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MuddyPuddle

MuddyPuddle

Joined February 2018

Drawn in by mysteries and YA, secret love for picture books and kid's poetry, can never finish a nonfiction no matter how hard I try.
review
MuddyPuddle
Northern Lights | Nora Roberts
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Mehso-so

#11 of 2023 Pros: Interesting characters. Descriptive setting (Alaska, mostly in deep winter)almost like another character. Believable protagonist. Cons: Too long, made the story drag. Many of those interesting characters didn‘t seem particularly real. Read for a Bookgirls challenge.

63 likes1 stack add
blurb
MuddyPuddle
Fire and the Ore | Olivia Hawker

February 2023 Book Spin & Bingo
1-The Fire and the Ore
2-Fountains of Silence
3-The Dark Room
4-Keeper of Enchanted Rooms
5- Knitlandia
6-Caught
7-The Birchbark House
8-Midnight Children
9-Signal Moon
10-Indigo Girl
11-The Lying Club
12-Lonely Hearts #4 Jessica Shaw
13-House at the End of the World
14-2023 Newbery winner
15-2023 Printz winner
16-New middle grade novel
17-New YA novel
18-An actual physical book
19-A memoir
20-Free Choice

50 likes2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
The Bodyguard: A Novel | Katherine Center
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Pickpick

#10 of 2023. The perfect book to read when you need a break from darker stuff. The two protagonists were so clever/incredibly good looking/funny that it should probably be labeled a farce! HEA of course - gotta throw in a romance every now and then!!

robinb I enjoy Center‘s books. 😊 2y
67 likes1 stack add1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

#9 of 2023
This is the closest to a “so-so“ of any in this series so far-this is the 11th. It refers back quite a bit to the first in the series, which I only partially remember. Maybe some of the themes, motivations, similar characters are starting to be repetitious? I‘m getting a little bit tired of the Ruth/Nelson…situation Ms. Griffiths has Ruth applying for a job at Cambridge, a little change of scene might be just what the series needs.

MuddyPuddle Still great storytelling!! 2y
73 likes1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

#8 of 2023
Excellent. When three friends are confronted with blocked out words in their sixth grade literature circle book, The Devils Arithmetic (a great book itself), they begin a campaign against censorship. A timely topic that includes a middle school boy dealing with his very odd, untrustworthy, father and the usual pre-teenage angst about friendships with girls. My favorite character is the ex Vietnam War granddad, who practices mindfulness.

LiteraryinPA I loved this book too, and you‘re right about the grandfather! 2y
69 likes1 stack add1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
Dark Highway | Lisa Gray
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Pickpick

#7 of 2023. 4.5/5. Third in the Jessica Shaw, Private Detective, series. A great protagonist - smart, lots of emotional baggage but devoid of physical baggage… she practically lives out of her car. Set in 29 Palms, California, it‘s about the disappearance/abduction of several women and goes back and forth between time periods and voices. I liked it a lot and could clearly picture it because I‘ve visited this area several times. Good one!

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MuddyPuddle
Dark Angel | Elly Griffiths
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Pickpick

#6 of 2023
4/5. Love this series, love Ruth Galloway. Elly Griffiths has been trying some very unusual plot twists to end the last couple of books. Really interested in seeing where she takes us next … good mysteries!

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MuddyPuddle
Hide | Tracy Clark
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Mehso-so

#5 of 2023
Couldn‘t wait to read a 2023 published novel, and this one looked good. Didn‘t work for me, though. The narrator did the protagonist voice OK, but all the other voices were just horrible. The story was shown through different viewpoints, so you immediately knew what was going to happen, there weren‘t many secrets at all. I did like the main protagonist, Harry. This is the first of the series, will I tried the next? Perhaps.

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MuddyPuddle
Unpunished | Lisa Black
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Mehso-so

#4 of 2023
2.5. If you‘re interested in the newspaper publishing business and how it‘s disappearing and want to be lectured ad nauseam about it, this is the book for you. It wasn‘t particularly the book for me! The other half of the book, the actual mystery, was OK…

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MuddyPuddle
We Lie Here: A Thriller | Rachel Howzell Hall
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Pickpick

#3 of 2023
3.5. Although I was able to pretty much figure out what was going on quite early in this book, I still enjoyed seeing it all come to fruition.

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MuddyPuddle
Book Lovers | Emily Henry
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Pickpick

#2 of 2023 This book took over 15 hours to listen to, and, although I love the banter between the two protagonists – such clever writing – I think it didn‘t need to be that long. A bit of a different premise for a romance, which was refreshing.

