Monday, December 01, 2025

November 2025

 https://catalog.lionlibraries.org//bookcover.php?id=ils%3A.b27934391&size=medium&format=Book&isn=1835411444
A sign? I did some browsing at a local library the other day. I decided to see if there was anything of interest to me on the New SCF shelf and the Langmead looked like something I might enjoy. Next display over was the New MYS section with the Bain book which had just gone onto my TBR list. I found a comfy chair and read a couple of random pages in each and decided to check them out. 
 
Next I got out my phone and looked at my list of possibles at this library and there was the Jemisin series! So I added book #1 to my stack. Next morning my daughter was perusing my shelf, "Hum, cities. Do I see a new theme here?"
 
"Well maybe, but I'm not stopping the "last" theme. See, there are two of those on the shelf. I also have holds placed on another five!"
 
She told me she had read and liked the Jamisin book and had read something else by Langmead and liked it. Then she took off to her cozy reading spot and I started my morning adventures on "The Internets." I opened LibraryThing, clicked on "folly" (left column menu on Home: page) and selected "Book of Yours" (which brings up a random title from my collection). What was the book?  This Is Not Your City  (Caitlin Horrocks) a short story collection I read and liked back in 2012!
 
All things point to a new theme, but I'm also keeping the "Last" one. Here are the word 'City' in the title books I picked up on this library trip: 
  City of All Seasons by Langmead, Oliver K. 
  The Ivory City by Murphy, Emily Bain
  The City We Became (Great Cities, #1) by Jemisin, N.K.
I can't help thinking there must be a book or two out there somewhere that have both "last" and "city" in the title. 
 
Here's what I read this month (liked them all unless otherwise noted).
 
Fiction: 
The Lamplighters by Stonex, Emma 
Three man Cornish lighthouse crew goes missing.
Heartwood by Gaige, Amity 
Female solo AppalachianTrail hiker goes missing in the Maine woods. 
Love After Love by Persaud, Ingrid
One of my not-so-plain-brown-wrapper birthday gifts. (see October 2025 post) This one set in San Fernando, Trinidad and New York City. I really liked it.
Evensong by O'Nan, Stewart 
Aging women taking care of aging women in Pittsburgh.
Some Bright Nowhere by Packer, Ann
Dying woman's husband and her besties cope with care giving. Set in Connecticut & Maine.
The Eleventh Hour by Rushdie, Salman 
A good collection. I highlighted my favorites. 
Contents: In the South -- The musician of Kahani -- Late -- Oklahoma -- The old man in the piazza. 
 
The Ivory City by Murphy, Emily Bain
This mystery set at the 1984 St. Louis Fair was OK. She got the historical setting, the fashions (both personal dress and interior decor), and available technology just fine but I wish she'd (or an editor/fact-checker) had spent more research on the language of the time.
The Gardener's Plot: A Mystery by Benoit, Deborah J. 
Another OK mystery. 
Queen Esther by Irving, John
I wish he hadn't written this mess. 
 
Nonfiction: 
Athens: Food, Stories, Love: A Cookbook by Kochilas, Diane 
Loved it! It's more than a cookbook.
The Art of Jacques Pépin: Favorite Recipes and Paintings From My Life in the Kitchen by Pépin, Jacques  
I don't cook much these days but I sure like foodie picture books.  
The Other Girl by Ernaux, Annie 
The author's musings on the child her parents had and lost before Annie was born.
Things That Disappear by Erpenbeck, Jenny; translated from the German by Beals, Kurt
A delightful little book of brief essays. 
Stan and Gus: Art, Ardor, and the Friendship That Built the Gilded Age by Wiencek, Henry 
Architect Stanford White and sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens
Rather creepy guys. I kinda wish I'd skipped this one. 
The Lady in Gold: The Extraordinary Tale of Gustav Klimt's Masterpiece, Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer by O'Connor, Anne-Marie 
Another winner from my brown-wrapper gifts.
 
 https://m.media-amazon.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1413749426i/22747960.jpg
Sotheby's : Leonard A. Lauder, Collector | Evening Auction, 18 November 2025, Lot 8
Gustav Klimt: Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer (Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer)
This auction came up just as i finished The Lady in Gold. What a treat to read the the cataloge notes for this painting.  
 
Checked out from library but decided not to read:
The Everlasting by Harrow, Alix E. 
A New New Me by Oyeyemi, Helen 
Perfection by Latronico, Vincenzo  We Are Green and Trembling
We Are Green and Trembling by Cabezón, Gabriela 
The Persians by Mahloudji, Sanam 
The Dinner Party by Sandt, Viola van de 
Last Acts by Sammartino, Alexander

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