I figured out the intrigue halfway through the book and that sort of spoiled the ending. But it's a good story. Well and interestingly written. (***)
H. P. Lovecraft: At the Mountains of Madness
If you can get through the repetitive, archaic language, this is a wonderfully scary tale about Antarctic explorers who discover the remains of an ancient, like 50 millions years ancient, alien civilization. (***)
Ken Follett: World Without End
Sequel to Follett's Pillars of the Earth. Excellent storytelling; mean, greedy, murderous characters. (****)
Bill Johnson: When Heaven Invades Earth
Think miracles were only for folks in "olden times?" Not hardly. (***)
Ambrose Bierce: The Damned Thing
Interesting concept that there are colors and things that the human eye can't see. And some of them are very bad. (**)
W.W. Jacobs: The Monkey's Paw
A very scary short story. The moral is obvious: Be careful what you wish for. (****)
Oliver Onions: The Beckoning Fair One
My sister told me this was the scariest story ever. I'm not even sure I understand the ending, but it didn't scare me too much. Good story though. (***)
Stephen King: Just After Sunset: Stories
SK has definitely written better stories than these. Warning: If you have a weak stomach, best to skip the last one. The author said it even made him sick. (**)
Vicki Myron: Dewey: The Small-Town Library Cat Who Touched the World
A heartwarming story of a small-town library in Iowa and its very own library cat. Be ready with a box of Kleenex for the last two chapters. (***)
Frank McCourt: Angela and the Baby Jesus: (Children's Edition)
Sweet story, beautiful art. (***)
Charlaine Harris: Living Dead in Dallas (Southern Vampire Mysteries, No. 2)
And this is even sillier than the Twilight books. No more Sookie Stackhouse for me, thanks. (*)
Stephenie Meyer: Breaking Dawn (The Twilight Saga, Book 4)
Last one in the series! Phew! I'm glad that's over. I don't know why I didn't give up after the first book, but I'm stubborn, and I kept thinking they'd get better. They didn't. (**)
Fannie Flagg: A Redbird Christmas: A Novel
This little book is a perfect holiday read. Classic FF characters combine with her wonderfully humorous prose and a bit of magic for a heart-touching story of an unusual south Alabama Christmas. (***)
Stephenie Meyer: Eclipse (The Twilight Saga, Book 3)
Bella tries to decide between a cold block of stone and a big hairy beast as her life's partner. (**)
Sarah Addison Allen: The Sugar Queen
Three young women have lived their lives in the same small southern town without knowing they are sisters. And there are even more secrets. This book is magical, fun, and at times heartbreaking. (***)
Stephenie Meyer: New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2)
Edward leaves Forks. Bella begins a relationship with Jacob, who is now a werewolf. Bella and Alice run off to Italy with Alice to save Edward from some Tuscan vampires. Bella and the Cullens return to Forks. Charlies is pissed off. (***)
Dean Koontz: The Darkest Evening of the Year
Marley & Me Meets Cruella DeVille! A very good and scary book. Hero doggies (this time, Golden Retrievers) and wonderful characters--except everybody has several aliases, so it's sometimes hard to keep up. (****)
Stephenie Meyer: Twilight (The Twilight Saga)
Teenage girl falls in love with vampire who looks young for his age. Then all hell breaks loose. Slow start, but this book gets better with pages turned. I'll probably read the rest of the series. (***)
Kathleen Kent: The Heretic's Daughter: A Novel
Fiction. Told by young daughter of one of the women executed for witchcraft in Massachusetts in the 17th century. If you need a reminder of the necessity of separation of church and state, you should read this book. Or it's a good book, even if you don't need the reminder. (***)
Kirsten Bakis: Lives of the Monster Dogs
Another wonderful book about dogs. This one's a fantasy whose moral seems to be that dogs weren't meant to be like humans. They're just right the way they are. (****)
Blake Morrison: The Yellow House
There's magic at the old yellow house for a little girl with a curious mind and creative heart. (Children's Book) (***)
Jodi Picoult: Nineteen Minutes: A novel
Well written story concerning a high-school shooting with Picoult's trademark surprise ending. (****)
Anita Shreve: The Pilot's Wife
Good book. I wish I hadn't seen the movie first. It sort of spoiled the book for me. But it was still good. (****)
Barbara Michaels: Witch
Pretty good ghost story. Or was is? (***)
Dennis Lehane: Mystic River
Excellent read! One of the best mystery/crime novels ever. (*****)
David Wroblewski: The Story of Edgar Sawtelle: A Novel
The one book to read this year if you read no other. (*****)
Ian Mcewan: Atonement
One of the most sensual love (sex) scenes and some of the most horrible war scenes I've ever read. This is an excellent book from an excellent writer. The ending took me by surprise. (****)