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MuddyPuddle
Daisy Darker | Alice Feeney
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Pickpick

#1 of 2023
I knew that this one would be a difficult one to figure out, and I was determined. I was also wrong. I didn‘t figure it out, L O L! Lots of books seem to get smooshed together in my mind and I can‘t remember details, but I think I‘ll remember this one.

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MuddyPuddle
BookSpinBingo | Untitled
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I haven't been on Litsy in ages, but am looking forward to participating again in this fresh new year. I'm going to have to relearn everything!

Here's my #bookspin for January 2023.

@TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Yay!! Glad to have you along!! 2y
Bookishlie Welcome back!! Me too:) 2y
Julsmarshall Welcome back! 2y
See All 9 Comments
mamareading Good to have you re-join the crew! 2y
Suet624 Welcome back! 2y
wanderinglynn Welcome back! 2y
rabbitprincess Welcome back! 2y
Deblovestoread Nice to see you! 2y
julieclair What a nice way to start a fresh new year! Great list 2y
56 likes9 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Untitled | Unknown
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OK, I‘m game to try. Hope this list works for #BookSpin.

MuddyPuddle My photo got cut. I‘m not sure what I did wrong 4y
Julsmarshall Great list! I loved #7-9 😄 4y
See All 9 Comments
Soubhiville Is this your first Bookspin? Litsy only likes square photos... when you are uploading a photo on the lower left there is a transform, 1:1 option that lets you select which part of your rectangular photo will go in the frame. 4y
Soubhiville Good luck, Bookspin is my favorite monthly Litsy game! 4y
Crazeedi I use an app called "pic collage" and put my pics on it before I post to litsy. The basic app is free! 4y
MuddyPuddle @Soubhiville Thanks, I edited it and it looks so much better. 4y
TheAromaofBooks Yay!! Glad to have you along - I'll tag you with the winning numbers tomorrow!!! 4y
COMICS XD lol 4y
57 likes9 comments
review
MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

I loved reading this YA sci-fi/fantasy series. I believe it was written in French and translated to English and I anxiously awaited the arrival of each in the series. I happily recommend all three books.

72 likes1 stack add
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MuddyPuddle
Beantown Girls | Jane Healey

#Bookspin
1-Beantown Girls
2.-The Changeling
3-Little Comfort
4-Letters to the Lost
5-The Graveyard Book
6-One Hundred Years of Solitude
7-Fahrenheit 451
8.-Paper Wife
9.-Murmur of Bees
10-The Downstairs Girl
11-Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus
12-The Life We Bury
13-Stillborn Armadillos
14-The Dovekeeper
15-All Systems Red
16-The Curiosity
17.-All the Beautiful Lies
18-The Hunt for the Dingo
19-Onyx & Ivory
20-Magpie Murders

MuddyPuddle I need to find some decent apps so that I can make lists like this without having to worry about the 452 spaces! 5y
rabbitprincess I use PicCollage, and have also made screenshots of lists written in the Notes app on my tablet 🙂 5y
TheAromaofBooks Great list!! I'm terrible at the collages. You don't even want to know how long it took me to make the picture for my original post for this challenge. *facepalm* 5y
55 likes3 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Big Lies in a Small Town | Diane Chamberlain
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Pickpick

After reading Big Lies in a Small Town and thoroughly enjoying it, I decided it‘s been along time since I‘ve read much historical fiction, so now I‘m on a roll. We Hope for Better Things was also a big hit for me and so now I‘ve started The Shoemaker‘s Wife. I‘ve discovered I particularly enjoy books that flip back-and-forth between two time periods or come from two different protagonists‘ point of view .
Any other suggestions for me?

Amie I recommend Beatriz Williams. She writes historical fiction with two timelines or two perspectives and has several books. 5y
sblbooks I recommend Lisa Wingate's 5y
ravenlee Have you read this? It‘s not the best book I‘ve read, but it‘s good and from an era/perspective that was new to me. Different protagonists and time periods. 5y
See All 6 Comments
MargaretPinardAuthor Yay for a histfic kick! You can check out my books if you‘re into 19th century, British empire, Celtic folklore, family struggles, and romance against the odds! 😁📚🎁 5y
MuddyPuddle @MargaretPinardAuthor Your books sound great! I just ordered Dulci‘s Legacy to read on my Kindle. 5y
MargaretPinardAuthor Amazing! She‘s my YA, and has a special place in my heart ❤️😊 5y
89 likes2 stack adds6 comments
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MuddyPuddle
The Au Pair | Emma Rous
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A question to help me round out my 2019 reading: What have been your favorite fiction novels of 2019?

