Showing posts with label Karen Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karen Young. Show all posts

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Summer Reading: The TBR of Intrepid Reader Karen

Intrepid Reader Karen has published her summer reading list, and I think I can speak for all of us when I say, "I approve!" 

As we all can agree, TBR List Approval doesn't matter. We The Readers read what we want, and we support reading freedom for others. 

However, we are inordinately pleased when we see books we recognize — either read or to read — on someone else's summer reading list.

So, without further ado, I present Intrepid Reader Karen's 2019 Summer Reading List:


  • The Psychology of Time Travel 
  • The Girl With a Pearl Earring
  • Relative Fortunes
  • The Lost City of Z
  • Women of the Bible (selected readings)
  • Ruby Red
  • Sapphire Blue
  • Emerald Green
  • Dream a Little Dream trilogy
  • Finding Fraser
  • The Ghost Studies
  • Pirate
  • The Iliad
  • Stealing Time
  • Released by the Highlander
  • The Holy Bible (selected readings)

You will notice The Ghost Studies is on her reading list. We hope you will join us for this group read!  Click here for more information.

Personally, I am excited about a couple of books on this list,that have been in my sights for a while. Now that Karen is reading them, perhaps I'll pull them down from the shelf and read them, too. I love getting ideas on what to read from my fellow readers. I hope I can do the same for you in return.

Do you have any of Karen's books on your TBR list? Let us know in the comments below, or drop me a line, and maybe we can read them together!

Happy reading!


Thursday, June 27, 2019

Ramp Up Your Summer Reading With The Ghost Studies

Do you want to ramp up your summer reading? Join your fellow book-clubbers in reading a fascinating book selected by Intrepid Reader Karen.

Karen has discovered a phantastic book titled The Ghost Studies: New Perspectives on the Origin of Paranormal Experiences by Brandon Massullo.

The Ghost Studies, according to Google, provides scientific explanations for paranormal occurrences, including:

  • New and exciting scientific theories that explain apparitions, hauntings, and communications from the dead
  • The latest research on the role of energy and electricity in hauntings
  • The role that emotions, bioenergetics, and the environment play in supernatural phenomena
  • New research into why some individuals are more prone to ghostly encounters


I am as skeptical as the next person, but I have had some inexplicable experiences that make me wonder what else there is in heaven and earth, and I'm willing to find out what Mr. Massullo has to say on the subject.

Readers, let's begin discussing the tome on September 2.

Oh, and start planning for our Autumn Read: The Iliad, a new translation by Caroline Alexander.

What books would you like to read together? Offer some suggestions in the comments below, or email me and I'll share your ideas with the rest of the group!

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Time Travel: When You've Gotta Go, and How Annie's Crew Managed

The Polar Book Club book took me a little bit longer to read than I anticipated— so thank you for your patience. Let's discuss The Lemoncholy Life of Annie Aster by Scott Wilbanks!

Intrepid Reader Karen suggested the book for our Polar Book Club because it sounded amazing: a young woman in San Francisco wakes up one day to discover a 19th century Kansas wheat field in her backyard, along with a letterbox that contains a letter addressed to her — from the year 1890.

The wheat field appears soon after Annie takes delivery of an old red wooden door purchased from a local antique shop. After a little digging, she discovers the door was once owned by the magician David Abbott, who was killed only days before it was sold at auction more than a century before. Her new "neighbor" Elsbeth dated her letter only days before the magician's murder. Can the crime be prevented and a life saved?

From the beginning, I wasn't sure what to make of the characters: Annie, a recently orphaned, terminally ill woman who speaks, dresses, and acts like a 19th century woman; Christian, her contemporary who survived a terrible accident and lives with the horror every moment of every day; Elsbeth, a widowed, retired schoolteacher who doesn't suffer fools and is all-business about everything in life; and Edmond, a gardener and friend of Christian's who is the key to this mystery — or is he?

Throw in David, an other-worldly magician doing the impossible with an ordinary-looking door; the good-natured but wary street urchin Cap'n who leads a perfectly oiled team of hungry, homeless kids; and truly evil, remorseless henchmen — and you have the motley crew who make up the story.

The book's characters seemed to embrace the outlandish premise too quickly. What would a time traveler need to do to convince you of their story? Would you travel across the country at the drop of a hat upon request and receipt of a pre-dated news article? What would you do for a virtual stranger: risk your life, your health, your future — or your present?

The book started a little slow for my taste, then began throwing in one bizarre vision, connection, and coincidence after another. In the end, it amounted to one too many coincidences, misjudged pop culture references, an implausibly violent scene in a rather soft-edged story, and an improbable ending that tidied up every conceivable loose end. However, I'd still consider it a three-star read: it is good time travel, and it presents an interesting premise, and a pretty intense ride full of surprises and familiar themes.

Polar Book Clubbers — and other readers of the book — what did you think? Send me a note, or comment below!