Joyce Carol Oates: The Collector of Hearts
Some of the stories are very good, but the ambiguous endings drive me nuts. Maybe I just don't have an artistic enough sensibility, but each and every story left me wondering, "What?" (***)
Anne Rice: Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana (Christ the Lord)
Fictional account of Jesus's young adult life before the crucifixion. (***)
William Trevor: The Story of Lucy Gault
A series of unfortunate events and coincidences makes for a pretty depressing story altogether. No happy ending here. (***)
Liz Curtis Higgs: Bad Girls of the Bible: And What We Can Learn From Them
Stories of ten biblical women of varying degrees of badness and what we can learn from them. Higgs starts each section with an updated story based on that particular ancient woman. Interesting read. (***)
John Burnham Schwartz: Reservation Road (Vintage Contemporaries) (Vintage Contemporaries)
How does it feel to be a father who has lost a little boy to a hit-and-run driver? How does it feel to be that hit-and-run driver who is also the father of a little boy? This is a heartbreaking story told from the perspective of these two fathers. (***)
Elmore Leonard: Get Shorty
Miami shylock Chili Palmer goes to Hollywood to collect a debt and gets involved in the movie industry. Funniest crime novel of all time. (****)
Marianne Wiggins: Evidence of Things Unseen: A Novel
Beautiful prose; lovely, sad story. I fell in love with Fos, Opal, Lightfood, and even Flash. I highly recommend this book. It's my book club's June selection. (****)
Emily Brontë: Wuthering Heights (Penguin Classics)
Want to know how demons carry on love affairs? Here it is. Either that, or as my sister maintains, there was something in the water those people were drinking. A wonderful story about a bunch of crazy people. (****)
Tom Rob Smith: Child 44
Not your mama's serial killer mystery! This is one of the scariest books I've ever read--not because of the serial killer aspect but because it's a story of people who have been stripped of their civil rights, every one of them. It takes place in Stalinist Russia during the 50s, the perfect society where crime doesn't exist (except it does) and where personal freedoms are unthinkable. (****)
Jodi Picoult: Vanishing Acts: A Novel
Picoult tackles the subjects of child abuse and abduction, alcoholism, repressed memories, friendship, love, and life behind bars in this very good book. I couldn't stop reading. (****)
Donald McCaig: Rhett Butler's People
If you're a fan of Gone With the Wind, you might find this book moderately interesting. I did. Not great writing, the book has problems. Way too much use of the "N" word and a few too many murders and arsons, but it was sort of fun to visit with Rhett and Scarlett again. (**)
Greg Iles: The Quiet Game
Exciting page-turner. Recently widowed lawyer-turned-novelist Penn Cage returns to his hometown of Natchez to solve a decades-old civil rights murder and gets involved in a government conspiracy. (***)
William P. Young: The Shack
Although fiction (fantasy), I believe this book is a very good description of the basic nature of God. I kept finding myself saying, "Yes, that's it!" all the way through the book. If you've ever asked "Why does God let bad things happen to good people?" you might find your answer in this book. Look for a more comprehensive review on April 3, 2008 blog entry. (****)
Van Ryn & Cerak Families: Mistaken Identity: Two Families, One Survivor, Unwavering Hope
Two young women are victims of not only a horrific traffic accident but also mistaken identity. One is buried under the wrong name; one is in a coma and being cared for by the wrong family. This is an absolutely amazing story--not just of the unbelievable mix-up, but also how faith sustains two families through heart-wrenching tragedy. (***)
Kate Jacobs: The Friday Night Knitting Club
A book about love, heartbreak, loyalty, betrayal, joy, and grief--and why today's women choose to take up handicrafts that became unnecessary decades ago. This is a beautiful story. It's a chick book, but a good one. (****)
Diane Setterfield: The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel
A book for book lovers. One of my favorites so far this year. Wonderful twisty plot that involves twins. It has mystery, murder, ghosts, an old house. Think Jane Eyre meets Shirley Jackson. This novel was a delight to read. (****)
Patricia Cornwell: The Body Farm (Kay Scarpetta)
Murder mystery dealing with a rare and baffling condition that causes this person to murder. This book deals hardly at all with the Body Farm, a very disturbing forensics lab in Tennessee. So the title doesn't fit. (**)
P.D. James: The Children of Men
This book, which starts with an excellent premise (every man in the world is sterile; the last child on earth was born 25 years previously) would have better if the plot had been fleshed out more. The characters aren't developed. And the book leaves more questions than it answers. (**)
