However, for those of you who like to browse here for book suggestions [Laura :-) ] here's a "few" I've read lately.
- Several in the Daisy Dalrymple 1920s mystery series by Carola Dunn: Damsel in Distress, Dead in the Water, the Winter Garden Mystery
- Halsey's Typhoon: The True Story of a Fighting Admiral, an Epic Storm, and an Untold Rescue by Bob Drury & Tom Clavin -- the story of a 1944 typhoon that struck the Pacific Fleet during WWII. Not my usual type of read (as much as I like history, World War II is not one of my favorites and the book had some harrowing passages) but it was on audio at the public library so I gave it a try. Coincindentally, John McCain's grandfather featured prominently.
- The Tomb of Zeus by Barbara Cleverly -- another 1920s mystery, set at an archaeological dig on Crete
- Pushing Up Daisies by Rosemary Harris -- landscaper Paula Holliday stumbles upon body in the course of her work. I really liked her interaction with the cops, especially "MOM," Sgt. Mike O'Malley. Unfortunately this seems the first in the series and I don't think any others are out yet.
- Barometer Rising by Hugh MacLennan -- a novel set at the time of the Halifax explosion in 1917. I picked it up last year on my trip (in Halifax, of course).
- Several children's books: The Court of the Stone Children by Eleanor Cameron, Magyk and Flyte by Angie Sage (my oldest niece is two books ahead of me on this series), Moxy Maxwell Does Not Love Stuart Little by Peggy Gifford (my younger niece would like this; it's a hoot), and The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander. That last one I'd read when I was young and thought I'd reread it since I bought a copy for the new library.
- I also got on a fantasy kick and read or listened to several Tamora Pierce books: Wild Magic, Wolf Speaker, The Circle of Magic Quartet, Trickster's Choice.
- I listened to A Distant Mirror: the Calamitous 14th Century by Barbara Tuchman while I did a lot of my quilt work -- kind of a downer, what with the plague, wars, exploitation of peasants, etc. And not being able to see all that French written out (I'm such a visual person) drove me crazy. But it was very informative.
- A Very Dangerous Woman: Martha Wright and Women's Rights by Sherry H. Penny and James D. Livingston -- an interesting biography picked up at Women's Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls, NY, last summer.
I've started exercising again. I figure if Dara Torres can make the Olympics at 41, I can get into shape (although, round is already a shape). Note to self: taking the iPod to the gym does no good if you leave the earbuds in the car.
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