The Intruder by Freida McFadden

Casey loves her cabin in the woods – it’s just the right amount of seclusion that she craves. Sure, the roof creaks and the tree that looks like it can tumble on the house at any time is ignored by her landlord, no matter how many times she has mentioned it…

Then one night – a night that brings in a deadly storm and everyone has been told to stay safe in their homes … something… has found shelter in Casey’s shed… and that something…

is covered in blood.

Frieda and I have been back and forth this year… It’s a little love gate relationship between us. Many ( probably most) of these books I have enjoyed – some even loved – but also some that I was…. uhhh…. just no. I even took a break from her for a bit, but here I am after a series of now amazing reads, looking for a bit of a palate cleanser…

And…. here we are.

The Intruder was good, it had the elements that I appreciate of this author – likable characters, not dumming it down dialogue, and for the most part – a believable storyline. And thank goodness – I was due for just a good read.

While not one of her best, I would say it is read-worthy and a quick read as well, which, after coming off the HEAVY book club read of The Seven Gables, just felt right.

Rated: 3.5 out of 5
Read Author Before: Yup, many times
Read Author Again: oh yeah
Book Club Worthy: Could be, although there are things to discuss – wouldn’t be the deepest discussion

House of The Seven Gables by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Thank Goodness for Book Club ~Sheila

A Curse. A mysterious Death…or two. A Haunting. The sins of one generation layer upon the Pyncheon family as they navigate the legacy of the family’s and a home, violent past.
The grand house ( which does exist) is built on a piece of cursed land – cursed by the previous owner when he refused to sell to Colonel Pyncheon.

The Colonel has his ways and scoops up the property to make a grand home, but it seems the curse may have landed correctly as the Colonel dies the day the home is finished. And so it continues – curses, greed, sins, and secrets …

Where will it all end?

This was selected as our October Classic read for the Bookies Book Club. Admittedly curious about the book, as a few friends and I toured this estate in 2022 while in Salem, and always a fan of a good mystery, I was ready to dig in.

Then I opened the book…

Oofta. It read like a textbook. Between the book and I downloaded the audio as well, I slugged my way through this heavy read of lofty descriptions of the house and the colors …
And well… I was so curious about where the book club would land on this.


As we neared the book club date, I was hearing from some of the members that they had given up on it, one opted for the movie instead, and some never got a hold of the book… so I was really wondering what the book club would be like.
Well, we met last night, and actually, it was a nice discussion. For those who finished it, while admittedly a windy read of over detailing, they were able to pick out the story and get to the heart of the book, bringing my flat rating of a zero ( seriously… nothing in this book stuck with me) to a 1 rating, and an appreciation of what makes this book work.
A few of the Bookies had read The Scarlett Letter (also by this author), stating that the writing of that book was easier to digest.

Overall Bookies rating from those who finished was 2.25 – now bad when you consider an average read is a 3. The review definitely gave me more of an appreciation for the book. And as always – the Bookies bring a little something something to the discussion, including a few that dressed the era ( well played!), the gingerbread men cookies as sold in Hepzibah’s shop, fruits and fresh bread, cold cuts, cheeses, and crackers, and more. If this group knows one thing to be true, we can pretty much make a good time out of anything. 😀

And for those interested, a few pics from the House of Seven Gables Tour in 2022:

Have you read this book?

Katabasis by R F Kuang

When you want to love a book… but can’t ~Sheila

Alice Law has dreamed of attending Cambridge and working alongside the greatest magician in the world, Professor Jacob Grimes. She sacrificed much to become one of the brightest in the field of Magick, and her sacrifices have paid off, as here she is, living her dream where most never get this far.

That is – until the Professor dies in an accident that could very well be Alice’s fault.

Grimes is now in Hell, and Alice feels she has no choice but to go in after him… it’s just unfortunate that her nemesis, Peter Murdock, has the same plan.

In a word. Heavy.