Bookzombie I just finished this one. 5y
See All 14 Comments
jillrhudy Daisy Jones and the Six, Lonesome Dove, The Song of Achilles and The Sisters Brothers! 5y
Jerdencon Daisy jones and the six, where the crawdads sing 5y
Chelsea.Poole @Reggie I second The Lager Queen of Minnesota ♥️♥️♥️ 5y
hes7 It‘s hard to narrow down 🤦🏼‍♀️, but a recent favorite was 5y
readordierachel Published this year? It would have to be 5y
TheAromaofBooks Published in 2019 or read in 2019? Published, I really loved The Flatshare. Read, I absolutely loved Swallows & Amazons. 5y
charl08 Happy litsyversary! 5y
Melismatic I really loved Bunny but fair warning, it‘s supppper weird & creepy. 🤷🏻‍♀️😂 5y
45 likes14 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Lost for Words | Stephanie Butland
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Pickpick

This story was told by hopping back and forth between 1999, 2013, and 2016. Intricate characters were developed as the protagonist, Loveday Cardew, told her story. Abusive relationships, mental illness, foster care, grief and despair, forgiveness and love of all sorts are the main themes of this fascinating story. Another winner.

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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

What a funky, funny, unusual novel. Clever, over the top, and extremely humorous, the story kept me giggling, rolling my eyes, and completely hooked. Written mostly as emails, letters, faxes, etc., The glimpses of Microsoft, Seattle, private schools, architecture, the Antarctic, and five unique personalities are an absolute delight! Can‘t wait for the movie.

Smrloomis Loved this one too! I hope the movie does it justice. 5y
Sg1224 Just wondering if you had time to send over my book from the mark up swap from last year?!? 5y
108 likes4 stack adds2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

What a beautifully crafted story, how I enjoyed listening to it! I have a feeling that if I had read it I would‘ve been impatient with some of the description of the marsh, the animals, the winds and grasses and beaches. But listening to it read in Cassandra Campbell‘s lilting voice, it became poetry. Loneliness and aloneness, beauty and nature, described brilliantly. This is a wonderful piece of storytelling.

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MuddyPuddle
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QUESTION:
If the setting of a book is 1969 .... 50 years ago — would you consider it historical fiction or contemporary realistic fiction?

Reecaspieces Hmmmm good question. 6y
BookNAround Did the author live through the time period? I tend to think that historical fiction, whatever date cutoff someone chooses, also requires the author not to have lived at the time too. 6y
Samplergal Geez. I‘m historical. 🤦🏽‍♀️ 6y
See All 10 Comments
Johanna414 I‘d consider it historical since it‘s being published 50 years after the setting of the book... 6y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Historical, although for me it also depends on whether the time period is a big factor in the story. 6y
LibrarianJen I would just consider it fiction. Although I majored in history in undergrad so I think of anything post WW2 to be current. However, I‘m reminded daily that a good chunk of my students weren‘t even alive when 9/11 happened so I guess a historical time period is relative to how old a person is. 6y
Tamra At this point students think anything before 1990 is historical! 😜🙄 6y
wordzie Historical...its all history right? 6y
Bertha_Mason 20th century historical fiction. 6y
SW-T Probably overthinking it, but if spans from 1969 to today, or has flashbacks between then and now, contemporary. If it‘s all strictly 1969, historical fiction. 6y
81 likes10 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Vanishing Stair | Maureen Johnson
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Pickpick

I remember being extremely frustrated after finishing the first book because it left everything so incredibly up in the air. I think I feel even more frustrated at the end of this second installment! Decent mystery, especially since it‘s YA and a good YA mystery is a bit unusual. A year to wait before the sequel comes out, the final in the series, when the entire mystery BETTER BE wrapped up, lol!!

MuddyPuddle This was my 1000th book read since I started on Goodreads! 6y
Megabooks Congratulations! 🍾 6y
Stephaniereads1 Congratulations 6y
103 likes3 comments
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MuddyPuddle
The Au Pair | Emma Rous
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Pickpick

Another wonderful book that I read in one long gulp. It was told in two voices 25 years apart, by two innocent young women, one whose decisions and silence profoundly affected the life of the other. A mystery that one could almost… but not quite… figure out. Well defined characters. Lovely British setting. And read beautifully by Elizabeth Sastre.