Sunday, January 13, 2019

Join the 2019 Polar Book Club — And Read With Friends

What else should an Intrepid Reader do during the winter but — well, read?


Join the Polar Book Club in reading The Lemoncholy Life of Annie Aster by Scott Wilbanks. 


It's a novel loaded with time travel, mystery, and — you know what? I'll let the author describe the book himself:


Annabelle Aster has discovered a curious thing behind her home in San Francisco: a letter box perched atop a picket fence. 

The note inside is blunt—“Trespass is dealt with at the business end of a shotgun in these parts!”— spurring some lively correspondence between the Bay Area orphan and her new neighbor, a feisty widow living in a nineteenth century Kansas wheat field. 


The source of mischief is an antique door Annie installed at the rear of her house. The man who made the door—a famed Victorian illusionist—died under mysterious circumstances. Annie and her new neighbor, with the help of friends and strangers alike, must solve the mystery of what connects them across time before one of them is convicted of a murder that is yet to happen... and somehow already did.



Now that you're hooked... join the club!

Let's begin the discussion on Monday, March 4. 

You can leave a comment on the blog, below, or email me your impressions and I'll publish the thread of our conversation on the blog. You can decide how you want to be identified, if at all, in the conversation.

Thanks to Intrepid Reader Karen for giving me this book last summer, and for suggesting it for the Polar Book Club.

Questions? Comments? Ideas for the Spring Reading Club? Comment below or contact me!

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Summer Reading: Karen Had a Blast!

Intrepid Reader Karen had a great summer reading.

How great? Well, it looks like she consumed the entire Outlander series and immersed herself in cozy mysteries. 


Did you know "cozy mysteries" is a thing? I have been reading them for ages and just thought that was my author's pet name for her series. 


"Cozy mysteries" apparently involve cats saving humans from their own foolishness. (Maybe it's just me....) Well, I know my cats are exhausted each night after they keep me out of danger every day, even when I am at work — thanks to the Cat Networks.


At any rate, here is what Karen read this summer:

  1. Troublemaker 
  2. Outlander 
  3. Dragonfly in Amber 
  4. Voyager 
  5. Drums of Autumn 
  6. The Fiery Cross
  7. A Breath of Snow and Ashes 
  8. An Echo in the Bone
  9. Written in my Own Heart’s Blood 
  10. Murder in the Art Gallery 
  11. A Sip of Murder:A Japanese Tea Garden Mystery 
  12. Cream Puff Murder
  13. Gone with the Ghost 
  14. You’ve Got Tail
  15. The Secret of Seaside 
  16. Cruel Candy 
  17. Marigolds and Murder
  18. Wicked for Hire 
  19. Sweets and a Stabbing 
  20. Bakeries and Bones
  21. Horribly Haunted in Hillbilly Hollow 
  22. A Shot in the Bark
What an ambitious summer! Intrepid Reader Karen knows how to get some good books under her belt.

As a reward for a summer well-spent, Karen received a copy of Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore — which you all might want to put on your holiday gift list. Just saying.


What did you read this summer? Did you discover a new author or genre? Let us know: comment below, or send me an email.


Have you plotted out your Winter Reads, or are you winging it and banking on a book bonanza for the holidays? Discuss!



And a special shout-out to the artist of this year's Summer Reading graphic: Beth Wilson and her DoodleCats!

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Summer Reading: The TBR Stack Edition, or What Karen is Reading This Summer

I hope your summer reading is coming along swimmingly. 

If you are in the areas on the globe experiencing record rains and/or record heat, hopefully you can spend extra time indoors and get more reading done.

Intrepid Reader Karen has planned her summer reading carefully, and I see at least one or two books from her list that dovetail with titles I find interesting. Who among us has not salivated over adventure tales or time-travel stories? I rest my case.

So, without further ado, here is Karen's reading list (also fondly referred to as TBR, or to be read, stack):

  1. Pope Francis’ Little Book of Compassion
  2. Troublemaker 
  3. Never Broken: Songs are Only Half the Story 
  4. Outlander series books 1-8
  5. The Case of the Green-Dressed Ghost 
  6. Beyond the Fortune Teller’s Tent
  7. Legend of the Jade Dragon 
  8. The Pocket Watch
  9. Holy Bible 
  10. Morna’s Legacy 
  11. The Ruby Red Trilogy 
  12. Dragon Bones
  13. Lost City of Z
  14. The Source 
  15. The Secret Scroll
  16. Man & Horse: The Long Ride Across America 
  17. Elixir: A Teen-Genius Medical Thriller 


I adored the Ruby Red Trilogy, and I have been meaning to read The Lost City of Z for ages. I read only the first Outlander novel, so maybe it's time to see what's up with Claire and Jaimie. And, frankly, who doesn't love Jewel?

So, what's in your TBR pile? Join the club, and win a chance at a new book! Post your list in the comments below, or send it to me and I'll share with the class!