I was so looking forward to this book with visions of a descent into hell that is well written and engaging with the essence of magic (which I LOVE), and honestly, maybe a Harry Potter vibe, and well….

Can I say I loved the synopsis? The storyline – not so much…. the book felt over-detailed… and not a lot happened. Cool idea, and great references, but when I read a book, most of the time it is for the enjoyment, the adventure, the falling in love with a book, and this one felt way too much like work and no reward for my efforts.

I really hope someone can tell me differently and that they love this book ( and why) – for me …. too much work to keep me engaged.

Rated: 2.5 out of 5
Read Author Before: I have not…. and maybe that’s a thing
Read Author Again: Not if the books are this heavy
Book Club Worthy: I wish it were, but I can’t imagine my book club getting through this book to discuss it.


A Perfect Stranger by Shalina Boland

“And here I find myself again, wrapped up in a Psychological Thriller like a beloved blanket….” ~ Sheila

Emily adores her husband, Aiden. They have one child and are expecting their second. But something is wrong, and Emily knows it. Aiden is not himself lately, distracted and unengaged with not only Emily, but their son as well.

Dani is Married to Marcus. They are well off, and Dani wants for nothing; the envy of her friends. But Marcus is not himself, inviting strangers to their home, making promises he does not keep…and acting like all is perfect for Dani is getting harder and harder

How well can you really know someone – even if they share a bed with you?

As much as I like to color outside the lines of Psychological Thrillers, I find my way back time and again…a good mystery with a twist? Count me in!
I enjoyed the way this book was written – the back and forth between the couples as well as the connection between them.
In the end – a solid twist, a little nitpicky things (that’s on me) throughout the book, but overall worth my time and felt nice to be back on a good read wave after a few “not-so-much” reads.

Rated: 3 out of 5 – solid average read
Read Author Before: No
Read Author Again: I would!
Book Club Worthy: I think so, this would be a fun discussion

Morning Meandering…All The Things #1

Happy Sunday.
I love Fall… I love October. In fact, October is my favorite month.
It’s usually not overly hot or cold… It’s a great time of year to walk the dogs, hike the local trails, bike, make soup, bake, and plan loads of fun events to dress up to. It’s also the time I usually get into a home-update mood… painting, cleaning out a closet…etc…

So here is what is current –

We have a new deck on the front of the house – YAY! Long overdue, and it looks MARVELOUS!

Admittedly… I can’t stop playing with it…. I bought a bench and added a few things I had in the garage… 😀

We are fostering a puppy. Yup. A. Puppy.

I signed up to be a foster almost a year ago, and finally one came along that felt like a fit for our lifestyle and home, and our two rescues already in da house.

His name, he came with, is Twig; he’s a mix and has these crazy blue eyes. He is about 12 weeks old.

For those not familiar with the terms, here is what this means….

Rescue Foster: Taking a dog into your home and caring for them until they find their forever home (someone adopts them).

Here is another term to know:

Foster Fail: This is when you say you are going to foster a dog to give them a safe home until they find their forever home AND you or someone in your home (*cough cough Al*) decides that we should keep the dog because he really likes him.
Exhibit A:

To all my friends who said I would fail…. It wasn’t me. 😛

And for other things this past week –

I received a cool book gift (left for me on that lovely bench on the new deck) from the Battle Of The Books team, thanking me for assisting with food setup for the kids. Awe….

I dabbled in making my first Grapefruit Smoothie ( A whole grapefruit, a 1/2 cup of plain Greek yogurt, 4 chunks of frozen pineapple, 1 TBLS coconut oil, and a knob of Ginger. It was good… and now that I am thinking about it I want another one.

I have had a pinched nerve in my right shoulder blade since last Monday…. I tried the Red Light Therapy at our local Caribbean Beach Tanning and Wellness, and that was a cool experience, and I felt it made a difference. I will do that again!

Some of our Breakfast Club peeps volunteered for A Kindness Event, and over 1200 people attended. So much fun!