Deborah Rodriguez: Kabul Beauty School: An American Woman Goes Behind the Veil
An account of the American author's adventures in opening a beauty school in post-Taliban Afghanistan. Insightful look at the plight of Afghan women. You'll admire the bravery and strength of most of them; and your heart will break for others. (***)
Deepak Chopra: The Third Jesus: The Christ We Cannot Ignore
Chopra's new age take on Jesus: the historial Jesus, the mystical Jesus, and Jesus of the Bible. Parts of this book would no doubt be deemed heretical by some fundamentalist Christians, but, while I didn't agree with everything Chopra writes, I did find it all interesting--especially the last chapter. (***)
Greg Iles: Blood Memory: A Novel
This book deals with the disturbing subject of child molestation and its effects on those children after they reach adulthood. It's also an engrossing murder mystery. (***)
Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex: A Novel (Oprah's Book Club)
This book manages is to be humorous and sad all at once. I think it succeeds so well for two reasons: 1) Eugenides is an excellent writer and storyteller and 2) his heroine/hero manages to keep a sense of humor although his/her life is complicated and fraught with problems. There's never a dull moment in this book. Every page, every paragraph held my interest. (****)
Greg Iles: Dead Sleep
This thriller centers around a group of paintings called "The Sleeping Women." Trouble is, the paintings' subjects just might be doing more than sleeping. They might be dead. Page turner, very exciting, very readable. (***)
Stephen King: Duma Key: A Novel
One-armed artist must combine his artistic skills with his supernatural abilities to defeat King's newest monster, Perse, an ancient demoness who sales her ship of death off Florida's west coast. This is a good 'un, folks. (****)
Geraldine Brooks: March
After finding the first few chapters slow going, I really enjoyed this book. It's an account by Mr. March (the father in Little Women) of his experiences as a Union chaplain during the Civil War. Parts of it are heartbreaking, and parts are hard to read. Definitely not a book for children. (****)
Ken Follett: The Pillars of the Earth (Deluxe Edition) (Oprah's Book Club)
After reading this historical novel, whose plot centers around the priory of Kingsbridge, England during the 12th century, you'll wonder how Christianity ever survived. It's an engrossing story with strong characters, some who are good, some pretty good, and and many just downright horrible). The book is full of climaxes (both literary and carnal), and the ending (which centers on the assassination of Thomas Becket) is the most exciting one of all. (1,075 pages) (*****)
Greg Iles: True Evil: A Novel
Thriller about a murder-for-hire that kills victims by giving them cancer. A page-turner. Iles is a good storyteller. (***)
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Oh, one of my very favorite hymns that has pulled me through some tough times. I'm so glad you shared this. Thank you!
Posted by: Gayle | Monday, July 13, 2009 at 12:58 PM
My favorite hymn, too, and the picture is lovely. Is it now enlarged and framed in your home?
Grace and peace!
Posted by: Barbara Anne | Monday, July 13, 2009 at 09:14 AM
I love this song,and your picture today is so peaceful!
Ginger
Posted by: Ginger | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 10:56 PM
This is my favorite hymn, and my favorite verse is the third:
My sin, oh, the bliss of this glorious thought!
My sin, not in part but the whole,
Is nailed to the cross, and I bear it no more,
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord, O my soul!
Posted by: Sally | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 07:43 PM
Susan, I love these words, too. I am inspired by the story of the author.
I'm thinking of you and Vann. I hope he is feeling stronger.
Posted by: Beverly | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 06:12 PM
What a beautiful picture to represent a beautiful song. Thank you for sharing it with us today for Spiritual Sundays.
Blessings,
Charlotte
Posted by: Charlotte | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 04:03 PM
I have always loved this hymn, and what a beautiful serene picture you have shared.
Blessings,
Sue
Posted by: Sue | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 03:04 PM
I have always loved this hymn. Thank you for reminding me how much!:)
Posted by: Lisa | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 03:01 PM
It seems that every time I hear or read one of the old hymns I end us saying, "That is one of my favorites." But it's true. I guess I love ALMOST all of them. This is one of my favorites!
Posted by: Clif | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 02:34 PM
Beautiful. Thank you.
Posted by: valerie | Sunday, July 12, 2009 at 02:02 PM