88 likes3 stack adds
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

This book IS actually full of exotic stories, as well as insight into the Punjabi/Indian/Sikh culture in contemporary London. Told from the point of view of a modern British young woman of Punjabi heritage, the twists, turns, inter-generational friendships, arranged marriages, and honest peeks into a fascinating culture enthralled me totally. And listening to the lilting accented reader was a special added treat.

115 likes6 stack adds
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MuddyPuddle
An Anonymous Girl | Sarah Pekkanen, Greer Hendricks
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A bit of a slow start to my February reading, but all three were quite interesting, to be sure. A psychological thriller, a dystopian Navajo reservation mythological adventure, and a scientifically – based serial killer chase. Hmmm......

Nebklvr Ohhh...I have been looking at Trail of Lightning 6y
104 likes1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
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SO much good reading this month-horrible weather and the “creeping crud” kept me snuggling in with a book or listening whilst knitting. Particularly enjoyed the murder mysteries/police procedurals. Would love some recommendations!

StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Awesome job!! 📚💕 6y
MemoirsForMe Hope you‘re feeling better! 6y
93 likes1 stack add2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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January‘s been a great month for reading! Paul Doiron‘s Mike Bowditch series keeps getting better and better – The Precipice was number six. So good, especially if you‘re interested at all in a great mystery, the state of Maine, and/or the Appalachian Trail. Run You Down was another excellent mystery, helping me learn more about the highly-Orthodox Jewish community. And Time‘s Convert allowed me back into the world of the All Soul‘s Trilogy folks.

MuddyPuddle Satisfying reading! 6y
94 likes1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
Lethal White | Robert Galbraith
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Pickpick

My most recent four reads – I really enjoyed listening to Lethal White (Galbraith/Rowling‘s descriptions are wonderful) and Essie‘s story is mesmerizing and flies by. Definitely nixed Toxic, Accidental Romeo was another “just for fun” guilty pleasure. Sure helps the winter pass!

107 likes2 stack adds
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

It‘s fun to throw in a little romance once in a while – and if it‘s sweet, and it takes place in a bookstore, well…

CampbellTaraL Those are my favorite types of romance too! 💛 6y
Elizabeth2 Wow! Six books already! Bravo!! 🎉🎉 This looks good! Stacking! #blamelitsy 6y
Sg1224 @MuddyPuddle happy new year. Will you please send my book from the mark up swap from last year back to me?-it‘s notes from underground. Thanks and please let me know if you need my address. 6y
99 likes4 stack adds3 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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Mehso-so

I‘ve read them all (this is #10) – I used to love them – but they‘re starting to sound more and more alike. Similar phrasing, similar reflections, similar characters. Maybe I should read the next one with my eyes and not listen with my ears? I‘ll keep reading them because I love the setting and enjoy the main characters, but…

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MuddyPuddle
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Panpan

Very simplistically written, with lots of unedited errors, always frustrating. A very promising story, but just didn‘t follow through. The bad guys were very very bad and the good guys were very very good. Blah. The plot, setting, basic ideas, we‘re super – but the writing left a lot to be desired. YA. Dystopia. Setting: Southern California and Arizona 50 years from now.

JenlovesJT47 Hey! I‘m just wondering about the last two books I sent you for the Breakfast Book Club and if you received them and are going to send them to the next person. Haven‘t heard anything from you. Hope you‘re doing well! 🙃 6y
93 likes1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
The One | John Marrs
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Pickpick

Oh my goodness, what a clever, addicting book, though not the greatest cover, right? I couldn‘t put it down. Never a dull moment!! There were so many things I loved about this book: all sorts of twists and turns, following five different people that were easy-to-remember in an uncomplicated way, being left on the edge-of-your-seat short chapter after short chapter, and a premise that made you think, wonder, and rationalize throughout. A winner.

AJones Thanks for sharing; stacked! 6y
RadicalReader @MuddyPuddle I HIGHLY recommend you check out his other novels! The one I am reading next is 6y
110 likes12 stack adds2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Nyxia | Scott Reintgen
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Pickpick

Others have compared this book to a sci-fi Hunger Games, and other than having slightly more than one winner at the end, that‘s pretty much what it is. I loved the entire premise from the start and was pulled into the story immediately, which hasn‘t happened a whole lot lately. Nothing like “coming-of-age“ in outer space! Loved it - 4.5.