And… a group of us made it to the annual purse auctions for Children’s Miracle Network. always a fun time… no winners to report from our group but lots of laughs 🙂

This weekend I am focusing on yard care – it’s time to clean up the deck, garden, and get everything put away as next week is the annual Murder Mystery Retreat in Deerriver and I will be gone Friday through Sunday afternoon.
Kylie, Al, and I had a little Halloween shopping on Saturday and found a little something fun to add to the deck. Hang out time and campfire in the backyard
My day today continues with cleaning, finishing the book club book for our review this coming Tuesday, and a little ME time to reset before I hit the ground running tomorrow.
Bookish, things will be in my Monday What Are You Reading Post 🙂
Enjoy Today!
~Sheila

Mean Moms by Emma Rosenblum

“I may have gone out of the frying pan – into the fire…” ~Sheila

Frost, Morgan, and Nell are the “it women” of downtown Manhattan. Their children all go to the top private school, and their social life is all about being seen at extravagant events and themed parties. Nothing changes year to year beyond maybe a hairstyle.

But the start of this school year is different. Enter a new mom. Sofia is gorgeous, recently relocated from Miami, and easily fits in with the other 3 women, almost as though they had a missing piece until she arrived.

And then things start to happen… each of the women goes through a type of crisis…enough to make them wonder if someone is behind these reputation-damaging happenings…

Oof. Secrets, lies…. women behaving badly… maybe this was too soon after finishing another read about a school… I didn’t engage with any of the moms, none of them were likable, and I know I know… they don’t have to be… but really, I just wasn’t invested in what was going on and how it would all pan out. It felt a little forced. Maybe too much going on? DRAMA.
Plenty of others out there that enjoyed this book, and you can find those reviews here.

Rated: 2 out of 5
Read Author Before: No
Read Author Again: I don’t think so unless something is getting raves
Book Club Worthy: I’m probably the wrong person to ask – while I struggled, someone else may love it and find plenty to chat about ( the themes are all there – backstabbing, betrayal, friendship, secrets…)



Morning Meanderings… and a Late What Are Your Reading

Unintentional MIA there….

Well, Fall has arrived, and I have hit the ground running between work and all the to-dos. Reviews to write and things to chat about. To start with -YAY for the Friends of the Brainerd Public Library Fall Book Sale. I got a chance to volunteer and a little time to shop as well. I came home with 10 treasures:


I am currently reading ( still)

Its good, just a slow pace this time of year for reading reading….

I’m listening to:

It’s good… and thank goodness because I have had a couple recently that have been not so great ( reviews coming soon).

For Book Club ( we meet next week) – we are reading our October Classic, and our group selected The House of Seven Gables. So far, I have heard it is a struggle… (I have not started yet). I need to get on this and figure out a way to make the discussion fun 😀


Check out Kathryn’s It’s Monday, What Are You Reading for great selections ( and yeah yeah… I know it’s Tuesday…)

Talk Soon! Enjoy Today!

~Sheila

The Academy – Elin Hilderbrand and Shelby Cunningham

I want kind of a deep thought here… but … I don’t have one ~Sheila

It is the start of a new school year at Tiffin Boarding School in New England, and amidst the chaos of cars being unpacked, rooms being found, friends reconnecting, and new faces in the crowd, something else is happening too. Tiffin has just been ranked the number 2 boarding school in the country. A seventeen-spot jump from last year’s rankings to everyone’s surprise. While the school does lay claim to smaller classrooms, a brilliant New York Chef preparing the meals, and a lovely campus, there is also much to be done with run-down dorm rooms, mediocre sports teams, and let’s just say the students are known more for their social skills than academic skills, but here we are.

With the spotlight on Tiffin and other schools, wondering how they ranked so high, it’s almost inevitable that things will go a little (or a lot) south.
A new app appears out of nowhere called Zipzap and is a tell-all of the students as well as teachers, most private moments. No one is safe as friends turn against one another, accusations fly, and things hidden in the dark are revealed.

Was the ranking a mistake, because this does not feel like a #2 in the country ranked school.

Sigh.
This review is a bit of a harder one. I met Elin Hilberbrand in New York during the Annual Book Expos. In fact, she was there every year and gave away cold Corona Beer bottles at her signings. While I don’t have a photo with her (poo!) I did ask her once about the beer, as there is no connection to the Corona in the book. She just said that it was something that she liked to do – a personal touch. Not book-related.

That said, I have a long-standing relationship with this author – a lover of her books, in fact, I just checked her on Book Journey and there are sooooo many of her books I have read. Definitely a go-to author for me, and always excited when I see something new coming from her.

Known for her fun stories centered around Nantucket, it was a sad day when she announced over a year ago that she was stepping away from her writing, followed quickly by a sense of excitement when she announced she would be switching gears and writing a book with her daughter.

So, here we go.
At Tiffin Academy, A LOT is going on. In fact, this book felt like it had so much lead-in of the beginning of the school year, who was who, who was new, etc, etc… that I actually stopped reading to review the synopsis again as I wasn’t getting a feel for where we were going with all this. Don’t get me wrong, the characters ( while MANY) are fairly developed enough where I felt I could picture the scene, but I have never been a big fan of a lot of characters to keep track of. It’s not that what was happening was dull – it’s just that it was a lot of things going on and nothing really going anywhere. That’s not meant to sound harsh.

So I check out the synopsis, and it appears to be centered around this app, ZipZap… ok! Back into the book I go. It is a long lead-in (again, not boring.. things are happening!) before we get the app. I wish I could recall exactly when it shows up, but it’s a good way in to the read.

While I listened to part of this on audio – in both audio and book, I felt Elin’s style come through enough to enjoy the book, but not love the book. Great storyline – maybe just a little too many directions, it all wraps up pretty quickly and left me with a few questions and ONE BIG ONE when something is introduced early on that is supposed to be revealed in the end … is not. Like a forgotten thread. I Googled this morning to see if this is planned to be a series, and it looks like it is a two-book contract; however, I honestly have to ask myself if I am engaged enough to go back in for another round.

Overall peeves –

A little too much F bomb. Not a prude but not a fan. I understand if it fits the scene, for instance, there is one point in the book where someone is called an F’er, and I laughed out loud because it was fitting. Other times throughout the book, every time it was said, it felt like filler… or maybe it was trying to give that school vibe. Either way, it pulled me out of the story.

A lot of things are happening that have nothing to do with anything and are going nowhere

A few story lines started, and no other information #storylineghosted

Likes –

There is the Hilderbrand vibe, and while definitely different, I felt her snarky vibe in the voices of some of the characters, and enjoyed that

I feel there is potential, and obviously, this is the first mother-daughter duel book, and I can only imagine what that would be like to share the writing when you are an established author with a big following, but at the same time not overshadowing your daughter’s vision and giving her room to take some ownership.

I can’t tell you to read this one or not. I can tell you that after finishing this one and seeing what people are saying, there are very mixed reviews going both ways.

Rated: 2.75 out of 5
Read Author Before: many times
Read Author Again: in this new style? maybe
Book Club Worthy: It could be; there are some things to unpack here for sure, but from my book club experience, I think they would be found wanting more, and with so many details left unsorted, I feel this could result in a dissatisfied group.

Hiderbrand Books I have read and reviewed: (I have read more, sadly did not review them all)

Swan Song

Troubles In Paradise

28 Summers

The Identicals

Here’s To Us

The Rumor

Winter Street

The Matchmaker

The Island

The Castaways

What Lies In The Woods by Kate Alice Marshall

Twenty-two years ago, 11-year-old Naomi, Cassidy, and Olivia loved to spend their summers in the woods making up fairy tales and creating what they called the Goddess Game. It was a time of innocence, bonding of friendships, and making memories – you remember those days, the ones that never ended – you came home late, breathless, and tired and ready to sleep and then do it all over again.