RadicalReader @MuddyPuddle gorgeous beyond words book cover 6y
82 likes4 stack adds1 comment
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MuddyPuddle
Far from the Tree | Robin Benway
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Pickpick

I have such admiration for an author that can weave together a story like this one. Getting to know and understand the three protagonists is a slow (in a good way) process and makes this story all the more delicious. This book is also a reminder that there are more good people than bad in the world and that you don‘t have to be born into a family to be surrounded by love. Listening to it read aloud was really amazing.

MuddyPuddle And it‘s certainly NOT for just young adults! 6y
Lovesbooks87 Loved this book. It was such an amazing story!❤️❤️❤️ 6y
LiteraryinPA Great review! I loved this one as well. 6y
JennyM This was a fave for me also 6y
BooknerdsLife Have this on my TBR 😃 definitely need to read it soon 😄👍 6y
88 likes5 stack adds5 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

Definitely another winner by Kimberly Willis Holt! Though touched throughout with sadness, it isn't a sad story. It's about blooming where you're planted, making the best of everything, seeing the good things there are to see, and learning from the mistakes of your parents and grandparents. And it has a wonderful array of really cool characters. I so enjoyed this story!

87 likes3 stack adds
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MuddyPuddle
Fields of Corn | Sarah Price
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Panpan

There‘s a fascination and pull towards the simplicity of the Amish life that more-than intrigues me, especially as I now live near numerous Amish communities. But my spiritual beliefs and those of the Amish are so very different that it makes books likes these particularly difficult to digest. The last quarter of the book pulled my rating way down, very hard for me to take. Or understand.

MelissaSue81 I just learned today that Amish fiction is it‘s own Genre. Who knew? 6y
GondorGirl My friend is a librarian at one of the roughest male prisons in the midwest. Amish romances are the second most requested genre there... 6y
Geeklet @GondorGirl I have so many questions but this is probably best left as a mystery. 6y
CouronneDhiver I‘ve always loved Amish fiction for a quick, relaxing read. 😊 They always fall in love and its all rainbows in the end. 6y
88 likes4 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

This is the first short story in the series that hasn‘t seemed rushed and fit really well into the short story category. My only question – who paid for all the food and entertainment of the Amish Rager? Ribs and beer and a live band for 200 people? Whew! Not a bad story at all, and it even includes a tiny glimpse of Tomasetti…

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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

Shifting back-and-forth between the past and the present, and told from the points of view of two young women whose lives and destinies are entwined, The Color of our Sky paints a picture of contemporary Bombay that is fascinating, illuminating, and incredibly sad.

96 likes3 stack adds
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MuddyPuddle
Magpie Murders | Anthony Horowitz
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#makemereadit #helpmechoose
All my books are on Kindle, so I couldn‘t stack them.
Please choose for me!

See All 57 Comments
Foragingfantasy Year of Womders! 6y
MeganAnn I loved People of the Book by the same author so I'm voting for 6y
keys_on_fire Haven‘t read any of these, but the one that interests me is Inlaws and Outlaws 6y
Naj Magpie Murders 6y
Sace Year of Wonders 6y
whofan4life The Blinds 6y
hes7 The Blinds!! 6y
Reviewsbylola The Blinds 6y
113 likes57 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Losing It | Cora Carmack
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Panpan

As much as I try, I just can‘t get into romances. What‘s wrong with me? Sure, I like the sexy bits, but the silliness surrounding it all just keeps my eyes rolling. There was definitely some humor in this one, I snickered occasionally, and I loved all the stuff with the cat, Hamlet (thus this cute sticker). I can‘t even say it‘s because I guess I‘m getting old, because I don‘t think I‘ve ever liked romance....but I keep trying…

Soubhiville I‘m with you. Most romances are ridiculous to me. Occasionally I come across good fiction that happens to have romance as main theme, but without a really good plot and more depth full story I‘ll pass. 6y
TheSpineView I am with both of you. The romance has to be in the background. 6y
CouronneDhiver I enjoy a good love story on TV but never in books... they always seem too cheesy to me. 6y
See All 6 Comments
Lreads I like some romance but I wouldn‘t read the tagged book. I read and liked a similar book that had more depth to the story: 6y
shaynarae Call Me By Your Name completely changed my perspective on romance! I had no idea the genre could be that good. If you‘re up for queer romance, I HIGHLY recommend giving it a read. 6y
jenniferw88 Hi, I don't know f you've seen but we are matched for the #summerbookmarkswap. Can you please email me your details? My address is irene_gulliver@yahoo.co.uk (there's a _ between irene and gulliver!) 6y
71 likes2 stack adds6 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Glory in Death. J.D. Robb | Robb, J D Robb
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Panpan

I definitely didn‘t enjoy this book as much as I did the first one - it was all I could do to finish. The plot was boring, the killer‘s actions at the end ridiculous. And the way the protagonist was portrayed by the audio reader didn‘t match what I had in my head. She gave Eve a particularly bitchy edge that just didn‘t sit right with me. So when you have a lousy story that isn‘t read to your liking, the rating isn‘t going to be too high. Bummer.