But that was then…

Now Naomi, in her mid-30s, still can not recall the full details of all those years ago when she was attacked in those very woods with her friends as witnesses. While Naomi’s memories are foggy, the 17 scars left from the serial killer’s attack are as visible as ever. Naomi had survived because of the quick decisions made by her friends, as well as their eye-witness testimonies that put the killer behind bars for life.
But now that the killer has died, Olivia has more to say – she wants to share what the girls were up to that summer… haunted by her past, and Naomi, as well as Cassidy, aren’t sure they are ready for all to be revealed.

Shnikey, what a good synopsis! This has all the makings of just a good old mystery ( remember those?) Not to say the book does not have its share of twists and turns – it does… but not in such a crazy way that sometimes you can not follow all the bread crumbs.
I liked Naomi as a protagonist, and I liked the development of the supporting characters around her.

It read mostly real (Spoiler: how does no one find a body in the woods after all these years when the location was near a crime scene?)

Overall – an enjoyable read that kept me turning the pages.
Want to win this gorgeous hardcover book? Leave a comment below… I will choose a commentator early next week from the comments using random.org

Rated: 3 out of 5
Read Author Before: No
Read Author Again: Maybe
Who Should Read This: Mystery lovers who like a good twist
Book Club Worthy: Definitely discussable -themes can be pulled from this on friendships, trust, justice…

Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt

I found this one… relatable ~Sheila

Tova Sullivan, now in her 70s, has been the evening cleaning woman at Sowell Bay Aquarium for the past two years. A widow as well as having lost her 18-year-old son thirty years ago when he disappeared from his boat, Tova’s coping mechanism of choice is to keep her mind busy.
While the aquarium at night is not all that exciting, Tova finds herself becoming more and more interested in Marcellus, the Giant Pacific Octopus, whom she has caught more than once attempting (and succeeding) to get out of his tank during the night hours.

No one would ever imagine exactly how smart Marcellus is, but Marcellus knows things… he knows how to read people. He may be old, but he is whip smart and picks up on Tova’s heartache and the chapters in her life she can not quite close with so many unanswered questions. As Marcellus pieces together what happened to Tova’s son, he must use every skill he has to unearth the truth before it is too late.

“Humans. For the most part, you are dull and blundering. But occasionally, you can be remarkably bright creatures.” – Remarkably Bright Creatures”
— Shelby Van Pelt

Honestly, I dragged my feet on this one.
While fellow readers shared over the past few years how amazing this book was, I could not wrap my head around a talking octopus… and was not sure how much suspended belief I could pour into a book like this.

I know I know… me? The Queen of Imagination and What Ifs, struggling with what I thought the book was going to be like. Believe me – I’m disappointed in myself too.

FINALLY… while looking for that next read/fix, I decided to give it a try. So glad I did…. for naysayers such as myself in this particular instance – knock it off. It’s not so much that Marcellus is talking; it’s that we know his thoughts. It’s actually a brilliant idea by the author to write a book from this perspective.

While Marcellus is who we get to know first in the book, rightfully so, as you have to know Marcellus and his capabilities for the rest to fall into place, the book is also about Tova, and some of the other people we meet who work at the Aquarium.

I don’t want to say too much as this story unfolds beautifully in ways that are best discovered on your own. This book is worth all the praise you may have heard – READ IT or LISTEN to it ( the voice of Marcellus is fantastic!)
Netflix will have a film adaptation of this book coming in 2026 – but do not miss the experience of the book.

Rated: 4.75 out of 5
Read Author Before: No – this was her first book
Read Author Again: She is writing a second book around the same topic with other creatures, and I am interested
Who Should Read This: YOU! Anyone and everyone… It’s a beautiful story that I think touches us all a little differently, as there is so much in this book to reflect on
Book Club Worthy: Yes! Great topics, on love and loss, doors that open where we did not know doors existed, so so much….