DGRachel I agree. The audiobook narrator can really make or break a story. 6y
BooksAtNight This book is probably my least favorite of the entire series. And come to think of it, this book may be the reason that I stopped listening to this series on audio. I think you just helped me figure out why! 6y
81 likes2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Dark Matter | Blake Crouch
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June
June - 13 Books - A good month!
3,726 pages
4 Audio - 7 Kindle
1 SciFi - 1 Dystopian- 1 Fantasy - 1 Memoir
1 CRF- 3 Mystery/Suspense - 3 Murder Mysteries

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MuddyPuddle
Invisible City | Julia Dahl
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Pickpick

I love mysteries, but not usually from the pov of a journalist (harassing people to get a story). That being said, this was a good mystery that Rebekah solved all by herself - mainly because it was not being pursued by the police - while encountering clues from her own past. I love reading books that take a peek inside the Hasidic Jewish community, and for that this book did not disappoint. It gave me that peek, a good mystery, and a short read.

Pamwurtzler Looks interesting- stacked! 6y
Dragon Sounds good! Stacking 👍🐉 6y
82 likes4 stack adds2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

An in-depth look at one screwed up family, The Last Equation of Isaac Severy comes at you from many directions. Told distinctly from two different points of view and less distinctly from one or two others; mystery, reality of a gritty world, and some scientific/fantastic mathematics combine to make quite an interesting tale.

KateFulfordAuthor If you like that “slightly larger than life” family story, may I recommend my debut to you? Tight plot, sassy female protagonist and well crafted characters (edited) 6y
swynn You had me at "mathematics." 6y
MuddyPuddle @KateFulfordAuthor You sold me – and one of the reviews said it‘s funny, too. I‘m needing that. Thanks! (I just ordered a Kindle copy, though I love the cover!) 6y
101 likes3 stack adds3 comments
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MuddyPuddle
The Book of M: A Novel | Peng Shepherd
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Mehso-so

This was a long, endless, DEPRESSING story told from the point of view of four different people. For quite a while I couldn‘t help but compare it to The Fifth Wave, with shades of Station Eleven, until it went in its own direction. So depressing, it‘s going to take me a while to climb back out of the hole it put me into. It worked well as an audiobook.

ElleSkel I felt that way about The Road. I was depressed for like a week after that one. (edited) 6y
97 likes2 comments
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MuddyPuddle
No Title | None
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Got to another #indiebookstore today, this one is in Frederick, Maryland, one of my favorite towns anywhere.

Lovesbooks87 Omg I live in Frederick! I have never been there, is it nice? I was thinking about making a trip there next week! (edited) 6y
tjwill Cool storefront! 6y
Nerdgirl_Ms_Sorrells Great name! 6y
See All 6 Comments
Susanita I‘m going to have to go there! 6y
Megabooks Great display! 6y
dsfisher Wow, I grew up there and hoping to make a visit in the next couple of years. 6y
124 likes6 comments
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MuddyPuddle
No Title | None
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Help, please…
I‘m going to splurge on an Audible book to listen to while I finish a quilt.
Suggestions please!!
Fiction – published this year, 2018.
Thanks so much 💜

MuddyPuddle @TheLibraran Oh my goodness, this one sounds wonderful! 6y
ReadingRover There is a huge sale going on right now. Have you checked it out? 6y
ReadingRover This was a good one. 6y
69 likes4 comments
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MuddyPuddle
Zeroes: A Novel | Chuck Wendig
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Mehso-so

Creepily interesting....
Great characters. The story/plot either left out some information or took it for granted I understood some that I didn‘t. Since it was about hacking and disturbing government agents and agencies, probably both apply! The first and second halves of the book were very different – I much preferred the first half, and would have rated the book higher if it had continued in the same vein.

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MuddyPuddle
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Pickpick

This is an autobiography more than a memoir, I think. It‘s sort of like an outline of her life through eighth grade. Not only does 15-year-old Jazz Jennings write this, she reads it aloud as well, and in a self-confident way that gives extra impetus to what she says. She is so positive, so upbeat, that I think this book would be extra special and helpful for any young person that‘s transgender.

SkeletonKey Loved this one. 6y
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